Now a days everyone in Pakistan looking each other what to do next.
Patriotic Politicians have no interest to think sincerly how to tackle
the on going grave situation in Pakistan. With the series of
atrocities took place in which hundereds have been slained brutally by
the forces of evil who are in the disguise of friends (internal &
external) forced people to think about $7.5 billion aid promised by
the axis of evil. This has been hailed by President & interior
minister of pakistan as great victory and start cultivating grounds
for their forces to be landed here, and once they get here then these
guys wrap up their lagguage and leave innocent people on their
own.Every one is confused about why this is happening and what is the
next...
So my fellow countrymen now it is a time for now and never. Allah
Almighty has said in his book when the warning time for nations get
over then thier is no one in this universe can help them in survival.
It is Allah Almighty who has said in Quran Surah 9 Verse 23 & 24
"O Jama'at-ul-Momineen do not take your fathers or your brothers for
friends if they prefer Kufr to Ei'man and whosoever amongst you will
do so will be deemed to be from the Z'alimeen. O Rasool tell the
Momineen, "If your fathers and your children and your brothers and
your wives and your kith and kin and the wealth that you have acquired
and the merchandise whose depreciation you fear and the dwellings of
which you are very fond - are dearer to you than the Divine Order and
striving in the cause of Allah, then wait and see what Allah's Law of
Mukaf'at will disclose. You know well that F'asiqeen cannot follow the
path leading to blissful life".
I think the time has come, thou we are very late in this to make our
blood sucking leadership & other frigid politicans an example to all
non humane humans both in the country & outside the country. Traitors
who are like mir jaffer and mir saddiq who have sold their mothers
blood to the vampires only for $ Dollars, now it is a pay back time
for them.
Dont get late this time otherwise history will never forgive us. It's
a time for Now & Never.
Nawaz
Religion Islam
www.parvez-video.com
-----------------
"Insurgent Threat Shifts in Pakistan"
"Assault on Police Academy Indicates Risk Has Moved Beyond Tribal
Areas"
By Pamela Constable
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, March 31, 2009; A01
KABUL, March 30 -- The brazen occupation of a Pakistani police academy
Monday by heavily armed gunmen near the eastern mega-city of Lahore
was the latest indication that Islamist terrorism, once confined to
Pakistan's northwest tribal belt, now threatens political stability
nationwide.
The precisely orchestrated assault by a squad of young men, which left
at least 11 people dead and took security forces nearly eight hours to
quell, was also a likely sign that Islamist militant groups in Punjab
province, once tolerated and even supported by the Pakistani state to
fight in India and Afghanistan, have turned openly against the
government.
The assault in the once-peaceful Punjabi heartland came four weeks
after an attack in Lahore in which gunmen opened fire on a visiting
Sri Lankan cricket team, killing seven people. The latest attack
raised new questions about the vulnerability of Pakistan, a nuclear-
armed Muslim state with a weak civilian government that only recently
emerged from a decade of military rule. Lahore, home to more than 10
million people, is a bustling provincial capital and is generally
considered the cultural heart of the country.
"The realization that this problem is now no longer confined to a
buffer zone with Afghanistan must dawn on everyone in Pakistan," said
Shuja Nawaz, a Pakistani American military expert, speaking from
Washington. "Pakistan has the wherewithal to deal with the problem,
but does its leadership have the will to do so?"
Pakistani officials, normally given to blaming India or other foreign
adversaries for fomenting anti-government violence, were unusually
frank in denouncing Monday's attack as the probable work of domestic
terrorists, who they said were attempting to destabilize the country.
Rehman Malik, the government's top civilian security official, told
journalists in Islamabad, the capital, that there are "thousands of
trained workers of banned militant organizations present in Pakistan
who could be used by foreign elements." He mentioned three armed
Islamist groups -- Lashkar-i-Taiba, Lashkar-i-Jhangvi and Jaish-i-
Muhammad -- and said the perpetrators had staged an "assault on the
integrity of the country."
At least a dozen young assailants traveling on foot used grenades,
assault rifles and rockets to commandeer a rural training compound in
Manawan, just a few miles from the border with India, as hundreds of
police recruits were beginning early morning parade drills. The
attackers took dozens of trainees hostage and held security forces at
bay until late afternoon, when a commando team stormed the complex,
killing several gunmen. Some of the gunmen who survived the raid
surrendered, while others blew themselves up.
Witnesses to the siege, including police trainees who managed to
escape the compound as the fighting continued, said they heard the
attackers speaking in Punjabi and in a southeast Pakistani dialect.
The escapees described seeing 15 to 20 armed men in their 20s, many of
whom had beards and some of whom wore suicide vests. They said some of
the attackers were dressed in police uniforms, while others were
wearing masks.
No group has asserted responsibility for the attack, but Pakistani
experts said the most likely source was Lashkar-i-Taiba, or Army of
the Pious, a militant Punjabi group. With help from the military, it
was formed in the early 1990s to fight in the disputed region of
Indian Kashmir, but later broadened its Islamist agenda and was banned
by the government several years ago.
The group is affiliated with a large religious school based at a
campus near Lahore. Officials have found evidence linking it to
several other recent terrorist attacks, including a three-day siege in
the Indian city of Mumbai that killed more than 170 people in
November, and a suicide truck bombing that killed more than 50 people
at Islamabad's luxury Marriott Hotel in September.
Pakistan has been an incubator for Islamist militant groups for the
past several decades. Until recently, they were focused on external
conflicts, especially the dispute over Indian Kashmir, the Soviet
occupation of Afghanistan during the 1980s and the presence of U.S.-
led forces in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban in late 2001.
In the past several years, extremist groups along the Afghan border
have turned inward, spreading violence and religious fanaticism among
the ethnic Pashtun populace in Pakistan's northwest. Pakistan has
tried to contain the problem through a combination of military
offensives and political negotiations, which are underway in several
conflicted border districts.
The Obama administration, faced with a protracted war against Taliban
insurgents in Afghanistan, has just launched a regional anti-terrorist
strategy that conditions economic aid to Pakistan on tougher Pakistani
action against insurgents based in safe havens along the border. U.S.
officials have publicly charged that some elements of Pakistan's army
and intelligence services still support the fighters as a
counterweight to India.
Now, however, the increasing pattern of insurgent assaults against
high-profile government and civilian targets in other regions of the
country -- especially in Punjab, the traditional home of Pakistan's
large and powerful armed forces -- suggests that militancy has spun
out of the government's control.
"The nexus between the militants in Punjab and in the tribal areas has
been clear for some time now," Nawaz said. "Now the question is
whether the government can penetrate and dismantle these networks. The
army is overstretched, so we have to start dealing with the causes of
militancy -- the vast gap between rich and poor, the lack of
governance -- that Pakistan has neglected for so long."
[Special correspondent Aoun Sahi in Lahore contributed to this
report.]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/30/AR2009033000098.html