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Zardari had Stroke Facial Paralysis

hey bhagwan meri jaan lele par zardari ko bacha le..he is the best PM of pakistan:rofl:

but you are indian not pakistani :rofl::rofl:

zardari bache na bache per tu jalan ki aag main zarur bache ga nahi :lol:
 
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@ all the people praying for his death
Our prophet has set a much better example than what you guys are showing right now.Our religion teaches us much better than that.Please, never pray for someone's death.Be human for the love of God.
 
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so he did not have facial paralysis already..it sure looked like he did..
 
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I agree with you that it is a drama but it is more than JUST introducing Bilawal.

Remember! he was asked by supreme court few days ago (on the day of Nawaz Sharif petition hearing) to submit reply in memogate. Now he has developed the drama of STROKE and he will say that "I cannot remember, I lost my memory due to stroke". He can claim selective amnesia due to stroke.

But he remembers all his bank account numbers and the balance available.
 
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I agree with you that it is a drama but it is more than JUST introducing Bilawal.

Remember! he was asked by supreme court few days ago (on the day of Nawaz Sharif petition hearing) to submit reply in memogate. Now he has developed the drama of STROKE and he will say that "I cannot remember, I lost my memory due to stroke". He can claim selective amnesia due to stroke

Even with this he cannot continue in that position any more as per constitutional rules. head of the state should not be in any medical conditions which prevent him/her from his/her duties..

END OF THE GAME
 
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@ all the people praying for his death
Our prophet has set a much better example than what you guys are showing right now.Our religion teaches us much better than that.Please, never pray for someone's death.Be human for the love of God.
Xcatly tht wht im saying...Long Live Zardari..Long live pakistan.... :)
 
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December 9, 2011

Zardari 'most likely' suffered mini stroke, party member says

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, who has spent three days in a Dubai hospital, sparking frenzied speculation, "most likely" suffered a mini stroke, a member of his party told AFP on Friday

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, who has spent three days in a Dubai hospital, sparking frenzied speculation, "most likely" suffered a mini stroke, a member of his party told AFP on Friday.

Officials said Zardari was moved out of intensive care at the American Hospital on Thursday but was still being treated, forcing allies to deny rumours that he may resign.

A cabinet member said earlier in the week that he suffered a "minor heart attack" but a senior member of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) told AFP on Friday that the cause was "most likely a transient ischemic attack".

Medics describe a transient ischemic attack as a mini stroke that briefly cuts off blood flow to part of the brain, leaving the patient with stroke-like symptoms for a maximum of two hours.

Attacks do not cause lasting damage, but are understood to be an indicator of a possible stroke in the future. The PPP official said that doctors would announce a final diagnosis shortly.

Medical observation

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari will continue to be under medical observation in Dubai for some more days and it may last even more than two weeks before he returns home, Gulf News learnt Thursday.

Zardari, who was admitted in the American Hospital in Dubai on Tuesday night, was moved from the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) to a room on Thursday, his close aide in the hospital said. He also underwent some more tests on Thursday for the third consecutive day.

"President Zardari's condition is stable, he is OK," said presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar.

Officials at the Pakistan Embassy were unable to say when the president will return home and declined to comment further.

"It can take two days or even more than two weeks, it all depends on what doctors advise him," one of his aides told Gulf News. He may leave the hospital and rest in his house under observation of doctors, but we want him to stay here because he needs rest," he said.

After speculations died down of Zardari's resignation on the pretext of illness, a top official in Pakistan told Gulf News that Zardari may not return to Pakistan until the end of this month because of the expected decisions on ‘memogate' scandal; the National Reconciliation Order, and the release of Abbottabad Commission report on Osama Bin Laden's killing by US forces.

gulfnews : Zardari 'most likely' suffered mini stroke, party member says

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A cabinet member said earlier in the week that he suffered a "minor heart attack" but a senior member of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) told AFP on Friday that the cause was "most likely a transient ischemic attack".

After speculations died down of Zardari's resignation on the pretext of illness, a top official in Pakistan told Gulf News that Zardari may not return to Pakistan until the end of this month because of the expected decisions on ‘memogate' scandal; the National Reconciliation Order, and the release of Abbottabad Commission report on Osama Bin Laden's killing by US forces.

So first they said normal check ups and then heart attack and now storke. Too much cooking is not good. It may be surely that he is definately in a bad condition or this is his acting.

"It can take two days or even more than two weeks, it all depends on what doctors advise him," one of his aides told Gulf News. He may leave the hospital and rest in his house under observation of doctors, but we want him to stay here because he needs rest," he said.

Chances of him being assasinated at home are more than in a hospital in UAE :devil:
 
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i think after memogate scandal, PM is with army and zardari is left alone, thats y all this drama ...
 
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A transient ischemic attack (spelled ischaemic in British English)[1] (abbreviated as TIA, often referred to as "mini stroke") is a transient episode of neurologic dysfunction caused by ischemia (loss of blood flow) – either focal brain, spinal cord or retinal – without acute infarction (tissue death). TIAs share the same underlying etiology (cause) as strokes: a disruption of cerebral blood flow (CBF). TIAs and strokes cause the same symptoms, such as contralateral paralysis (opposite side of body from affected brain hemisphere) or sudden weakness or numbness. A TIA may cause sudden dimming or loss of vision, aphasia, slurred speech and mental confusion. But unlike a stroke, the symptoms of a TIA can resolve within a few minutes or 24 hours. Brain injury may still occur in a TIA lasting only a few minutes. Having a TIA is a risk factor for eventually having a stroke or a silent stroke.[2][3] A silent stroke or silent cerebral infarct (SCI) differs from a TIA in that there are no immediately observable symptoms. A SCI may still cause long lasting neurological dysfunction affecting such areas as mood, personality and cognition. A SCI often occurs before or after a TIA or major stroke.[4]

Transient ischemic attack - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

So he may think the female pakistani ambasador to USA is Hilary Clinton :D and so on .................
 
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A transient ischemic attack (spelled ischaemic in British English)[1] (abbreviated as TIA, often referred to as "mini stroke") is a transient episode of neurologic dysfunction caused by ischemia (loss of blood flow) – either focal brain, spinal cord or retinal – without acute infarction (tissue death). TIAs share the same underlying etiology (cause) as strokes: a disruption of cerebral blood flow (CBF). TIAs and strokes cause the same symptoms, such as contralateral paralysis (opposite side of body from affected brain hemisphere) or sudden weakness or numbness. A TIA may cause sudden dimming or loss of vision, aphasia, slurred speech and mental confusion. But unlike a stroke, the symptoms of a TIA can resolve within a few minutes or 24 hours. Brain injury may still occur in a TIA lasting only a few minutes. Having a TIA is a risk factor for eventually having a stroke or a silent stroke.[2][3] A silent stroke or silent cerebral infarct (SCI) differs from a TIA in that there are no immediately observable symptoms. A SCI may still cause long lasting neurological dysfunction affecting such areas as mood, personality and cognition. A SCI often occurs before or after a TIA or major stroke.[4]

Transient ischemic attack - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

So he may think the female pakistani ambasador to USA is Hilary Clinton :D and so on .................

And is that enough for him to resign from his position, as he is not able to continue the state duties...?
What a political death of this man, no sympathy Votes , no shaheed and end of Bhoto family from PPP... bilawal is too young to handle PPP and all these looters ...they see themselves in new picture... :)
 
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December 11, 2011

Pakistan suffers from many ills

Zardari's sickness in reality has much to do with the health of the ruling structure in the country

The past week has witnessed Pakistan once again thrown into a state of commotion following President Asif Ali Zardari's sudden departure for Dubai, ostensibly for treatment of a potentially serious medical condition. While accounts of his illness ranged from a cardiac ailment to a stroke, the latest reports suggest that Pakistan's head of state is in recovery mode and hopes to return home soon.

Once Zardari returns, questions surrounding his health will continue to make the rounds as they must in looking at any public figure on the face of this earth. Yet, a serious dimension of this entire episode could well have been avoided in the best tradition of democracy.

Unlike countries which remain totalitarian in terms of their politics, Pakistan has successfully embarked on a democratic route and lives in the hope of coming at par with its neighbouring democracies in south and south-east Asia. It is a country where institutions and not people ought to make a difference. Yet, Pakistan still has much of a gap to fill in rising to the occasion and becoming a truly democratic state.

Zardari, more than others in the ruling structure, has chosen to surround himself with a heavy concentration of authority — a choice that works only to undermine the best tradition of a democracy and shared decision making. He remains not only the president but co-leader of the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) — a controversial choice. Though he has successfully shed off some of the presidential powers, notably the authority to dismiss parliaments and elected governments, Zardari's clout is exercised more through his dominance of the PPP — a role that he inherited after the December 2007 assassination of his wife, Benazir Bhutto.

Setbacks

In the three years since Zardari became President following the election of a PPP-led ruling coalition, Pakistan has suffered in other ways too. The most significant among the setbacks to the country's prospects has indeed been a failure to lay the course for improving the lives of ordinary Pakistanis. While this has clearly not been achieved, thanks to Pakistan's collapsing economy, official slogans defending the country's democracy have only become hollow with the passage of time.

Moreover, Pakistan's security interests in more ways than one have been badly compromised. In addition to the growing economic malaise which increasingly threatens Pakistan's future prospects, the country's political disarray has only become the root of a growing challenge.

Under Zardari's watch, a periodic cobbling together of the ruling structure, simply to keep the top elite in place has done more harm than good.

Across the streets of Pakistan, many lament the PPP's alignment with stranger than expected political bedfellows.

The most telling such case was the decision to team up with the Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid-e-Azam (PML-Q), once lamented by the PPP's own leaders, on the basis of some PML-Q leaders having been allegedly responsible for Bhutto's assassination.

Last but not the least has been a visible erosion of the public's confidence in the government's willingness to ensure the rule of law. Prominent cases such as the refusal to comply with an order by the Supreme Court for Pakistan's top anti-corruption body to approach the Swiss authorities to reopen past cases of corruption against Zardari, remains a prominent example of this failure.

Once Zardari recovers from his ailment and returns, questions surrounding his physical health will inevitably haunt him. In reality there are also many questions about the health of the ruling structure. Clearly, Pakistanis have a right to ask their leaders to live by the best traditions of democracy — not just in name but in spirit.

Worst challenges

If Zardari and others such as Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani continue to defy their critics, Pakistan will remain stuck in its present position. This, as the country continues to be surrounded by some of the worst challenges in its 64-year history. Zardari's unexpected illness may have placed the spotlight squarely on his own wellbeing. Yet, what is truly at stake is the wellbeing of the country he rules in the name of democracy, where the ruling political structure still needs to rise to meet the aspirations of its people.

Farhan Bokhari is a Pakistan-based commentator who writes on political and economic matters.

gulfnews : Pakistan suffers from many ills
 
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