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Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM) sponsored by NDS & RAW

Daalkhor insan

Tauheen na karo gosht ki. Warna ababeel se kankar parenge
Mein daal shauq se nahin khata. Samandur ke paas paida howa hun machli khata hun, aur ababeel ke pathar high cholestrol se behtar hain.

Don't be so insecure. A decorum is needed to air your grievances within a framework of a state if not might as well be Syria and call it a day. This is what seperates the civilized from the uncivilized.
Sadly that decorum was lost the day the unionists and dictators had their day.
Syria was more civil and advanced with better roads and tourism than Pakistan any day after 1970.
 
Mein daal shauq se nahin khata. Samandur ke paas paida howa hun machli khata hun, aur ababeel ke pathar high cholestrol se behtar hain.

Edde aap Salt Bay of Machi world.

Per daal ke khilaaf bolne per vote apka hua
 
Mein daal shauq se nahin khata. Samandur ke paas paida howa hun machli khata hun, aur ababeel ke pathar high cholestrol se behtar hain.


Sadly that decorum was lost the day the unionists and dictators had their day.
Syria was more civil and advanced with better roads and tourism than Pakistan any day after 1970.
But what about Syria NOW?
 
No u are highly mistaken. Also one doesnt have to hate a person just cause he is religious i am also very religious.

As of thelahorejoker he is NOT religious at all he is a typical liberal secular found in our country who we can see openly spouting hate from media houses like dawn. He is one like asma jahangir. Was asma a religious person? No never. So please dont let ur hate for religious people mislead ypu into categorizing every person in one category. Hussain haqqani , tariq fateh are other such examples none of these are religious , this guy the lahore hoe is a copycat of these.
I actually get along with many religious types quite well as long as they do no post non sense here.I am not against his ideology but his stupid posts are annoying.
Everyone has a right to follow whatever he likes but at least patriotism and nationalism is expected from everyone.I can blame every Islamist by naming osama bin laden etc overall seculars are much better,progressive minded and rational than brain dead islamists. It is a well know in our history of 70 years islamists and religious types caused much more harm to this country than the liberals and seculars you hate.
@Zibago
 
Don't like calling out flags but when you said a tiny segment cut off from society I hope you meant yourself.

And how exactly do you define "oppression" ? How about having federal control over an area since creation and yet close to no infrastructue ? Hell they don't even have Pakistani ID cards.

Do you think the rest of Pakistan have infrastructure? only few big cities have infrastructure.The rest are on their own.

And Army has build more infrastructure there then the gov. and he is still maligning Army.

And how does demand for infrastructure turned into ethnic support group against the state?
 
*SHABQADAR: *A social movement for demining the once militancy hit Waziristan agency and recovery of missing Pashtun people has been painted as a force working against the security forces and the state of Pakistan.

People in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) and Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) took out rallies against Pakhtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM).

The rallies were organised by a newly formed Pakistan Zindabad Movement, across the FATA and K-P.

PTM had rose to prominence after it held mammoth protests for the arrest of Karachi’s SSP Rao Anwar for the extrajudicial killing of Naqueebullah Mehsud.

Protestors in rallies said they were marching to pay tribute to the sacrifices rendered by the security force for maintaining peace in FATA and K-P.

Anti-PTM rallies were held in Mohmand, Khyber, Kurram agencies and also in the K-P towns of Kohat, Shabqadar and Charsadda. People from different walks of lives praised the Pak Army and its sacrifices for maintaining peace in FATA and K-P. Protestors termed PTM anti-state and anti-forces.

The organisers of these rallies even called PTM an agent of RAW and NDS with a mission to defame the Pakistani security forces.

The organisers warned that if PTM did not let up their foreign agenda the Pashtun people will come after them


https://timesofislamabad.com/03-Apr-2018/pashtun-tahafuz-movement-ptm-sponsored-by-raw-nds


Pakhtun renaissance


A YEAR ago, the Fata administration held a seminar on reforms in a hotel in Peshawar. The governor of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa was the chief guest and the invitees were mostly maliks. The youth of Fata came to know of it and gate-crashed the event, booing the maliks for opposing the reforms recommended by the Sartaj Aziz committee. The event was unceremoniously concluded, and the governor left without ever addressing the seminar.

Referring to this incident, many intellectuals warned that any delay in reforms will increase frustration among Fata’s youth, leading to similar incidents, which may turn ugly at some point. We have witnessed long marches, sit-ins and grand jirgas of various political parties all in favour of reforms, yet have seen no results. Fata’s parliamentarians, political parties, civil society, and particularly the youth have adopted every lawful means to practically beg for constitutional rights as equal citizens. Meanwhile, the government, in its wisdom, has apparently shelved the idea of reforms altogether. Having exhausted all available options, the people of Fata ask: what are we to do now?

With this background, a tsunami of young Pakhtuns have risen up. No one had heard about the Mehsud Tahaffuz Movement (now the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement, or PTM) when it organised its long march to Islamabad. The organisers themselves probably did not expect the kind of response they got, with Fata’s youth joined by more Pakhtun youth from KP and Balochistan. The way they staged their protest was impressive, and soon many political parties and civil society organisations wanted to be identified with them, and many leaders visited the sit-in and pledged their support.

PTM came to Islamabad with a few genuine and practical demands. The movement ought to have fizzled out after many of these demands were met, ie Rao Anwar’s arrest (in connection with Naqeebullah’s death), demining the area, replacing Watan cards with CNICs. But others soon joined in, as a reaction to the decades of alienation felt by Pakhtuns in general and those of Fata in particular. The support PTM received within the country and abroad was beyond their expectations. The mainstream electronic media that ignored the Islamabad sit-in has also began giving them space listening to what they have to say. Every individual has his heart-wrenching story and desires a sympathetic ear.

Marginalised youth have found their voice.

Since the Islamabad sit-in, PTM has been holding rallies in Fata, KP and Balochistan (‘southern Pakhtunkhwa’, as they call it). Though their first sit-in and the rallies that followed have been peaceful, many fear they will end up becoming violent. And, surprisingly, Pakhtun nationalist political parties fear them as their replacement and have thus advised their workers to stay away from PTM. But the movement is here to stay. The Pakhtun have found their voice in PTM’s lead anthem, Da sanga azadi da (what kind of freedom is this).

Many believe this is the dawn of a Pakhtun renaissance, as the youth seek to redefine their political status and create a new social contract with the state. Fata’s people in particular have stopped looking up to the recognised leaders, the maliks and mullahs, and have come up with an alternate leadership among the youth. For the first time, someone other than a mullah has been able to gather the Pakhtun under one banner. For too long, they have suffered under the oppressive Frontier Crimes Regulation and militancy. They have seen life down country and the attendant rights enjoyed there, and will not settle for anything less.

The Pakhtun are in pain and they need to be comforted. The political parties shouldn’t view them as rivals; rather they should join their voice for a just cause. The mature leadership of the political parties has the ability to steer the youth away from harm’s way. Left on their own, already frustrated and feeling like the government does not care, they may turn to violence. Anger has been building, and like Naqeebullah’s murder, any event can ignite this tinderbox of seething anger.

So when PTM holds its grand rally in Peshawar, scheduled for April 8, those in power have to be careful. The use of brute force can turn the movement into a revolt. And third-rate politicians should not be pitted against them to brand them as traitors and foreign agents. There should be no attempt to sabotage the rally; they must be heard; they have not made a single illegal demand.

For 15 years, the government has been fighting against extremist militants, yet the war is far from over. No war can be won without the support of the people, and our state is far from winning the hearts and minds of the Pakhtun youth in general and Fata youth in particular. The government, instead of ignoring these protesting Pakhtuns, ought to embrace them.

The writer is a former bureaucrat and author of Cheegha, The Call.



https://www.dawn.com/news/1399271/pakhtun-renaissance
How pashtunes are marginalized they are everywhere in Pakistan the author may be on some ones pay roll NAB should investigate it Nip the evil in the bud
 
This was said by an Iranian king about Pashtuns. Iranian history books refer to Pashtuns when they speak about Afghans

How pashtunes are marginalized they are everywhere in Pakistan the author may be on some ones pay roll NAB should investigate it Nip the evil in the bud
These people are protesting against the circumstances in FATA and tribal areas mainly. Pashtuns doing well in all fields in Pakistan doesn't the small minority that feels neglected shouldn't speak out against it

I'm not saying that the movement doesn't have Afghan influence, it certainly does. But the Afghans endorsing this campaign doesn't make it afghan. That's like saying Pakistan owns the Kashmiri struggle because we support it. By equating every movement to a foreign agenda you are alienating the people who support it that only deepens the hard feelings. Most of the demands of the movement are pretty fair. Asking for infrastructure and a legal identity for your people isn't playing into some enemies hands, it's giving basic rights to your own people. Admittedly removing checkposts is not an acceptable term.



Lol I'm aware of that. And by now it's well established that Altaf had started taking foreign funding to further his cause but such was not the case at the time.
I'm glad someone's actually getting the damn point

drop me out, Afghan Nazis are the bane of this world

Just ask the Germans who gave these Afghans refugee status and they returned them the favour back by raping young boys and girls in Germany. These animals deserve to live in the stone age
Pakistani men set up an entire gang raping upto 100s of white minor girls in Northern England for many years. Not gonna mention amount of Pakistani drives improsoned for harassment of white female passengers
 
'We are against the oppressors': PTM leader Manzoor Pashteen tells thousands at Peshawar rally

5aca195697f59.jpg

A view of the Pakhtun Tahafuz Movement's (PTM) rally in Peshawar on Sunday. — Photo by Author

Pashtun Tahafuz Movement's (PTM) grand gathering in Peshawar kicked off on Sunday afternoon with the speakers demanding the release of missing persons as well as provision of basic human rights to the Pakhtun community in Pakistan.

People numbering in thousands, from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata), participated in the gathering at Pishtakhra Chowk near Ring Road and intermittently chanted the slogan da sang azadi da (what kind of freedom is this) — their movement's rallying cry.

The families of missing persons arrived at the gathering holding pictures of their loved ones, whose whereabouts remain unknown.

"We are only against the oppressors," PTM leader Manzoor Pashteen told a charged audience as he took the stage.

"We are only the 'agents' of our nation," he said, addressing allegations that the movement is being backed by foreign agencies.

"What has happened so far for the missing persons?" he asked. "The mothers and elders whose beloveds are missing should not be coerced."

5aca19dc6d6ab.jpg

Family members of a missing person hold poster demanding his recovery. — Photo by Author


"In Karachi, money is taken in return for bodies. Even Genghis Khan did not take money after killing people," Pashteen said.

"After Rao Anwar (the ex-SSP Malir accused of the extrajudicial murder of Naqeebullah Mehsud), it is now the turn of Ehsanullah Ehsan (former TTP leader)," he said, demanding that the erstwhile TTP spokesperson should be brought to the courts.

"After Ehsanullah, we will bring [former president] Musharraf to the courts," he added.

He also spoke about how businesses in Fata have been affected by the ensuing violence. "Fruit from Wana and Swat is being sold in Lahore instead of Peshawar."

"In Waziristan, the 'good Taliban' are threatening the people," he said.

Pashteen demanded that the practice of imposing curfews in Fata should come to an end, and that schools, hospitals under occupation should return to their usual course of action.

"We will go to every village until our demands are met," Pashteen announced, adding that more jalsas will be held in Karachi, Hyderabad, Loralai and Bannu, followed by a sit-in in Islamabad.

He also announced that a gathering named "Jalsa Raddul Fasaad" will be held on April 22 in Lahore, whereas another one in Swat on April 29 will be called "Raah-e-Raast".

The Islamabad sit-in would end only after an international guarantee, Pashteen told the audience.

He also said that a rally will be taken to Waziristan after Ramazan.

"We have to give the coming generations a bright future," he concluded.

5aca1af0d32f6.jpg

Thousands gather to demand basic human rights at PTM jalsa in Peshawar. — Photo by Author


'Basic rights'
Earlier, highlighting the plight of the tribal people, PTM's central leader Ali Wazir said that bloodshed was being spread across the country. "The people of Fata have been rendered homeless while their belongings have been destroyed," he added, demanding a human rights commission — rather than a judicial commission — to investigate the issues of Fata's people.

Meanwhile, PTM leader Sanna Ejaz demanded the closure of National Logistics Cell units in Torkham, Chaman and Ghulam Khan, as well as the return of properties in Swat and Malakand to their rightful owners.

Read: ‘Pakhtun Tahaffuz Movement has no anti-state agenda’

"The people of tribal areas should be given the same rights as the people of Lahore and Islamabad," she said, demanding an end to target killing of Pakhtuns and the provision of basic human rights to the people of tribal areas.

Other speakers demanded that facilities such as hospitals, schools and colleges should be provided in Fata, vowing to continue their demand for rights within the ambit of the Constitution.

"Sindhis, Balochs and even the oppressed Punjabis are looking towards you today," a speaker said in Urdu, addressing the crowd, adding that the movement's leader Manzoor Pashteen is the last hope of the oppressed in the country.

The speakers included a mix of emotionally charged young men and women as well as elders, who read poems.

Related: Mazari red cap orders increase ahead of PTM meet

Leaders of other political parties also spoke at the gathering. Pakhtunhwa Milli Awami Party (PkMAP) Senator Usman Kakar said that whoever wants peace, education, employment and hospitals for Pakhtuns is a friend, while those wanting unrest are the enemy.

"Rao Anwar is the name of a mindset which should be put to an end," Senator Kakar said.

There were unconfirmed reports of 3G and 4G internet service being interrupted in the area. A Twitter account — said to be the movement's official account — alleged that "internet connectivity was being constantly interrupted by the state".



The Pakhtun spring
Reports of protests led by the PTM in Islamabad first made headlines following the extrajudicial killing of Waziristan native Naqeebullah Mehsud — a shopkeeper and aspiring model — in Karachi in January.

The PTM — an organisation working for the rights of those affected by war on terror in Tribal Areas especially those from South Waziristan — staged protests in different parts of the country against alleged enforced disappearances, extrajudicial arrests and killings, as well as the mistreatment of the Pakhtun community by security forces.

Explore: Pakhtun renaissance

The movement's leaders claim that in the past decade, 32,000 Pashtuns have gone missingfrom Fata. They insist that their struggle is to ensure implementation of the Constitution, under which law-enforcement agencies are supposed to provide details of the people they pick up and present them before courts.
 
'We are against the oppressors': PTM leader Manzoor Pashteen tells thousands at Peshawar rally

5aca195697f59.jpg

A view of the Pakhtun Tahafuz Movement's (PTM) rally in Peshawar on Sunday. — Photo by Author

Pashtun Tahafuz Movement's (PTM) grand gathering in Peshawar kicked off on Sunday afternoon with the speakers demanding the release of missing persons as well as provision of basic human rights to the Pakhtun community in Pakistan.

People numbering in thousands, from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata), participated in the gathering at Pishtakhra Chowk near Ring Road and intermittently chanted the slogan da sang azadi da (what kind of freedom is this) — their movement's rallying cry.

The families of missing persons arrived at the gathering holding pictures of their loved ones, whose whereabouts remain unknown.

"We are only against the oppressors," PTM leader Manzoor Pashteen told a charged audience as he took the stage.

"We are only the 'agents' of our nation," he said, addressing allegations that the movement is being backed by foreign agencies.

"What has happened so far for the missing persons?" he asked. "The mothers and elders whose beloveds are missing should not be coerced."

5aca19dc6d6ab.jpg

Family members of a missing person hold poster demanding his recovery. — Photo by Author


"In Karachi, money is taken in return for bodies. Even Genghis Khan did not take money after killing people," Pashteen said.

"After Rao Anwar (the ex-SSP Malir accused of the extrajudicial murder of Naqeebullah Mehsud), it is now the turn of Ehsanullah Ehsan (former TTP leader)," he said, demanding that the erstwhile TTP spokesperson should be brought to the courts.

"After Ehsanullah, we will bring [former president] Musharraf to the courts," he added.

He also spoke about how businesses in Fata have been affected by the ensuing violence. "Fruit from Wana and Swat is being sold in Lahore instead of Peshawar."

"In Waziristan, the 'good Taliban' are threatening the people," he said.

Pashteen demanded that the practice of imposing curfews in Fata should come to an end, and that schools, hospitals under occupation should return to their usual course of action.

"We will go to every village until our demands are met," Pashteen announced, adding that more jalsas will be held in Karachi, Hyderabad, Loralai and Bannu, followed by a sit-in in Islamabad.

He also announced that a gathering named "Jalsa Raddul Fasaad" will be held on April 22 in Lahore, whereas another one in Swat on April 29 will be called "Raah-e-Raast".

The Islamabad sit-in would end only after an international guarantee, Pashteen told the audience.

He also said that a rally will be taken to Waziristan after Ramazan.

"We have to give the coming generations a bright future," he concluded.

5aca1af0d32f6.jpg

Thousands gather to demand basic human rights at PTM jalsa in Peshawar. — Photo by Author


'Basic rights'
Earlier, highlighting the plight of the tribal people, PTM's central leader Ali Wazir said that bloodshed was being spread across the country. "The people of Fata have been rendered homeless while their belongings have been destroyed," he added, demanding a human rights commission — rather than a judicial commission — to investigate the issues of Fata's people.

Meanwhile, PTM leader Sanna Ejaz demanded the closure of National Logistics Cell units in Torkham, Chaman and Ghulam Khan, as well as the return of properties in Swat and Malakand to their rightful owners.

Read: ‘Pakhtun Tahaffuz Movement has no anti-state agenda’

"The people of tribal areas should be given the same rights as the people of Lahore and Islamabad," she said, demanding an end to target killing of Pakhtuns and the provision of basic human rights to the people of tribal areas.

Other speakers demanded that facilities such as hospitals, schools and colleges should be provided in Fata, vowing to continue their demand for rights within the ambit of the Constitution.

"Sindhis, Balochs and even the oppressed Punjabis are looking towards you today," a speaker said in Urdu, addressing the crowd, adding that the movement's leader Manzoor Pashteen is the last hope of the oppressed in the country.

The speakers included a mix of emotionally charged young men and women as well as elders, who read poems.

Related: Mazari red cap orders increase ahead of PTM meet

Leaders of other political parties also spoke at the gathering. Pakhtunhwa Milli Awami Party (PkMAP) Senator Usman Kakar said that whoever wants peace, education, employment and hospitals for Pakhtuns is a friend, while those wanting unrest are the enemy.

"Rao Anwar is the name of a mindset which should be put to an end," Senator Kakar said.

There were unconfirmed reports of 3G and 4G internet service being interrupted in the area. A Twitter account — said to be the movement's official account — alleged that "internet connectivity was being constantly interrupted by the state".



The Pakhtun spring
Reports of protests led by the PTM in Islamabad first made headlines following the extrajudicial killing of Waziristan native Naqeebullah Mehsud — a shopkeeper and aspiring model — in Karachi in January.

The PTM — an organisation working for the rights of those affected by war on terror in Tribal Areas especially those from South Waziristan — staged protests in different parts of the country against alleged enforced disappearances, extrajudicial arrests and killings, as well as the mistreatment of the Pakhtun community by security forces.

Explore: Pakhtun renaissance

The movement's leaders claim that in the past decade, 32,000 Pashtuns have gone missingfrom Fata. They insist that their struggle is to ensure implementation of the Constitution, under which law-enforcement agencies are supposed to provide details of the people they pick up and present them before courts.
God knows where these people go . How can govt track them down. Hundred die in Afghanistan, crossing Iran border for Europe, boat capsize etc etc .... How a govt can locate such people. All is due to no education. Actually , at the end of every suicide attack they media found a pashtun kid. Thousands of extremist seminaries establish in FATA or Pashtun region. This is whole belt is infested . TTP headquarter in FATA mountains. How much army can do ??
 
This is a separatist movement and unfortunately supported by a large number of gullible pushtuns.
 
The establishment has completely failed to anticipate this and this now threatens the integrity of the state.
 
One can't force people to tie up together....I don't know what's the issue...If they don't need check posts so remove the same....If they don't need Army , Army should withdraw ...
 

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