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پاکستان میں آخر ہو کیا رہا ہے۔

PAkistan mein banana cultivation ko layker aalmi conference ho rahie hai.
 
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Judiciary has enough holes in the net to let every big fish slip, u look at the judicial system and tell me does anyone influential person with a good lawyer need Army's support to stay out of jail??

Whenever the military has indulged in politics, its leaders may have made fortunes no doubt.But this thrive is not in isolation, and civilians have made money with them, for them and some times even more than them, without a gun to their temple....
Session judge and lower judicary is so corrupt that they will openely ask for bribes

The only way to stop this spiral down turn is to do what the انگریز and theصحابہ did..i.e declare wealth beyond means as corruption..but only nawaz sharif was prosecuted after panama named particular properties

Noone else is blamed or arrested

Today 17 grades judges who cant even own a car have mansions in dubai..and no this is only in pakistan..in western countries they arent this rich

We also need to move away from giving judges absolute and power if we cant fix the system and may be get local jury involved

Even today half of the population and including my beloved leader(refer to my DP) thinks corruption is halal money
 
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This Sailaab/Floods and tragedy has a silver lining.

The Sindhi interior poor people captive and slaves of Zardari and fake Bhutto mafia have woken up and challenging the waderas/feudals and the Mafia PPP politicans, there is some nexus between the Waderas and the Generals too.
 
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One small neutral occupying a big office had an ego problem and decided to sell off the whole country.
 
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New flooding fears​

On Thursday, southern Pakistan braced for more flooding as a surge of water flowed down the Indus river, compounding the devastation in a country a third of which is already inundated by the climate change induced disaster.


The United Nations has appealed for $160 million to help with what it has called an "unprecedented climate catastrophe."

"We're on a high alert as water arriving downstream from northern flooding is expected to enter the province over the next few days," the spokesman of the Sindh provincial government, Murtaza Wahab, told Reuters.

Wahab said a flow of some 600,000 cubic feet per second was expected to swell the Indus, testing its flood defences.

Pakistan has received nearly 190% more rain than the 30-year average in the quarter from June to August, totalling 390.7mm (15.38 inches).

Sindh, with a population of 50 million, has been hardest hit, getting 466% more rain than the 30-year average.

Some parts of the province look like an inland sea with only occasional patches of trees or raised roads breaking the surface of the murky flood waters.

Hundreds of families have taken refugee on roads, the only dry land in sight for many of them.

A man looks for salvageable belongings from his flooded home in the Shikarpur district of Sindh Province, Pakistan on Thursday.



A man looks for salvageable belongings from his flooded home in the Shikarpur district of Sindh Province, Pakistan on Thursday.


This aerial photograph, taken on September 1, 2022, shows flooded residential areas in the town of Dera Allah Yar town in Jaffarabad district, Balochistan province.


This aerial photograph, taken on September 1, 2022, shows flooded residential areas in the town of Dera Allah Yar town in Jaffarabad district, Balochistan province.

Villagers rushed to meet a Reuters news team passing along one road near the town of Dadu on Thursday, begging for food or other help.

The floods have swept away homes, businesses, infrastructure and roads. Standing and stored crops have been destroyed and some two million acres (809,371 hectares) of farm land inundated.

Pakistan floods caused by 'monsoon on steroids,' says UN chief in urgent appeal

Pakistan floods caused by 'monsoon on steroids,' says UN chief in urgent appeal

The government says 33 million people, or 15% of the 220 million population, have been affected.

The National Disaster Management Authority said some 480,030 people have been displaced and are being looked after in camps but even those not forced from their homes face peril.

"More than three million children are in need of humanitarian assistance and at increased risk of waterborne diseases, drowning and malnutrition due to the most severe flooding in Pakistan's recent history," the UN children's agency warned.

The World Health Organization said that more than 6.4 million people were in dire need of humanitarian aid.

Aid has started to arrive on planes loaded with food, tents and medicines, mostly from China, Turkey and United Arab Emirates.

Aid agencies have asked the government to allow food imports from neighboring India, across a largely closed border that has for decades been a front line of confrontation between the nuclear armed rivals.

The government has not indicated it is willing to open the border to Indian food imports.

CNN's Angela Dewan and Azaz Syed contributed reporting.
 
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'Heavenly' Swat mountain town becomes site of ruin​

In Bahrain, hotels disappeared, town's mosque is a bare shell, and waist-high water still gushes through main bazaar

AFP
August 31, 2022

a vehicle bridge across the swat river was destroyed by a flash flood and now the only way across is by a rickety makeshift footbridge photo afp

A vehicle bridge across the Swat River was destroyed by a flash flood, and now the only way across is by a rickety makeshift footbridge. PHOTO: AFP


Bahrain is a town in ruins –- reduced to rubble by the incredible force of flash floods that swelled the river running through it, severing a lifeline bridge.

Hundreds of settlements in Pakistan's north have been cut off by monsoon rains that came to a head last week, causing the worst floods in the country's history.

But in the past few days, the heavily damaged road heading through the Swat Valley has slowly opened up, revealing the extent of the destruction.

In Bahrain, hotels have disappeared, the town's mosque is a bare shell, and waist-high water still gushes through the main bazaar.

"It was a heavenly place but now it is a wreckage," Muhammad Asif, a 22-year-old college student, told AFP on Wednesday.


"In the past week, everything has changed dramatically. The river added to the beauty, but now it is a threat."

The town usually bustles with more than a thousand summer tourists every day, drawn by majestic mountain views from hotels and restaurants perched on the riverbank.
It will likely take years for them to return, and with tourists gone, the fear of economic ruin is also setting in.

"My hotel is still partly under water," said Muhammad Nawaz, whose 40 employees at his various establishments are now jobless.

"I am pulling sand out of my restaurant and searching for furniture in the ruins."

The road north ends at the edge of the Swat River, where the bridge that once connected the two halves of the town is now a mass of debris.

Rickety wooden planks stand in its place, crossed by men carrying sacks of rice, flour and sugar to their villages -- hours away by foot.
Further north, their valleys remain cut off.

Desperate for help

What was once a 20-minute journey by motorbike for Karim Farman is now close to a four-hour walk over crumbling roads.

No help has reached his flooded village of Balakot yet.

"We are desperate for any sort of assistance. We are in dire need of medicine, it is very tough to bring patients here," said Muhammad Amir, who is from the same village.

"There has been no electricity in our village for nearly a week, people don't even have a candle for light. Several people are sick with diarrhoea."

Bahrain's destruction unfolded late last Thursday night.
Many locals reported not receiving any warnings, but as the river rapidly rose tourists began to evacuate from hotels.


Like in many riverside villages and towns, locals believed only the homes on the banks were vulnerable.

But just hours later the full scale of the water's rage became clear.

"In a few minutes the water suddenly encircled my shop from every side," said Aftab Khan.
"I couldn't take anything with me because I had to save my life."

The army arrived on Wednesday, local residents said, to oversee the chaos of diggers clearing rubble and to manage the flow of foot traffic across the river.

Helicopters fly overhead, dropping food packages to the stranded valleys.

A district government official who asked not to be named told AFP it could be months before the road and bridge are repaired.




"Before, this place was like a paradise but now even locals want to escape," said restaurant owner Sheer Bahadur.
 
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bhai when system goes off in "civilized" western countries people turn into animals! hamaray yahan toh logon ko queue banna bachpan say nai sikhaye because hamaray pass system he nai! hum toh bachpan say wardi mafia ko zardari ki dalali kartay dekh rahay hain!
jugnueye@beeble.com any work in India mail me
 
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this flood looks like its the last nail in Pakistans coffin!
baki Allah hifazat karay hamaray lumber 1 aur in keh waderun nay zulm ki intaiha kardi hai and insha Allah Allah will do justice and he is the most just!

i have no hope from Elististan now! i really want all these elites to be dragged on street and lynched and burned they deserve it and insha Allah they will get what they deserve!


khi ko bhool jao bhai yahan ab kuch nai hona infact Pakistan may ab kuch nai hona! kids are eating grass in flood effected areas while our waderas protected by wardi mafia are washing their shoes with mineral water!
The ruling players are all compromised, they’re agents of WEF and West. Here to TRY their level best to destroy this country.

Koi faida nai fauji fanboys se behes kerne ka, ye kabhi nai manainge k ghalti inki ha. Bas topic change kerdainge, they will never be accountable. Shuker to zarur kerainge k inke pas sari qaum se zyada facilities aur paisa aur power ha. They have it all while awam sink in floods, poverty and hunger.
 
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