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UN General Assembly - UNGA 2009

Righteous_Fire

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President arrives in N.Y. to lead Pakistan delegation to UNGA​



President Asif Ali Zardari flew into New York Sunday night to lead Pakistan’s delegation to the 64th session of U.N. General Assembly during which world leaders will debate issues of peace and security. The President, who traveled by a commercial flight, was received at New York’s John F. Kennedy airport by Pakistan’s U.N. Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon, the envoy to the United States, Husain Haqqani, and senior officials of the Pakistan Mission to the U.N. and the Consulate General in New York. ...........


On Thursday, UN Secretary Ban Ki-moon, who will attend the meeting, called for supporting President Zardari’s government as it fights terrorism. The President’s bilateral meetings will be with Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodrigues, Netherlands Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkende, US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and United Arab Emirates Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdallah Bin Zayid Al Nahyan.​
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President Zardari will address the U.N. General Assembly on Sept 25 and participate in a Summit-level meeting of major troop and police contributing countries being convened by the President Obama for a review of UN peacekeeping operations. With around 11,000 troops, Pakistan is one of the largest troop troop contributors, constituting 11% of the total UN Peacekeeeping force. “We welcome the initiative of President Obama in convening a summit- level conference of troop contributing countries,” Haroon said. “We hope this conference will go a long way in creating a better understanding about the role of peacekeeping”. More than twenty heads of State/government and representatives from India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Ghana, France, United kingdom, the United Staes, Russia and China are likely to attend the conference. ................

Meanwhile, the Azad Kashmir prime minister will raise the Kashmir issue at a meeting of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) to be held on margins of the assembly.


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Foreign Secretaries of Pakistan and India to meet in New York on Sept. 26​



Pakistan and India are ready to resume dialogue process and foreign secretaries of the two countries will meet on September 26 followed by foreign ministers’ level talks on September 27 in New York on the sidelines of General Assembly session of the United Nations. Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir while talking to APP on Monday confirmed the meeting with his Indian counterpart Nirupama Rao will be held on September 26 in New York.

The Foreign Secretary, who will leave for New York on September 24, said the meeting between two foreign secretaries will be in accordance with the decisions and joint statement issued following the meeting of two prime ministers at Sharm ul Shaikh.

The foreign ministers of Pakistan and India will then meet on September 27 to discuss the agenda being prepared by the two foreign secretaries, said the Foreign Secretary.

Salman Bashir said, “The meetings between foreign secretaries and foreign ministers of Pakistan and India in New York are the follow up of the summit meeting held in Sharm ul Sheikh.”

He hoped that these meeting will pave the way to formal launch the already stalled peace process between the two countries.

Referring to the agenda of the meetings of the two foreign secretary and foreign ministers, the Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir said, “All the issues between the two countries including terrorism and the core issue of Jammu and Kashmir will be discussed in these meetings.”​


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Reference:​
UNGA
AFP UNGA 2009
 
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Our main goal is to show world how dangerous Tehran is​


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As foreign heads of state converge at the UN General Assembly this week, Israeli leaders and diplomats will focus on the Iranian threat in speeches, high-level meetings and bilateral talks, while boycotting a speech by Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

A major focus of participating leaders will be Thursday's summit-level Security Council meeting, to be chaired by US President Barack Obama, which will focus on nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, set to arrive in New York late Monday, also has a busy schedule that includes meeting with Obama and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Tuesday, meeting with Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday and addressing the General Assembly on Thursday. Netanyahu will not be present when Ahmadinejad addresses the gathering on Wednesday.

"Our main goal at this crucial time is to show the world how dangerous Iran is," said Ambassador Gabriela Shalev, Israel's permanent representative to the United Nations, describing the expected focus of Netanyahu's speech to the General Assembly and planned meetings between Israeli diplomats and their counterparts.




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Reference:​
The Jerusalem Post
UN
 
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FM Qureshi discusses bilateral relations with counterparts​



oreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi spent a busy day at the United Nations on Tuesday, meeting with his counterparts from some European, Central Asian and African countries on advancing bilateral relationships in economic and diplomatic fields. In a meeting with the Tajik Foreign Minister Hamrokhon Zarifi, the top Pakistani diplomat, who is accompanying President Asif Ali Zardari to UN General Assembly session, discussed the situation in Afghanistan and the recent elections in that country.

They discussed prospects of bringing 4000 MW electricity from Tajikistan to Pakistan with the Tajik diplomat reiterating his country’s desire to supply electricity to Pakistan as it has surplus power.

Foreign Minister Qureshi underlined the need for starting negotiations on free trade agreement as a framework to bolster commerce between the two countries.

Qureshi and Austrian Foreign Minister Michael Spndelegger also discussed bilateral relations. The foreign minister briefed his Austrian counterpart on Pakistan’s successful anti-terrorism efforts in Swat.

He reiterated Islamabad’s call for getting greater access to the robust European market, saying expansion in trade will help spur economic growth and bring employment to people. The foreign minister said Pakistan is pleased that the European Union has agreed to start negotiations on the subject.

Meanwhile, Qureshi said, Pakistan wants to avail GSP facility.

Foreign Minister Qureshi also had a meeting with an Italian parliamentary delegation, led by its former foreign minister and exchanged views on UN Security Council reforms.

The Italian parliamentarians were appreciative of Pakistan’s efforts in fight against terrorism and expressed their support for Islamabad’s desire for greater access to the European market. The members of the Italian delegation said they see Pakistan as a prospective and attractive investment destination.

Meanwhile, the Pakistani foreign minister and his Egyptian counterpart Ahmed Aboul Gheit also exchanged views on expanding bilateral economic cooperation and agreed that the joint ministerial commission should meet at the earliest.

The Egyptian diplomat extended an invitation to Shah Mahmood Qureshi to visit Cairo at his earliest convenience.

Discussing growing level of Egyptian investment in Pakistan, Gheit said Egyptian entrepreneurs see Pakistan as a lucrative investment destination.

Qureshi briefed the Egyptian foreign minister about Pakistan-India relations and the situation in Afghanistan.​



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Reference:​
Qureshi 23092009
 
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Obama Sets New Tone, but Problems Are Familiar​



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The United States is ready to begin a new era of engagement with the world, President Obama said Wednesday in a sweeping address to the United Nations General Assembly in which he sought to clearly delineate differences between his administration and that of former President George W. Bush.

“We have re-engaged the United Nations,” Mr. Obama said, to cheers from world leaders and delegates in the cavernous hall of the General Assembly. “We have paid our bills” — a direct reference to the former administration, which often tied paying its United Nations dues to demands for reforms of the institution.

An array of world leaders sat in the hall for Mr. Obama’s speech, which was often interrupted by applause and the flashbulbs of cameras going off, including some from delegates in the room.

But even as Mr. Obama sought to signal a changed tone in America’s dealings with the world, much of his speech centered on old and intractable issues, including Iran’s nuclear ambitions and a Middle East peace process. And while his choice of words was different and more conciliatory, the backbone of American policy he expressed remained similar to the Bush administration’s in many areas.

Just as Mr. Bush once did, Mr. Obama singled out Iran and North Korea for their pursuit of nuclear weapons. “In their actions to date, the governments of North Korea and Iran threaten to take us down this dangerous slope,” Mr. Obama said. “We respect their rights as members of the community of nations. I am committed to diplomacy that opens a path to greater prosperity and a more secure peace for both nations if they live up to their obligations.”

But, he added, “if the governments of Iran and North Korea choose to ignore international standards; if they put the pursuit of nuclear weapons ahead of regional stability and the security and opportunity of their own people; if they are oblivious to the dangers of escalating nuclear arms races in both East Asia and the Middle East — then they must be held accountable. The world must stand together to demonstrate that international law is not an empty promise, and that treaties will be enforced. We must insist that the future not belong to fear.”

As he spoke, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sat in the fifth row, displaying no visible reaction. Iran maintains that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.

Mr. Obama’s address to the General Assembly is the headline event in a day of many headlines. He was followed by Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, the Libyan leader, who also listened to him from the hall, and, later this afternoon, Mr. Ahmadinejad.

Mr. Obama said he planned to work toward a comprehensive peace deal between Israel and its Arab neighbors, and indicated again that he was impatient with the slow pace of work on interim measures like a settlement freeze and was now swinging for the harder, more entrenched final status issues that have bedeviled peace negotiators since 1979.

“The time has come to relaunch negotiations — without preconditions — that address the permanent-status issues: security for Israelis and Palestinians; borders, refugees and Jerusalem,” Mr. Obama said. “The goal is clear: two states living side by side in peace and security — a Jewish state of Israel, with true security for all Israelis; and a viable, independent Palestinian state with contiguous territory that ends the occupation that began in 1967, and realizes the potential of the Palestinian people.

“As we pursue this goal, we will also pursue peace between Israel and Lebanon, Israel and Syria, and a broader peace between Israel and its many neighbors. In pursuit of that goal, we will develop regional initiatives with multilateral participation, alongside bilateral negotiations.”


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Reference:​
UNGA
 
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Gadhafi tears up UN Charter at GA​





Ripping up a copy of the United Nations Charter, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi issued a scathing attack on the Security Council on Wednesday and chastised the world body for failing to intervene or prevent some 65 wars since the UN was founded in 1945.

Gadhafi called for reform of the council - abolishing the veto power of the five permanent members - or expanding the body with additional member states to make it more representative.
"It should not be called the Security Council, it should be called the "terror council," he said.
The veto-wielding Security Council powers - the United States, Britain, China, France and Russia - treat smaller countries as "second class, despised" nations, Gadhafi said.

"Now, brothers, there is no respect for the United Nations, no regard for the General Assembly," Gadhafi said.

His speech followed US President Barack Obama's first General Assembly address, but not before a recess of some 15 minutes was called by the Libyan president of the General Assembly so diplomats could take new seats.

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NY town to file lawsuit over Libyan tent​



The US Mission was represented at a low level by a note-taker and an African expert. US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and US Ambassador Susan Rice departed before Gadhafi ascended the podium.

After waiting for the room to settled, Gadhafi rose and swept his robe over him and strode to the stage, using the handrail on his way up. He wore a shiny black pin in the shape of Africa pinned over his heart, on his brown and tan Bedouin robes.

Gadhafi laid the yellow folder in front of him and opened some of the handwritten pages as he received scattered applause.

The chamber was half-empty as Gadhafi gave his first speech and held a copy of the UN Charter in his hands, each with a large, shiny ring. For a moment, it seemed he lost his place in his speech while he sorted through the pages of his yellow folder.

He appeared to be speaking without a text, looking at a set of notes before him on handwritten pages. He was not reading from the TelePrompTer.

Gadhafi welcomed Obama as the leader of the host nation for UN Headquarters, and hailed Obama's maiden UN General Assembly speech.

He railed against the "inequality" of UN member states, quoting from a copy of the UN Charter that calls for equality of nations, and then noting that five nations hold veto power on the Security Council and can block actions contrary to their interests: the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France.

Speaking rapid-fire Arabic, Gadhafi said the use of military power was contrary to the spirit of the UN, unless such actions are sanctioned by the United Nations.

Since the world body was founded in 1945, Gadhafi said it had failed to prevent or intervene in dozens of wars around the world.

"But 65 aggressive wars took place without any collective action by the United Nations to prevent them, Gadhafi said.

In his lengthy speech, Gadhafi cited UN chapter and verse in questioning the UN's lack of action to halt 65 wars - elaborating on many of them individually.

Gadhafi was dressed in flowing brown robe, and a black beret that he patted at times. As he listened to speeches before he took the stage, aides huddled around him; he kept his glasses, a red handkerchief and a rumpled yellow folder in front of him on the desk.

Gadhafi, introduced as the "king of kings" by his countryman and assembly president Ali Treki, remained in his seat for long after the introduction.

An hour into his speech, Gadhafi complained at some length about being jet-lagged from the 10-hour flight to New York, and having to get up early for the General Assembly.

Fatigue may have been endemic. Well into Gadhafi's long, rambling speech, more than half the General Assembly seats were empty as the lunch hour arrived.

Ninety minutes into Gadhafi's speech, the exhausted translator was relieved by another simultaneous translator.

The Libyan leader's speech ran an hour and 36 minutes, no threat to the length record set by Cuban leader Fidel Casto in 1960, at 4 1/2 hours.

Speakers are supposed to limit themselves to 15 minutes.

Gadhafi's fatigue may have been complicated by his uncertain sleeping arrangements. He spent Tuesday night in his Bedouin tent in the suburban Westchester town of Bedford on property leased from Donald Trump.

But town inspectors planned to visit the property Wednesday in Bedford, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of Manhattan, to make sure make sure the tent has been removed.

Gadhafi will likely face protests over Scotland's recent release of Libyan Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, who was convicted of the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 which killed 270 people.

Gadhafi had wanted to pitch a tent at Libya's five-acre estate in Englewood, New Jersey, and live and entertain there during the UN assembly. But local opposition turned him away.

Later, the Libyan government asked to use Manhattan's Central Park for a tent, but the request was denied.​




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Reference:​
UNGA Jerusalem Post
 
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New UN Resolution Aims at Nuclear-Free World​



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With U.S. President Barack Obama presiding over an historic session, the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a U.S.-drafted resolution Thursday aimed at ridding the world of nuclear weapons.

Russia, China and developing nations supported the U.S.-sponsored measure, giving it global clout and strong political backing.

The resolution calls for stepped up efforts to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons, promote disarmament and ''reduce the risk of nuclear terrorism.''

It was only the fifth time the Security Council met at summit level since the U.N. was founded in 1945. And Obama was the first American president to preside over a Security Council summit, gaveling the meeting into session and announcing that ''the draft resolution has been adopted unanimously.''

''The historic resolution we just adopted enshrines our shared commitment to a goal of a world without nuclear weapons,'' Obama said immediately after the vote. ''And it brings Security Council agreement on a broad framework for action to reduce nuclear dangers as we work toward that goal.''

Just one nuclear weapon set off in a major city could cause major destruction, Obama said.

He said the global effort would seek to ''lock down all vulnerable nuclear materials within four years.''

''This is not about singling out an individual nation,'' he said. ''International law is not an empty promise, and treaties must be enforced.''

''We will leave this meeting with renewed determination,'' Obama said.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon saluted the national leaders for joining in the unprecedented Security Council summit on nuclear arms.

''This is a historic moment, a moment offering a fresh start toward a new future,'' he said.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said that ''our main shared goal is to untie the problem knots'' among nations seeking nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament.

''This is complicated since the level of mistrust among nations remains too high, but it must be done,'' he said.

Obama aides see adoption of the resolution as an endorsement of the president's entire nuclear agenda, as laid out in his April speech in Prague. He declared his commitment to ''a world without nuclear weapons.''

The president called in that speech for the slashing of U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals, adoption of the treaty banning all nuclear tests, an international fuel bank to better safeguard nuclear material, and negotiations on a new treaty that ''verifiably'' ends the production of fissile materials for atomic weapons.

He also strongly backed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, or NPT, which requires signatory nations not to pursue nuclear weapons in exchange for a commitment by the five nuclear powers to move toward nuclear disarmament. States without nuclear weapons are guaranteed access to peaceful nuclear technology for electricity generation.

All those measures are included in the draft resolution.

In its opening paragraph, the draft reaffirms the council's commitment ''to seek a safer world for all and to create the conditions for a world without nuclear weapons.''

Arms control advocates say those elements are interconnected. Some nations might eventually reject the limitations of the Nonproliferation Treaty, for example, if the U.S. and other nuclear powers don't abide by that treaty's requirement to move toward disarmament by reducing their arsenals, or if they reject the test ban.

Also Thursday, the U.S. rejoined a biennial conference designed to win support for the treaty banning all nuclear bomb tests.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was scheduled to help kick off that U.N. session, uniting foreign ministers and other envoys from more than 100 nations that have ratified or at least signed the 1996 treaty. It represents the first U.S. participation since 1999.

Among the invited guests were U.N. nuclear chief Mohamed ElBaradei, former U.S. Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and George Shultz, former U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry, media mogul Ted Turner, former U.S. Senator Sam Nunn and Queen Noor of Jordan -- all campaigners against nuclear weapons.

Nunn, a Georgia Democrat who heads the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a Washington-based group designed to fight the global spread of nuclear materials, said the most important thing about the resolution ''is the high-level visibility that will be taking place ... with world leaders gathering to remind both themselves and the world that we are at a nuclear tipping point.''

Nunn said Wednesday Obama's message is that ''we are in a race between cooperation and catastrophe.''

The draft resolution does not mention any country by name but it reaffirms previous Security Council resolutions that imposed sanctions on Iran and North Korea for their nuclear activities. It does not call for any new sanctions.

The draft ''expresses particular concern at the current major challenges to the nonproliferation regime that the Security Council has acted upon.''

It also calls on all countries that are not parties to join the treaty ''to achieve its universality at an early date,'' and in the interim to comply with its terms. The major countries that are not members of the NPT are India and Pakistan, which have conducted nuclear tests, and Israel which is believed to have a nuclear arsenal.​



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Reference:​
UNGA 2009 at NYT
 
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Pakistan’s stability synonymous with world security: President Zardari​



UNITED NATIONS, Sept 26 (APP): President Asif Ali Zardari Thursday made a stirring call for international community’s moral, political and economic support to help fight terrorism, saying the security of the world lay in Pakistan ‘s stability. “The terrorists strike all nations and continents and there was a need to draw the line on their rampage,” he said in his maiden speech to the U.N. General Assembly at its gold-and-blue hall.“We must draw that line in Pakistan,” he told the 192-member Assembly, saying he was here in place of his martyred wife, Benazir Bhutto, to muster support for her nation which is a victim of terrorism. “In our stability lies the world’s security,” he added.


Pakistan, he said, was fighting for the peace of the world as also for the hearts and minds of the affected people. “It can’t be won only by guns and bombs. The fight must be multifaceted,” he added.

In his speech focusing the scourge of terrorism, President Zardari said the challenges facing Pakistan can only be addressed by a democratic government and added the country was in the process of reaching a national consensus necessary to confront and defeat the terrorists.

“Only a democratic government can win this war,” the President said and questioned the world leaders whether they will stand with Pakistan, just it stood for the entire civilized world on the front-lines of this epic struggle of the new millennium.

He said globalization was not merely economic, but was also political. The terrorists strike all nations and continents and there was a need to draw the line on their rampage. “And we must draw that line in Pakistan,” Zardari said.

He, however, warned that unilateral actions of great powers can inflame the passions of the allies.

“Violating our nation’s sovereignty is not helpful in eliminating the terrorist menace. Indeed, this could have the opposite effect,” he said.

President Zardari said it was time for the world to take notice. “We are not the cause of the problem of terrorism, we are its victims,” he said.

“We are an aggrieved nation, not one that has caused grief,” he said and pointed that Pakistan has fought this battle largely alone.

“We have shared our air bases, our air space, our intelligence and our armed forces in a coordinated effort to contain terrorism.”


President Zardari said Pakistan has alone lost more soldiers than all the 37 countries that have forces in Afghanistan put together. He traced back the roots of terrorism to the war involving superpowers in Afghanistan during the 1990s.

The President said the threat of terrorism cannot be fought by military means alone and requires political will, popular mobilization and a socio-economic strategy that wins the hearts and minds of nations afflicted by it.

Zardai said “It was time for the developed world to step up to the plate to help us, and in turn help itself.”

He said the battleground must be economic and social as well as military. “We will win when people are mobilized against the fanatics. To mobilize them we have to give them hope and opportunity for their future. They need jobs. Their children need education. They must be fed. They must have energy.

“We must give people a stake in their own government, and we must demonstrate to them that democracy does perform, that democratic governance can improve their everyday life.

The President said an economically viable Pakistan will be a stable Pakistan as it will suck the oxygen from the terrorists’ agenda. Economic justice and political democracy are the worst nightmares of the terrorists, he added.

“We must all fight this epic battle together as allies and partners. But just as we will not let Pakistan’s territory to be used by terrorists for attacks against our people and our neighbours, we cannot allow our territory and our sovereignty to be violated by our friends,” he added.

President Zardari said the government will work patiently to persuade leaders in FATA and the Pakhtunkhwa Province to accept the writ of government and turn their back on terrorists.

“The terrorists can blow up our girls’ schools but we will rebuild them, brick by brick, inch by inch. We are in this battle to win. And we know how we have to do it.”

He said Pakistan will work together with Afghanistan, and the NATO forces stationed there, to ensure security of the common border. He also vowed to continue the composite dialogue with India so that their outstanding disputes were resolved.

“Whether it is the core issue of Jammu and Kashmir , or cooperation on water resources, India and Pakistan must accommodate each other’s concerns and interests; we must respect and work with each other to peacefully resolve our problems and build South Asia into a common market of trade and technology,” he said.

President Zardari was of the view that better relations between Pakistan, Afghanistan and India would help create the regional environment that was more conducive to reducing militancy in the region.

“But let be clear, to those in this hall, and to the terrorists lurking in their caves plotting their next assault on humanity. If necessary we will confront evil with force - our police, our army and our air force. We will turn the power of the state against the stateless terrorists. We will turn the power of justice against the chaos of anarchists. We will turn the power of right against the darkness of evil.”

President Zardari said he did not choose this life, rather it has chosen him through an extraordinary combination of circumstances. He said it has not been an easy road and recalled his nine years in prison, in solitary confinement, as a hostage to his wife’s struggle for democracy and to party’s future.

“I was unjustly imprisoned under a judicial system manipulated and controlled by the forces of dictatorship. I refused to break under pressure.

“My years in prison made me a stronger person and hardened my resolve to fight for democracy and justice. Those years prepared me for this moment.”

The President said terror took his wife’s life. But the terrorists cannot kill his wife’s dream.

“Her vision, her passion, her force is now our common task. The Benazir Bhutto Doctrine of Reconciliation lives on; it guides us in our endeavours. Her Reconciliation is the mantra of the new era, and I am dedicated to implementing what she has proposed. I wish I could do it at my wife’s side. But now I will do it in my wife’s place.”

President Asif Ali Zardari said Pakistan will prove wrong all the negative predictions about its future.

“We will show the way in overcoming suspicions towards and from our neighbours and building a future for our people.”

“Throughout her life, my wife struggled to make the world a better place for our children, the children of Pakistan and the children of the world.

“I owe it to her memory, and to all of the martyrs of democracy to continue to do the same, until the Bhutto Doctrine of Reconciliation is not just her dream but the world’s reality,” the President said.​



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Zardari UNGA 2009 Sept 26 APP
 
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Terrorist
Terrorism
bla bla bla

Who is the real Terrorist ?

Most Corrupted and illiterate Govt in this history of Pakistan!!

First Why he put benazir Bhutto everywhere ??? 2nd Usnay koon say itnay teer maray hain ????
 
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^^Mr 10% has an excellent speech writer. Still well done I must say to Mr. Zardari
 
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hahhahahahhhahah Seriously these Indians Israel and Americans heheheh

Most Scared people in the world!!

Who fired first and Only Nuclear bomb ?? (AMERICA)
Who violate Int border ? (India)
Who Attack on Vietnam ?? (America)
Who attack Iraq ?? (America)
Who Attack Afghanistan ?? (America)
Who Try to Attack on Iran ??? (America/Israel)
Who Attack Palestine ?? (Israel)
Palestine Issue ??? (Israel)
Kashmir Issue ??? (India)

Now WHO is the real terrorist ????? hahaha all terrorist countries are only MUSLIMS ???

First Clear Nuclear missiles/Bombs from INDIA ISRAEL and AMERICA thn other nuclear countries finish thr Program!!
 
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This guy lost it, the moment they put Benazir's picture on the stand! :tdown: :sick: :cry: :frown: :tdown:

 
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looool - u know - it was so horribly bad. that he was giving his speech and i was feeling embarrassed loool

u just chk the way he talks carry himself , looool something horribally wrong going on in paksitan. when Musharraf talk ( although he got horrible turret and Punjabi tongue ) people listen to him,
and he impresses people . this guys is totally opposite to him.



------------------------ lol and that pic of bhutton in a un meeting , doesnt give a great impression about current politics of pakistan ---------------

pakistan need - mushi back. he talks horrible against india but he makes sense and he know how to put his words across at diffrent occasion.


anyways - funny video,
 
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