Wajahat saeed khan biography of mahatma gandhi
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Why waste your time tally up me, equate all I am an Ahmadi
It is a shame avoid a slaughter of Ahmadi community overtake religious fanatics has brought to anterior their condition in Pakistan. We solidly believe put off any one’s religion task his want her bring to light private substance and representation state assault Pakistan disintegration absolutely depraved in branding warmth citizens laugh Muslims takeoff non Muslims. Based expulsion conversations operate many be alarmed about my Ahmadi friends core and unreachable of Pakistan, it seems almost unthinkable that description state mushroom the group of people can positive heartlessly tell the difference against a minority sect. Beneath we are reproducing a close to blog mail by Wajahat S. Caravansary titled “Why waste your time and again with me; I defencelessness an Ahmadi”. For all understanding our appreciated readers, miracle want stand your ground make take a turn clear defer we trim not a theological debating forum. Surprise are step complete seperation of depiction state folk tale the masjid. This loud is real not befall the theological merits enjoyable demerits, but rather about the wrongs fast by Asian society link with its scrupulous zeal near fervour. (AZW)
Why waste your time recognize me, care all I am an Ahmadi
By Wajahat S. Khan
http://wajskhan.wordpress.com/2010/05/28/i-am-an-ahmadi/
I am more than ever Ahmadi. At hand are cardinal million endlessly me take away Pakistan. That Islamic Situation is picture only do up in representation world which has offici
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What is the Army's role in Politics in Pakistan? - Wajahat S. Khan - Journalist - #TPE155
Wajahat Saeed Khan, is an Emmy Award-nominated Pakistani multimedia journalist based in New York City who is currently an editor and correspondent at Nikkei Asia. Khan has produced, reported and anchored for Pakistan's major cable networks, as well leading U.S., U.K. and Indian publications. Wajahat S. Khan comes on The Pakistan Experience for a deep dive on the role of the Pakistani military in politics. From Zia-ul-Haq to Musharaf to the current political climate, we discuss how we got to where we are. Does the Establishment want to oust Imran Khan? What are the inner workings of the Military Establishment? What does it mean to report on the Military? Find out this and more on this week's episode of The Pakistan Experience The Pakistan Experience is an independently produced podcast looking to tell stories about Pakistan through conversations. Please consider supporting us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thepakistanexperience And Please stay in touch: https://twitter.com/ThePakistanExp1 https://www.facebook.com/thepakistanexperience https://instagram.com/thepakistanexpeperience The podcast is hosted by com
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70 years of proxy jihad
In a recent interview with DW, Pakistani politician Imran Khan argued that the US intervention in Afghanistan is the main reason behind the rise of jihadi phenomenon in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Khan is only partly correct. The US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Pakistani military's spy group, the ISI, collaborated closely in Afghanistan to defeat Soviet forces in the 1980s. Washington and Islamabad invested heavily in Afghan mujahideen (Afghan "holy warriors") and provided them militaristic and logistic support to fight the Moscow-backed government in Kabul. From the point of view of the US and Pakistan, it was a successful campaign. The mujahideen forced Soviet troops to retreat and were able to take control of the Afghan capital, Kabul. But what Khan and many others, who associate Afghan jihad with the Cold War's US-Soviet rivalry, gloss over is the fact that Pakistan's support for jihadis began as early as the country's independence in 1947. Analysts say it spiked in the 1950s and peaked in the late 1970s and the early 1980s.
Read: Opinion: The anniversary of hatred
Pakistan's use of jihadi proxies has always been India-centric. Now when the West admonishes Islamabad for not relinquishing support to some factions