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Musharraf's political career launch speech (apology, promises and clean slate)

Am also looking forward to Musharaf being the next president! All the rest have a horse shi* of a legacy and deprived of a major biological god given gift: Backbone

I have yet to hear from someone that musharaf own over 20 multi million dollar properties, drinks and begs money at IMF frequently...
 
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When the Gov of Pakistan is not defending the honor of Pakistan and its armed forces, President Musharraf has again played the role of a leader. Here is what International Business Times has writes:


Musharraf defends Pakistan from accusations of harboring Osama"

"Pervez Musharraf, the former President of Pakistan and chief of the army, has appeared all overt western media outlets defending his country from accusations its security and intelligence services harbored al-Qaeda boss Osama bin Laden."


"We have achieved successes and that should be recognized,” he said. “If we continuously keep blaming the army and the ISI [Pakistani intelligence services] for what they have not been able to do, well, if they haven't been able to do it then it's CIA's failure also."


Read more: Musharraf defends Pakistan from accusations of harboring Osama - International Business Times

Where are the Shareefs and the Zardaris? Please spread this message and convince your families and friends in Pakistan to vote for the APML in the next elections. Let them know that Pakistan has a leader, President Musharraf, who will save Pakistan once again insha-Allah.

Pakistan First!!!
 
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musharaf was much much much better then these wolfs who are ruling now over pakistan yah few decisions taken by him were not good but for those he has apologized and i can say with 200% surety that if he would be the president at this time no one could enter in pakistan and start military operation either it is America or india..... he was the real soldier..................

Bumper Stickers
 
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Enough of Musharraf and others =- they have already shown where their loyalties lie.

Patriotic rhetoric does not make a new man!

Get a fresh face and new ideas!

Imran not good enough?
 
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Enough of Musharraf and others =- they have already shown where their loyalties lie.

Patriotic rhetoric does not make a new man!

Get a fresh face and new ideas!

Imran not good enough?

In 2008 elections, PML-Q won seats from all provinces of Pakistan by using President Musharraf's name. Only the PPPP could win seats from all provinces. This tells you about his support base in Pakistan and you can imagine the support he wqill get upon his return to Pakistan.

His tenure was the best in the last 30 years and he will still be able to do far better insha-Allah.
 
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Yesterday's Skardu Jalsa. Just look at the amount of people. They were all over the place even on roof tops.
 
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APML UK Press Conference Brief Note-London 27th May 2011​


President APML Pervez Musharraf addressed the media in a press conference about current prevailing situation after Osama Bin Laden’s death and PNS Mehran Karachi attack. The press conference was organised by APML UK team. The event was covered by a number of leading Pakistani, Indian and English TV channels along with News paper reporters.

The former president of Pakistan Pervez Musharraf briefed the media first about the party's view on Osama Bin Laden’s death. He iterated his death will benefit Pakistan and the world peace; but also showed resentment on the modality of the operation by the US. He stated that there was a trust between Pakistan and US in his term while this trust is lacking today. He bluntly rejected the perception about the complicity of ISI in hiding bin laden and considered it impossible. Mr. Musharraf also shared his view on the PNS Mehran attack and the ways it could have been prevented. His main emphasis was on unmanned post and he considered it useless if there are obstructions placed to deny an entry without any official monitoring it 24/7.

He also pointed out that if a person is willing to sacrifice himself in order to cause damage and kill others, then little can be done to stop him. The President APML Pervez Musharraf dedicated most of the time to question and answer session. Everybody was keenly listening to the views of the former president. Speaking on drone attacks; Pervez Musharraf stated that only 9 drone attacks were carried out in 7 year. The result was that President Bush and the Secretary of State, Colin Powell, were compelled to offer apologies and excuses to Mr. Musharraf upon every drone attack. This diplomacy resulted in fewer drone attacks.

He also confirmed that he never permitted the US to conduct any operation within the Pakistani territory. He never compromised on national integrity and sovereignty of country and kept ahead national interests of his people and country for any sort of decision making and never bow down before foreign pressure during his period. Mr Musharraf also pointed out that RAW (Indian secret agency) is supporting terrorists in Baluchistan in order to destabilise Pakistan. Mr Musharraf again reiterated his resolve to arrive in Pakistan on 23 March 2012 and no later, perhaps coming to Pakistan before this date should the situation change.

Ch. Muhammad Altaf Shahid President APML UK, Mohammad Asif Shahzad Senior Vice President and Political Coordinator, M Ifzaal Sidiqui Gen Sec. Adam Gheasuddin VP, Usman sheikh, Mohammad Tariq VP, Ch Tabraiz President Youth wing, Ch Zeeshan Ishfaq SVP, Ch Fawad Mughal Gen Sec APML Youth Wing, M Sohail Sec Info youth wing, Mohammad Saeed Bhatti President APML London. M Ali SVP London, M.Tariq VP London, Ch Akram Gen Sec London, Miss Ramisa Shah President woman wing UK, Salina Sidiqui Sec Gen woman wing UK, Najma Shaheen women wing London, Mr. Kashan President monitory group APML UK, and Dr Zia Rehman Information Secretary APML UK were also present on the occasion. Dinner was served after the press conference where the media people intermingled with the party workers. APML UK Team is extremely thankful to the media for their co-operation and support.


Dr Zia Rehman
Information Secretary. APML UK


Source: his facebook page
 
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APML UK Press Conference Brief Note-London 27th May 2011​


President APML Pervez Musharraf addressed the media in a press conference about current prevailing situation after Osama Bin Laden’s death and PNS Mehran Karachi attack. The press conference was organised by APML UK team. The event was covered by a number of leading Pakistani, Indian and English TV channels along with News paper reporters.

The former president of Pakistan Pervez Musharraf briefed the media first about the party's view on Osama Bin Laden’s death. He iterated his death will benefit Pakistan and the world peace; but also showed resentment on the modality of the operation by the US. He stated that there was a trust between Pakistan and US in his term while this trust is lacking today. He bluntly rejected the perception about the complicity of ISI in hiding bin laden and considered it impossible. Mr. Musharraf also shared his view on the PNS Mehran attack and the ways it could have been prevented. His main emphasis was on unmanned post and he considered it useless if there are obstructions placed to deny an entry without any official monitoring it 24/7.

He also pointed out that if a person is willing to sacrifice himself in order to cause damage and kill others, then little can be done to stop him. The President APML Pervez Musharraf dedicated most of the time to question and answer session. Everybody was keenly listening to the views of the former president. Speaking on drone attacks; Pervez Musharraf stated that only 9 drone attacks were carried out in 7 year. The result was that President Bush and the Secretary of State, Colin Powell, were compelled to offer apologies and excuses to Mr. Musharraf upon every drone attack. This diplomacy resulted in fewer drone attacks.

He also confirmed that he never permitted the US to conduct any operation within the Pakistani territory. He never compromised on national integrity and sovereignty of country and kept ahead national interests of his people and country for any sort of decision making and never bow down before foreign pressure during his period. Mr Musharraf also pointed out that RAW (Indian secret agency) is supporting terrorists in Baluchistan in order to destabilise Pakistan. Mr Musharraf again reiterated his resolve to arrive in Pakistan on 23 March 2012 and no later, perhaps coming to Pakistan before this date should the situation change.

Ch. Muhammad Altaf Shahid President APML UK, Mohammad Asif Shahzad Senior Vice President and Political Coordinator, M Ifzaal Sidiqui Gen Sec. Adam Gheasuddin VP, Usman sheikh, Mohammad Tariq VP, Ch Tabraiz President Youth wing, Ch Zeeshan Ishfaq SVP, Ch Fawad Mughal Gen Sec APML Youth Wing, M Sohail Sec Info youth wing, Mohammad Saeed Bhatti President APML London. M Ali SVP London, M.Tariq VP London, Ch Akram Gen Sec London, Miss Ramisa Shah President woman wing UK, Salina Sidiqui Sec Gen woman wing UK, Najma Shaheen women wing London, Mr. Kashan President monitory group APML UK, and Dr Zia Rehman Information Secretary APML UK were also present on the occasion. Dinner was served after the press conference where the media people intermingled with the party workers. APML UK Team is extremely thankful to the media for their co-operation and support.


Dr Zia Rehman
Information Secretary. APML UK


Source: his facebook page
Musharraf acts have done the most damage to Pakistan his blunders has resulted in so much unrest in Pakistan
 
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First post here :p

Its our misfortune that we develop and progress so much under Military Rule

Musharraf was a Dictator who tried emulate Democracy which i believe was far better than the Current Democracy which is actually Civilian Monarchy
 
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LAHORE - Pervez Musharraf has every right to practice politics and the forces opposing him should face him in the political arena instead of adopting victimizing him and his loyalists, said Fawad Chaudhary, a leader of the All Pakistan Muslim League.

He expressed these views while addressing a press conference at the inaugural ceremony for APML’s provincial office at Garden Town on Wednesday. Fawad said dropping the APML from the registration list could not demoralize the party leadership and its workers from continuing their campaign to pull the country out of the crises under the leadership of Pervez Musharraf.

He alleged that district administration was harassing the party activists following the directions of provincial government in a bid to sabotage party’s second political show at Ravi Town on June 18.
Terming the upcoming schemes of the provincial government as flawed, Fawad said the PML-N government “should made public details of 50,000 Yellow Cab Cars which were imported during their previous regime before launching another such scheme.
He said the Punjab government had announced that it would not entertain the foreign loans but this announcement was not more than a claim, as the provincial government was facing an overdraft of Rs 100 billion.

He said that the performance of the federal government was also bad, as it, too, failed on all fronts. He claimed that drone attacks and economic situation of Musharraf’s regime could not be compared to the current central government’s graph.

Musharraf politics defended | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 
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PJ Mir interviews President Musharraf:

 
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‘Musharraf always wanted the best for his people’


A veteran diplomat, Ms Wendy Chamberlin was serving as the US ambassador to Pakistan when terrorist struck the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001. A former High Commissioner of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), Chamberlin is currently the president of Middle East Institute, a prestigious think-tank based in Washington DC. In an exclusive interview with Dawn.com, Ms. Chamberlin talks about the ups and downs of the Pak-US relationship and the war in Afghanistan.

Editor’s Note: This interview was conducted before the United States’ decision to withhold $800 million aid to the Pakistani military.

Q: Prior to 9/11 attacks, President General Pervez Musharraf was very unpopular with the United States. Post 9/11, he suddenly became Washington’s favorite man in South Asia. At that time, you were serving as the US Ambassador to Pakistan. How did the new relationship with Musharraf develop?

A: I had my first contact with Musharraf over a dinner weeks before 9/11. That summer, there was a terrible drought in Pakistan and a famine was developing in Afghanistan because the Taliban were preventing the United Nations from distributing food. The civil

war and the drought prevented food from reaching the Afghan people. Hungry people (from Afghanistan) were beginning to come into Pakistan and the Pakistanis would threaten to push them back across the border. So, I went to see the situation in a holding camp in the summer of 2001. I felt that Musharraf was a man who always wanted the best for his people.

Q: What were the first contacts like with Musharraf soon after 9/11?

A: I called on him. I was under instructions to ask him to give up support to the Taliban and join the United States with the determination to root out, dismantle and defeat al Qaeda and those who support it. Thus, we started the conversation on how we could work together. The goal ahead was what Pakistan could do for us and vice versa. That year, we kept our promises to Pakistan. We lifted the Pressler sanctions and provided $600 million in immediate grant assistance that subsequently qualified Pakistan for World Bank loans, which otherwise Islamabad could not qualify for. Heads of different governments and states visited Pakistan for rest of the year. We agreed to help in the return of Afghan refugees.

Q: Did the dealings at that point take place with a harsh and threatening tone? Musharraf eventually revealed that the United States had warned to bomb Pakistan back to the Stone Age if Islamabad did not cooperate in the War against terror?

A: That tone and conversation never occurred with Musharraf. I was not there but I think it occurred with the ISI chief General Mahmud [Ahmed] when he was in Washington DC after 9/11.

Q: Did the US government, at that point, imagine that the strike against Taliban, who had provided shelter to al Qaeda, would transform into a full-fledged war which continues even after ten years?

A: No one ever wants to go to war. However, we did realise (and you would be crazy not to realise) that societies change very slowly. Development is a process that lasts for several decades.

The truth is that Afghanistan has developed enormously since the beginning of the war on terror. No one is starving in Afghanistan today as they were in the August of 2001. Food is abundant, roads, schools and hospitals are built. Millions of children are going to school today in a country where only a few boys attended school. Many good things have happened in Afghanistan. The Afghan army is being trained.

This is not the end, rather only the beginning. The situation in Afghanistan is on right enough of a good direction. Now, we can withdraw our troops. Why should we stay in Afghanistan now?

Q: Do you think the war in Iraq diverted attention from Afghanistan?

A: Yes, it did. Personally, I did not support the war in Iraq. It diverted our attention from Afghanistan until President Barrack Obama got elected and brought our focus again on Afghanistan.

Q: Why did the Americans ditch Musharraf?

A: I don’t think we ditched Musharraf. I, like many Americans, still consider him a personal friend. In fact he has many close friends here. He is welcomed here. We had a reception for him at the Middle East Institute. It was the people of Pakistan who voted against Musharraf, not the Americans. The Americans pushed for democratic elections in Pakistan. But we did not push at all for Musharraf or his party’s (Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid-e-Azam) defeat.

Q: Ten years after the beginning of the war in Afghanistan, what would you consider the major successes gained in the Afghan war?

A: Well, people tend to forget what a sorry state Afghanistan was prior to the war. Our analysts judged that by the beginning of 2002, six million Afghans would be caught in the midst of a famine. Today, Afghanistan has had two elections, although not fully meeting the international standards, a government and its own health and education systems. There is international trade taking place inside Afghanistan. It is a country that has risen from the rubble and we should take all these changes as our biggest collective achievement in Afghanistan.

Q: In an article in Newsweek Pakistan, you had proposed the resolution of the controversy over drone strikes in Pakistan “in a way that recognises both Pakistan’s sovereignty and the national-security threat that extremists operating in northern Pakistan pose to the US and NATO”. Can you elaborate on your suggestion?

A: I support military, police and judicial actions that protect civilians. If and when the drones protect civilians against the people who bring violence to them, then it is an instrument of national security. What I would like to see is the forces of national security as the ones that protect the people of a nation.

President Obama has an obligation to protect his citizens and he is doing so. While, running for the presidential race, Obama had promised to his nation that he would do whatever it took to protect the American people against al Qaeda terrorism. The president kept his promise after his election by dismantling and weakening al Qaeda through drone strikes. He said he would do it and he did it. There was no surprise about his actions, including the killing of Osama bin Laden. In the same way, the Pakistani security forces are responsible for protecting the Pakistani people.

Q: Although the United States has historically granted assistance to Pakistani military and the military rulers, you belong to the breed of American diplomats who staunchly advocate civilian assistance for Pakistan. Why do you particularly demand civil assistance for Pakistan?

A: I think the American government must give balanced assistance in Pakistan. The civilian institutions in Pakistan are under-funded. The health care system and education sector are equally under-funded not only in terms of money but also in terms of knowledge, capacity and technology. The United States should be a part of any assistance that goes to the people of Pakistan to build public institutions.

I believe the American assistance should go to the most destitute and the weakest. My thoughts are always evolving. I think the best way to make use of the American assistance is to create jobs because if you have many businesses, people become employed and they can build their own lives. I am looking for entrepreneurship programs and enterprise funds, for example, that encourage Pakistani middle class instead of the truly wealthy and the military. I would like to see the American funds going in that direction to benefit the ordinary people of Pakistan.

Q: You have called for a “compact relationship” between the United States and Pakistan. What is that supposed to mean?

A: In 2001, the understanding the United States reached with Pakistan while starting a new epoch of cooperation was based on the promise that Pakistan would reverse its policy with regard to the Taliban and al Qaeda extremists. In return, we agreed to lift the sanctions, provide aid and restore military-to-military relationships. Pakistan asked for certain things such as not to deploy [international] troops on the ground. We agreed to this term hoping that Pakistan would not support al Qaeda and Taliban.

Over the years, that trust has been broken and it has been replaced with mistrust for which both the sides are a little guilty of violating that understanding. So, we need to seriously talk about it again.

Q: What do you think both the countries should talk about?

A: We need to reach a clear understanding. We [Americans] are not stupid. We know what is going on [with regard to the support provided to Islamic militant groups].

Q: But the Pakistanis argue that there is no change in America’s policy towards them. President Obama, they complain, is pursuing the same policies initiated by President George Bush vis-à-vis Pakistan by coaxing the latter to “do more”. Many say Washington’s unchanged attitude has compelled Pakistan to become a rebel ally in the war against terror.

A: That is not true. The policy has changed a great deal. For example, during President Bush’s time, Pakistan did not have a Kerry-Lugar Bill nor did it have a civilian aid programme. President Obama has been much more aggressive than President Bush in defending the American interests.

Q: Today, if you were the US ambassador to Pakistan again, what would you do to gain support for the controversial Kerry-Lugar Bill?

A: I would do what our Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, does. He was given eight billion dollars to improve the American education system. Instead of sitting in Washington DC and designing a plan and telling the school systems what to do, he put out a notice saying that he has eight billion dollars and he will spend it on the communities and schools that come up with the best ideas and plans how to spend this money. He called his strategy “Race to top”.

Likewise, I would go to Pakistan with the civilian aid saying that we know you need this aid. You need curriculum reforms so that your schools will lead to jobs. You need a better health system so that your children do not die before reaching the age of five. You need reliable and sustainable energy so that your factories continue production without any interruptions so that you sell your goods abroad.

We share the same objectives but we are not going to tell you how to do it. You should tell us how we can help you. We will partner with local (Pakistani) money on projects that you think are worthwhile or your design to accomplish the goals that we collectively wish to achieve.

Malik Siraj Akbar, a Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow based in Washington DC, is a visiting journalist at the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), a project of the Center for Public Integrity

‘Musharraf always wanted the best for his people’ | | DAWN.COM
 
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Pervez Musharraf zindabad. Except for ayub khan and Musharraf, no one really worked for Pakistan .
 
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MODS of this section are politially biased. They never give stickey to my repetitive request for Imran Khan but see this Mushraraf is given that even when his popularity is dwindeling at 10%.

MODs!

Think again.. "Unsticky" or give sticky to Imran Khan political carrier pages. Be fair.. and if you cannot.. you disqualify to be the MODs.
 
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