What's new

65% of investors leave KPK amid deterorating law and order

Did you manage to read the second sentence?


That was posted at 15th May, 2013 before formation of KP govt. That was what JI demanded but was turned down later. Show me a proof where it shows Education Minister from JI..

Let me help you, check who is current Education Minister in KP. Then check since when he is with this ministry. And then check to which party he belongs. That might help you.
 
.
That was posted at 15th May, 2013 before formation of KP govt. That was what JI demanded but was turned down later. Show me a proof where it shows Education Minister from JI..

Let me help you, check who is current Education Minister in KP. Then check since when he is with this ministry. And then check to which party he belongs. That might help you.
Did you manage to read the third sentence?

I accepted that it was dated source, read the sentence again. Then I said, none the less (which means regardless), JI is influencing education with backward thoughts
 
.
bakwas ..our mqm na india ka sath mil ka krachi ka kya hal kya ha sare dunia ka samna ha shame mqm

1102767851-1.jpg

1102767851-2.gif

Translation
Target Killing, Extortion and terrorism among the major causes of capital flight. Majority of elements involved in terrorism have now shifted to extortion causing a fall in terror attacks but an increase in extortion calls. The property prices have plummeted to half. The capitalists have started to shift their business to safer cities like Isalamabad and lahore. Police and law enforcement agencies have broadly failed to resolve the issue.
old news 20013
 
. .
Did you manage to read the third sentence?

I accepted that it was dated source, read the sentence again. Then I said, none the less (which means regardless), JI is influencing education with backward thoughts


LOL, you are sticking to one point regardless of what I'm trying to convey. How much do you think JI can influence with only 8 - 9 seats in a coalition with PTI who has around 60 seats? Do the math.
 
.
LOL, you are sticking to one point regardless of what I'm trying to convey. How much do you think JI can influence with only 8 - 9 seats in a coalition with PTI who has around 60 seats? Do the math.
No.

You did not read my post properly twice. I did say it was outdated source but you didn't read that part.

I said regardless JI is influencing education, for which evidence is given.

PPP has many seats in Sindh, why do they need MQM in coalition? If PTI is happy with 60 seats, why not leave JI out of coalition?
 
.
which newspaper is this

Urdu media not worth asking for the link. Afghans buisness owners are moving back to Afghanistan and instead of telling the truth,they are making it PTI fault.
 
.
Urdu media not worth asking for the link. Afghans buisness owners are moving back to Afghanistan and instead of telling the truth,they are making it PTI fault.
Most of the Afghans are more involved in smuggling than business. And secondly, for Afghans Peshawar is like what is Dubai to rich Pakistanis so for them Peshawar is much safer viz-a-viz Kabul.
So implying that Afghans are shifting their investments is invalid because they mostly earn from black economy.
 
.
No where else in Pakistan, we see this.
1102810593-1.gif

And this one
1102810920-1.gif
 
.
More news
Peshawar: Murtaza Khan, a trader dealing in automobile spare parts in Peshawar’s Shoba Bazaar has recently established his business in Rawalpindi and Lahore.

He says that Rawalpindi and Lahore, especially the later, are much safer than Peshawar. “Now I hardly spend 10 days a month in my hometown [Peshawar],” says Khan.

The rising rate of violence related to extortion and kidnapping in the provincial capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) has triggered an exodus of businessmen and industrialists who are fleeing Peshawar to safer places, leaving thousands of other people attached to these businesses jobless.

According to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chamber of Commerce and Industry, around 150 professionals have left the province due to the fear of extortionists.

Extortion cases in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa—the northwestern province of Pakistan plagued by militancy for the last 10 years—has registered a ten-fold increase, reveals the official data.

Data collected from the Central Police Office Peshawar puts the annual average of extortion cases during the last three years—2011, 2012, 2013— at 30 cases per year. This jumped to 285 in the first three quarters of 2014. Further breakup of the data shows 13 cases of extortion were registered in 2011, 21 cases in in 2012 and 56 cases in 2013.

Inspector General of Police of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Nasir Khan Durrani, explains the increase in the extortion cases saying earlier people were hesitant to register extortion cases with the police. “Contrary to the recent past, now people register extortion cases with the police, hoping that they would get relief from police.”

President of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KPCCI), Fuad Ishaq, says that there is a constant threat of extortion to industrialists and traders of Peshawar. “This is why, Peshawar has witnessed flight of capital as well as migration of industrialists and traders to other parts of the country,” he says.

According to Ishaq, an industrialist of Peshawar is investing 10 billion rupees in Karachi and another is investing 5 billion rupees in Lahore. He contends that shifting of capital and industry has deeper impact on a society than migration of a thousand ordinary person leaving for another city.

Says Ishaq: “Had these industrialists fleeing the city had invested their capital in Peshawar, there would have been thousands of job opportunities.This will lead to unemployment, which is one of the major causes of growing extremism in our region.”

He says life in Peshawar has been turned into the life of a captive. An industrialist and trader who can wind up business in Peshawar, he says, does not waste a moment to shift to other, safer cities of the country.

“We don’t let our children go out of home without armed guards, especially after sunset,” says Ishaq. The KPCCI chief says one can find a number of Pakhtuns now living in new sectors of Islamabad, because everyone here feels insecure.

He says that in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, extortion cases are on the rise in Peshawar, Charsadda, Mardan, Nowshera, Swabi, Kohat, Lakki Marwat and Bannu districts.

“If the government is sincere to bring back peace to the militancy-hit province of Khyber Pakthunkhwa, it should work to restore the confidence of the industrialists and traders by providing security,” says Ishaq. Otherwise, he fears, extremism will only grow in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

An official of the Intelligence Bureau, a federally-run intelligence agency, tells the News Lens that militant groups like Lashkar-i-Islam, Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan Mohmand and the Umer Adezai group are actively involved in extortion.

He says that unlike kidnapping, extortion is much safer and easier. He says all that criminals need for extortion is an registered mobile phone Subscriber Identity Modules (SIM) .

“Just make a call to an rich person,” says the IB official, wishing not to be named due to sensitive nature of his job . “If he surrenders to their demand then okay, otherwise a bomb blast occurs just outside his house. If the person still refuses to pay, he is killed.”

This is exactly what happened to Haji Kabal Khan, a well known fruit merchant of Peshawar. “He would pay extortion to militants on monthly basis,” the official tells News Lens. “But all of a sudden he was asked to pay a huge amount of money. Haji Kabal refused to pay which cost him his life on December 23, 2013.”

“Once you surrender and start paying extortion, it becomes a never ending process,” says Mr. Ishaq.

The IB official differs, though. “Almost all the busy doctors in Peshawar pay extortion,” he says. “This is why we have witnessed a decrease in the kidnapping of doctors.
Capital flies out of KP with rise in extortion cases | NewsLens Pakistan
1102883212-1.gif
 
.
If that was the case, PTI wouldn't have won the local body elections in Peshawar. Take is as a pinch of salt
 
. .
I wonder if 65% figure was taken directly out of Nawaz's arse - as only master fraudia is capable of such accurate numbers!

More news
Peshawar: Murtaza Khan, a trader dealing in automobile spare parts in Peshawar’s Shoba Bazaar has recently established his business in Rawalpindi and Lahore.

He says that Rawalpindi and Lahore, especially the later, are much safer than Peshawar. “Now I hardly spend 10 days a month in my hometown [Peshawar],” says Khan.

The rising rate of violence related to extortion and kidnapping in the provincial capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) has triggered an exodus of businessmen and industrialists who are fleeing Peshawar to safer places, leaving thousands of other people attached to these businesses jobless.

According to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chamber of Commerce and Industry, around 150 professionals have left the province due to the fear of extortionists.

Extortion cases in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa—the northwestern province of Pakistan plagued by militancy for the last 10 years—has registered a ten-fold increase, reveals the official data.

Data collected from the Central Police Office Peshawar puts the annual average of extortion cases during the last three years—2011, 2012, 2013— at 30 cases per year. This jumped to 285 in the first three quarters of 2014. Further breakup of the data shows 13 cases of extortion were registered in 2011, 21 cases in in 2012 and 56 cases in 2013.

Inspector General of Police of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Nasir Khan Durrani, explains the increase in the extortion cases saying earlier people were hesitant to register extortion cases with the police. “Contrary to the recent past, now people register extortion cases with the police, hoping that they would get relief from police.”

President of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KPCCI), Fuad Ishaq, says that there is a constant threat of extortion to industrialists and traders of Peshawar. “This is why, Peshawar has witnessed flight of capital as well as migration of industrialists and traders to other parts of the country,” he says.

According to Ishaq, an industrialist of Peshawar is investing 10 billion rupees in Karachi and another is investing 5 billion rupees in Lahore. He contends that shifting of capital and industry has deeper impact on a society than migration of a thousand ordinary person leaving for another city.

Says Ishaq: “Had these industrialists fleeing the city had invested their capital in Peshawar, there would have been thousands of job opportunities.This will lead to unemployment, which is one of the major causes of growing extremism in our region.”

He says life in Peshawar has been turned into the life of a captive. An industrialist and trader who can wind up business in Peshawar, he says, does not waste a moment to shift to other, safer cities of the country.

“We don’t let our children go out of home without armed guards, especially after sunset,” says Ishaq. The KPCCI chief says one can find a number of Pakhtuns now living in new sectors of Islamabad, because everyone here feels insecure.

He says that in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, extortion cases are on the rise in Peshawar, Charsadda, Mardan, Nowshera, Swabi, Kohat, Lakki Marwat and Bannu districts.

“If the government is sincere to bring back peace to the militancy-hit province of Khyber Pakthunkhwa, it should work to restore the confidence of the industrialists and traders by providing security,” says Ishaq. Otherwise, he fears, extremism will only grow in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

An official of the Intelligence Bureau, a federally-run intelligence agency, tells the News Lens that militant groups like Lashkar-i-Islam, Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan Mohmand and the Umer Adezai group are actively involved in extortion.

He says that unlike kidnapping, extortion is much safer and easier. He says all that criminals need for extortion is an registered mobile phone Subscriber Identity Modules (SIM) .

“Just make a call to an rich person,” says the IB official, wishing not to be named due to sensitive nature of his job . “If he surrenders to their demand then okay, otherwise a bomb blast occurs just outside his house. If the person still refuses to pay, he is killed.”

This is exactly what happened to Haji Kabal Khan, a well known fruit merchant of Peshawar. “He would pay extortion to militants on monthly basis,” the official tells News Lens. “But all of a sudden he was asked to pay a huge amount of money. Haji Kabal refused to pay which cost him his life on December 23, 2013.”

“Once you surrender and start paying extortion, it becomes a never ending process,” says Mr. Ishaq.

The IB official differs, though. “Almost all the busy doctors in Peshawar pay extortion,” he says. “This is why we have witnessed a decrease in the kidnapping of doctors.
Capital flies out of KP with rise in extortion cases | NewsLens Pakistan
1102883212-1.gif
 
. .
I wonder if 65% figure was taken directly out of Nawaz's arse - as only master fraudia is capable of such accurate numbers!
Law and order situation in KPK is way better than previously corrupt ANP government.
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom