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Afghanistan Ambassador raised Afghanistan flag in main Peshawar Market .

whaaaaaaaaat???
Seriously forst pakistani guy who didnt claim his ancestors ruled India,,well ok.somthng new.
Gud tht u realise u too were invaded n subjugated.
Btw Is some turk or afghan unfurling thr flags in delhi?
Did i miss somthng?
Btw perhaps yes ,,perhaps it wud lead to bhayyes on both side to decrease bakbak n sort out problms.

I was using your logic for Peshawar

If peshawar some centuries ago was part of Afghanistan then Delhi was also ruled by Afghans and Turks

Itni si baat nahi samajh aa rahi bharati sanghi?
 
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well, afghans are open enemy what about these Indian traitor Pakistanis
Pakistan politicians in bed with India, openly say we will get India to attack Pakistan if Imran khan does this and that. isn't that treason? yet no jail yet if British person breaks the law they plaster their mug shots all over the web like bunch of cheap pressititutes.
 
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I'm
you seem really confused mate, but anyways carry on

regards
Confused,,,not really.
What is the issue,,,,afghans n pushtuns r kind of similar words.
Like u said thr r persians,ujbeks,tajiks in afghanistan but persians r persians,ujbeks r ujbeks n so on.
Like desis in us or uk.
Perhaps its u who is confused.
 
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People should have started slapping the $h!t out of him all the way to Afghan border.
 
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Raising flalg not matters unless you have control on ground which afghanistan donot have even on their own country
 
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Why doesnt this shitty afghan hashish ambassador try to liberate areas from Afghan Taliban controlled areas and raise thier flags, yet they are too busy poking thier fingers in Pakistan expecting to be welcomed with red roses , and the stupid establishment is being soft to these namak haram Afghans.
 
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Row over market ownership: Afghanistan closes its consulate in Peshawar

PESHAWAR: Afghanistan on Friday closed its consulate here in protest following a dispute pertaining to the ownership of a market in the city.

The Supreme Court had earlier given its verdict in favour of a Pakistani citizen who claimed ownership of the building in Peshawar that is also claimed by the Afghan government. Afghan Consul General Mohammad Hashim Niazi maintained that the Afghan flag has been removed from the market owned by Afghanistan.

He alleged that the shopkeepers in the market were tortured. He recalled that Afghanistan had warned that it would close its consulate in Peshawar if the Afghan flag was removed from the market. "We have now closed our consulate in Peshawar," he added. The Afghan consul general expressed reservations over the incident at the market and said the Qabza mafia must be stopped.

He said Pakistan must find a solution to the problem by using diplomatic channels. He said such acts should have been avoided at a time when the situation is uncertain and tense. A Pakistani citizen, Syed Intikhab Haider Abidi, had claimed ownership of the Afghan market in Peshawar.

The Supreme Court had decided the case in favour of another litigant, Zawar Hussain. Afghanistan's consulate in Peshawar claimed that the Afghan government owned the market as it had purchased it from the previous owner.

Complying with the orders of the Supreme Court and Peshawar High Court (PHC), the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government on Tuesday took steps to hand over the market to Zawar Hussain, who had won the case of ownership.

However, the shopkeepers at the market staged a protest against the move. The Afghan Consulate lodged a protest over the action. Meanwhile, Afghan Ambassador to Pakistan Shukrullah Atif Mashal visited the market and again hoisted the Afghan flag there.

Talking to the media, he claimed the market was owned by the National Bank of Afghanistan. He threatened that the Afghan Consulate in Peshawar would be closed if the flag was removed again. Subsequently, the police again removed theflag and in reaction the Afghan government closed its consulate in Peshawar.

When this correspondent visited the Afghan consulate at 5:00pm it was closed. A message was written on white paper that the Afghan Consulate had been closed. The police and district administration got the market vacated after PHC Chief Justice Waqar Ahmad Seth issued a notice to the officials to appear in person for framing of charges for non-compliance with the decisions of the Supreme Court and PHC to get the Afghan market vacated so that it could be handed over to the decree-holder.

The court had issued the notice in contempt of court petition filed by one Syed Intikhab Haider Abidi, a decree-holder of the Afghan National Market, situated in front of the Jinnah Park in Firdous locality in the city. It is spread over five kanals and 19 marlas of land.

Fazle Haq, the lawyer for the decree-holder, submitted before the court that despite the clear decisions of the Supreme Court and PHC in favour of the decree-holder, the district administration failed to implement the order to get the Afghan Market vacated from the National Bank of Afghanistan and other tenants, who are mostly Afghan traders.

It was pointed out in the contempt petition that the bank was collecting more than Rs1.5 million per month through its manager from the 180 shops and it was distributed among the respondent officials, including those from the local revenue and police departments as their due share.

The lawyer informed the bench that at the previous hearing, the PHC had directed the respondents, including the deputy commissioner and the capital city police officer Peshawar to get the market vacated and submit compliance report on September 12.

However, he stated that the respondent officials failed to comply with the court order. After losing the legal battle in the Supreme Court, an official of Afghan National Bank, Safiullah Kajori held a press conference to appeal to the Government of Pakistan and the PHC to review the decision about the ownership of the market in the city as the building had been purchased by the Afghan government in 1946.
 
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Javad,,bhai saab,,,they r pushtuns,,a tribal ppl.
Who didnt know tht they will be stranded in a new country called Pakistan,,apart frm thr kin in afghanistan,,,for all they knew it was thr land,,,conquered by thr ancestors rightfully.
70% of all Pashtuns live in Pakistan, no one among them desire to join Afghanistan, those that do, want it the other way around where Afghanistan joins Pakistan.
 
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Row over market ownership: Afghanistan closes its consulate in Peshawar

PESHAWAR: Afghanistan on Friday closed its consulate here in protest following a dispute pertaining to the ownership of a market in the city.

The Supreme Court had earlier given its verdict in favour of a Pakistani citizen who claimed ownership of the building in Peshawar that is also claimed by the Afghan government. Afghan Consul General Mohammad Hashim Niazi maintained that the Afghan flag has been removed from the market owned by Afghanistan.

He alleged that the shopkeepers in the market were tortured. He recalled that Afghanistan had warned that it would close its consulate in Peshawar if the Afghan flag was removed from the market. "We have now closed our consulate in Peshawar," he added. The Afghan consul general expressed reservations over the incident at the market and said the Qabza mafia must be stopped.

He said Pakistan must find a solution to the problem by using diplomatic channels. He said such acts should have been avoided at a time when the situation is uncertain and tense. A Pakistani citizen, Syed Intikhab Haider Abidi, had claimed ownership of the Afghan market in Peshawar.

The Supreme Court had decided the case in favour of another litigant, Zawar Hussain. Afghanistan's consulate in Peshawar claimed that the Afghan government owned the market as it had purchased it from the previous owner.

Complying with the orders of the Supreme Court and Peshawar High Court (PHC), the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government on Tuesday took steps to hand over the market to Zawar Hussain, who had won the case of ownership.

However, the shopkeepers at the market staged a protest against the move. The Afghan Consulate lodged a protest over the action. Meanwhile, Afghan Ambassador to Pakistan Shukrullah Atif Mashal visited the market and again hoisted the Afghan flag there.

Talking to the media, he claimed the market was owned by the National Bank of Afghanistan. He threatened that the Afghan Consulate in Peshawar would be closed if the flag was removed again. Subsequently, the police again removed theflag and in reaction the Afghan government closed its consulate in Peshawar.

When this correspondent visited the Afghan consulate at 5:00pm it was closed. A message was written on white paper that the Afghan Consulate had been closed. The police and district administration got the market vacated after PHC Chief Justice Waqar Ahmad Seth issued a notice to the officials to appear in person for framing of charges for non-compliance with the decisions of the Supreme Court and PHC to get the Afghan market vacated so that it could be handed over to the decree-holder.

The court had issued the notice in contempt of court petition filed by one Syed Intikhab Haider Abidi, a decree-holder of the Afghan National Market, situated in front of the Jinnah Park in Firdous locality in the city. It is spread over five kanals and 19 marlas of land.

Fazle Haq, the lawyer for the decree-holder, submitted before the court that despite the clear decisions of the Supreme Court and PHC in favour of the decree-holder, the district administration failed to implement the order to get the Afghan Market vacated from the National Bank of Afghanistan and other tenants, who are mostly Afghan traders.

It was pointed out in the contempt petition that the bank was collecting more than Rs1.5 million per month through its manager from the 180 shops and it was distributed among the respondent officials, including those from the local revenue and police departments as their due share.

The lawyer informed the bench that at the previous hearing, the PHC had directed the respondents, including the deputy commissioner and the capital city police officer Peshawar to get the market vacated and submit compliance report on September 12.

However, he stated that the respondent officials failed to comply with the court order. After losing the legal battle in the Supreme Court, an official of Afghan National Bank, Safiullah Kajori held a press conference to appeal to the Government of Pakistan and the PHC to review the decision about the ownership of the market in the city as the building had been purchased by the Afghan government in 1946.

As expected these shops also used to bribe local police. While FBR get 0 tax from shops.
 
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FO rejects Afghan foreign ministry statements 'casting aspersions on judicial process in Pakistan'
October 12, 2019

5da20b6a562a6.jpg

Pakistan's Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Faisal speaks to the media at the Foreign office in Islamabad. — AFP/File
The Foreign Office on Saturday issued a statement rejecting comments by the Afghan foreign ministry which it said "cast aspersions on the judicial process in Pakistan".

"We reject insinuations contained in the statement issued by the Afghan Foreign Ministry regarding a market in Peshawar. It is deeply regrettable that a distorted and misleading account of the issue and related events has been presented," said a statement issued by the Foreign Office spokesperson.

The remarks refer to a decision taken by Afghanistan a day earlier to indefinitely close its consulate in Peshawar in protest of the Afghan flag being taken down in a disputed area known as Afghan Market.

The decision came after the Afghan foreign ministry in a statement decried the carrying out of a "night operation for the purpose of demolishing and evacuating the shopkeepers in the Afghan Market in Peshawar".

"For a brief period of time they had surrounded and besieged the Market and with absolute disrespect lowered the Afghan Flag and the Afghan Market billboard," the Afghan foreign ministry had claimed in its statement.

Afghan Consul General Muhammad Hashim Niazi, in a subsequent press conference, had termed the removal of the flag from the disputed property a violation of diplomatic norms. He had called upon Islamabad to "suspend the court's verdict" and solve the issue through diplomatic channels.

He said the land mafia was behind the dispute and its motive was to sow discord between the two countries.

The Foreign Office in its response today pointed out that the issue "was between a private citizen and a purported bank from Afghanistan" and that the court's verdict on the case in question had been decided in the citizen's favour in 1998.

"The recent enforcement action by the local administration occurred after legal remedies were exhausted by the Afghan party to this legal dispute. We reject any comments casting aspersions on the judicial process in Pakistan," read the statement.

The Foreign Office also regretted the closure of the consulate and hoped that the decision would be reviewed.

"We hope that a private legal case would not be allowed to adversely affect the relations between the two brotherly countries," it concluded the statement by saying.

According to a Dawn report, the district administration in Peshawar had evicted 180 Afghan shopkeepers from the market on October 8 and removed Afghanistan's national flag after a contempt of court petition was filed in the Peshawar High Court by Syed Intekhab Haider Abidi, the market’s owner, seeking implementation of an earlier judgement in his favour.

The administration later handed over possession of the shops to Abidi.

The market sits in front of the Jinnah Park and is spread over five kanals of land. The Afghan National Bank had been collecting more than Rs1.5 million as rent from tenants per month through its manager.

The place had been in possession of the Afghan government for the last several decades.
 
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Pakistanis are not an aggressive nation. Sorry they just dont have the qualities to defend thier nation.

FO rejects Afghan foreign ministry statements 'casting aspersions on judicial process in Pakistan'
October 12, 2019

5da20b6a562a6.jpg

Pakistan's Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Faisal speaks to the media at the Foreign office in Islamabad. — AFP/File
The Foreign Office on Saturday issued a statement rejecting comments by the Afghan foreign ministry which it said "cast aspersions on the judicial process in Pakistan".

"We reject insinuations contained in the statement issued by the Afghan Foreign Ministry regarding a market in Peshawar. It is deeply regrettable that a distorted and misleading account of the issue and related events has been presented," said a statement issued by the Foreign Office spokesperson.

The remarks refer to a decision taken by Afghanistan a day earlier to indefinitely close its consulate in Peshawar in protest of the Afghan flag being taken down in a disputed area known as Afghan Market.

The decision came after the Afghan foreign ministry in a statement decried the carrying out of a "night operation for the purpose of demolishing and evacuating the shopkeepers in the Afghan Market in Peshawar".

"For a brief period of time they had surrounded and besieged the Market and with absolute disrespect lowered the Afghan Flag and the Afghan Market billboard," the Afghan foreign ministry had claimed in its statement.

Afghan Consul General Muhammad Hashim Niazi, in a subsequent press conference, had termed the removal of the flag from the disputed property a violation of diplomatic norms. He had called upon Islamabad to "suspend the court's verdict" and solve the issue through diplomatic channels.

He said the land mafia was behind the dispute and its motive was to sow discord between the two countries.

The Foreign Office in its response today pointed out that the issue "was between a private citizen and a purported bank from Afghanistan" and that the court's verdict on the case in question had been decided in the citizen's favour in 1998.

"The recent enforcement action by the local administration occurred after legal remedies were exhausted by the Afghan party to this legal dispute. We reject any comments casting aspersions on the judicial process in Pakistan," read the statement.

The Foreign Office also regretted the closure of the consulate and hoped that the decision would be reviewed.

"We hope that a private legal case would not be allowed to adversely affect the relations between the two brotherly countries," it concluded the statement by saying.

According to a Dawn report, the district administration in Peshawar had evicted 180 Afghan shopkeepers from the market on October 8 and removed Afghanistan's national flag after a contempt of court petition was filed in the Peshawar High Court by Syed Intekhab Haider Abidi, the market’s owner, seeking implementation of an earlier judgement in his favour.

The administration later handed over possession of the shops to Abidi.

The market sits in front of the Jinnah Park and is spread over five kanals of land. The Afghan National Bank had been collecting more than Rs1.5 million as rent from tenants per month through its manager.

The place had been in possession of the Afghan government for the last several decades.
Thats all this pathetic man ever says 'deeply regretable'
 
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