Norwegian
BANNED
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2014
- Messages
- 19,001
- Reaction score
- 11
- Country
- Location
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
He is CM Sindh unfortunatelylols coas with daku murad ali shah! only in Pakistan!
Murad Ali Shah is a good guy. Its just he is in wrong party, just like Ahsan Iqbal, or Owais Laghari.lols coas with daku murad ali shah! only in Pakistan!
lols good guy! he is a chor a daku he is responsible for death of hundereds of thar kids! some good fking man!Murad Ali Shah is a good guy. Its just he is in wrong party, just like Ahsan Iqbal, or Owais Laghari.
He is named in JIT of fake accounts case but he is innocent of courselols good guy! he is a chor a daku he is responsible for death of hundereds of thar kids! some good fking man!
depends how much area fauj gets in khi to expand their commercial enterprEntHe is named in JIT of fake accounts case but he is innocent of course
Lose interest in Cricket? Are u even serious?I THOUGHT SOUTH ASIANS WERE LOSING INTEREST IN CRICKET. MANY 90s KIDS WOULD TELL YOU. TILL 2010, THEY WERE ENTHUSIASTIC ABOUT CRICKET. NOT ANY MORE.
Sindh has some serious issues and PPP, Murad, MQM, Altaf Bhai are the symptoms of that. The real issue is the Mohajir/Sindhi, urban/rural divide which of courses throws up the symptoms. The reality is mass migration from India into Sindh failed to integrate. That failure of integration has created deep divides in Sindhi polity which of course feeds the politics that you see played out in that province. And Murad/Altaf Bhai are the symptoms of that structural malaise at the heart of Sindh.
I am reminded of Northern Ireland in UK which suffers from similar problems despite being part of one of the worlds most prosperous, mature, competent states in the world. I am reminded of this as my daughter who is doing masters in higher education policy has just come back from Belfast after a stint there at Queens University Belfast as part of her research into the education system there and issues revolving around the divide they have. Listening to her 'on the ground report' was interesting as it painted a picture far worse then UK media covers. But I thought perhaps the same sociological issues are playing out in Sindh as well.
Perhaps a ethnic Sindhi can give some input. Sindh for me is the least understood part of Pakistan. Sindh has probably one of the most glorious history in South Asia but today it seems to be struggling. The Sindhi's fight against the British invasion in 1843 and their subsequent defeat at Battle of Miani which led them to being enslaved as part of British India is truely inspiring.
Yet today Sindhi people seem to be a dormant quantity. That puzzles me.