and meanwhile - thousands of Sikhs from india and around the world will be allowed to come to Pakistan to visit their holy land
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yes we too..
now as per some rogh eleemtn in pak like HS who openly call jiahd in india..
sorry we cant do it NOW>>>NOW>>>
We dont burn them alive the way some of your country men did to our citizens aboard the Samjhota Express in 2007; that much I can tell you.
If you failed to comprehend my earlier post - well, sorry, cant help ya
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Samjauto express was shame incident and people are behind bars.. but still we cant say we did all whihc we could ..
but that cant be intremtn of you guys to judge us
200 Pakistani pilgrims refused entry into India
The Newspaper's Correspondent
Updated about 4 hours ago
A view of the India-Pakistan Wagah border. — Reuters/file
TOBA TEK SINGH: Around 200 Pakistani pilgrims intended to visit Sarhand Sharif to attend the annual Urs of Hazrat Mujaddid Alif Sani (RA) were refused entry into India on Thursday.
Among them were 25 pilgrims of Sarhand Colony and other localities of Toba Tek Singh.
A local newspaper reporter, Afzal Gujjar, said when pilgrims reached the Lahore railway station to board Samjhota Express, they were informed that India had not allowed their entry due to security reasons.
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reason is in your backyard
Hafiz Saeed leads mass rally in Islamabad - Pakistan - DAWN.COM
Hafiz Saeed leads mass rally in Islamabad
Reuters
Published Sep 07, 2013 12:30am
O O
Hafiz Saeed, head of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa organisation and founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba, waves to his supporters during a rally marking Pakistan's Defense Day in Islamabad. -Reuters Photo
ISLAMABAD: Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Saeed appeared openly at a rally in Islamabad on Friday, denouncing India as a terrorist state as thousands of his supporters chanted for “holy war” against the rival nuclear nation.
India has accused Hafiz Saeed of masterminding the 2008 attack on its financial capital Mumbai where gunmen killed 166 people over three days. The United States has offered $10 million for information leading to his arrest and conviction.
As dusk fell, more than 10,000 people gathered in Islamabad in a show of defiance certain to enrage India further following weeks of tensions over the disputed Kashmir border.
“The United States and India are very angry with us. This means God is happy with us,” Saeed told the crowd as supporters chanted “Jihad!” (“Holy war”) and “War will continue until the liberation of Kashmir”. He did not use the word “jihad” himself.
“We are ready for every sacrifice for the liberation of Kashmir,” the stocky and bearded former professor added at the rally marking Pakistan's Defence Day.
Speaking about Sarabjit Singh, an Indian prisoner who died in a Pakistani jail this year and was given a state funeral back home, Saeed told the crowd: “He was a terrorist. How can the Indian government give state honours to a terrorist? This means the Indian government and army are terrorists.”
India has called on Pakistan to bring Saeed to justice, an issue that has stood in the way of rebuilding relations between the nuclear-armed neighbours since the Mumbai carnage.
Saeed is the founder of the LeT, a militant group banned in Pakistan but tolerated unofficially and believed to be close to the army. Saeed has long abandoned its leadership and is now the head of its charity wing.
India is furious that Pakistan has not detained him since it handed over evidence against him to Islamabad, and allows Saeed to live freely in the city of Lahore in a villa with police stationed outside.
Relations plunged to further lows last month after the killing of five Indian soldiers along the so-called Line of Control that separates the two sides in the Himalayan region of Kashmir.
BELLIGERENT MOOD
Seeking to defuse tensions, Pakistan's civilian leaders have kept a conciliatory tone, but on Friday, as thousands gathered in Islamabad, emotions spilled into the open.
The mood was strikingly anti-Western and belligerent, with speakers openly declaring their sympathy for the Taliban fighting Western forces in neighbouring Afghanistan.
“India should stop describing Kashmir as its indispensable part,” Saeed said from a makeshift stage mounted on a truck. “Otherwise every part of India would be dispensable for us.”
As the crowd cheered, two men performed a patriotic song threatening to “turn the whole of India into Mumbai”.
Others chanted “Whoever is a friend of India is a traitor” and waved black and white striped flags.
“They should know there are a lot of people here who are waiting for the conquest of India,” Hamid Gul, a former chief of the ISI intelligence service, told the crowd.
“It will be our privilege to take part in this war.”
Saeed founded the LeT, which India blames for the rampage in Mumbai, in the 1990s. He has denied involvement in any attacks.
He abandoned the leadership after India accused the LeT of being behind an attack on the Indian parliament in December 2001.
His charity, linked to the LeT, enjoys popular support for its humanitarian work.