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Brig (retd) Ijaz Shah has been appointed as Minister of Interior

I am perfectly fine with where she is, how she ended up there, and the fact that she will die there. To me what you say above matters not. :D

Now, let us see how the gentleman just appointed to the post of Interior Minister does his job. Does the policy of disappearing person continue on his watch as before? What do you think?
I made no comment on her imprisonment. He husband and various other sources confirm she was an extremist, and I don’t want her back in Pakistan where she would potentially be eulogized and her prison become a target of extremists trying to release her.

She can rot in jail like Shakil Afridi. My only quibble is over your claim of being arrested by Pakistan for which there is no credible evidence,

Pukhtoons and Baluch lost a great man, a great sardar regardless of what the other half of Pakistan thinks, what they think doesn’t really matter.
That’s like saying the Iraqis lost a great leader in Saddam or that the Germans lost a great leader in Hitler.

Bugti was a vile, violent sardar and Pakistanis are better off without him.

Question is are you a Baluch or a Pukhtoon from Baluchistan?, it’s not a trick question the answer is simple yes or no.
Stop telling Pakistanis to not comment on Pakistani affairs. Balochistan & KP are part of Pakistan & belong to all Pakistanis just like Punjab or Lahore - they are not your daddy’s Jagir to where you’re the only individual claiming to be able to speak on the affairs there. If you have a point then make it without playing some BS ethnic/sectarian card.
 
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That’s like saying the Iraqis lost a great leader in Saddam or that the Germans lost a great leader in Hitler.

Bugti was a vile, violent sardar and Pakistanis are better off without him.

The guy is only trying to further his point (which he doesn’t have) by including Pathans in his mourning for Akbar Bugti.

Pathans being mentioned in the same breath makes my skin crawl.
 
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I made no comment on her imprisonment. He husband and various other sources confirm she was an extremist, and I don’t want her back in Pakistan where she would potentially be eulogized and her prison become a target of extremists trying to release her.

She can rot in jail like Shakil Afridi. My only quibble is over your claim of being arrested by Pakistan for which there is no credible evidence,

As she rots in jail, without any evidence at all who apprehended her, just like there is no evidence who was helping hide OBL where he was killed (but the damage is done), what about moving to the actual topic of this thread: how would the gentleman just appointed to the post of Interior Minister do his job. Does the policy of disappearing person continue on his watch as before? What do you think? Any quibbles here thus far?
 
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View attachment 554170

ijaz-shah-4f635f26-4d54-4946-ad63-164e5a80fa2-resize-750.jpeg

Brigadier Ijaz Shah is a retired Pakistan Army officer and politician who is a member of the Pakistan's National Assembly from Nankana Sahib and the Federal Minister of Parliamentary Affairs.[1] Shah formerly served as Director-General of Intelligence Bureau of Pakistan from 2004 to 2008.[2]
Shah was a long-term close associate of Pervez Musharraf, and a former Pakistan Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) operator.[3] Shah's tenure as the head of Intelligence Bureau was controversial with accusations of political victimisation and for undermining the judiciary.[4]

IB chief

In 2004, Musharraf's attempt to appoint Ijaz Shah as High Commissioner to Australia was rejected in a highly unusual move by Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs. Instead Musharraf appointed him to head Pakistani Intelligence Bureau on 25 February 2004, transferring his predecessor, Wali Muhammad to Australia.[5]




soon imran will be on the chitrol list also----

the sooner he relealises that he has been used like a tissue paper , the better for imran khan--

he has been check mate by establishment-

who got clean chits of corruption for nawaz, shabaz, hamza, zardari-------etc

ijaz shah is establishment man

just like hafeez sheik is amercian IMF man.


but no one want to hear the truth-----

we live and love lies,

am just wondering when anger grief, frustration will get to pakistani public------

only they can break this jamoor---

but for that to happen----

1/2 lakhs dollar lovers have to be hanged on poles all along the zero point....
 
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As she rots in jail, without any evidence at all who apprehended her, just like there is no evidence who was helping hide OBL where he was killed (but the damage is done),
Correct - there is no credible evidence indicating Pakistani State involvement in either of those incidents. On the OBL case, multiple US government & military officials have clearly stated that there is no evidence of Pakistani state involvement. Without evidence all we have are conspiracy theories.
how would the gentleman just appointed to the post of Interior Minister do his job. Does the policy of disappearing person continue on his watch as before? What do you think? Any quibbles here thus far?
Time will tell how well he does his job, but, theoretically, his experience should assist him in overcoming institutional inertia preventing increased inter-institutional cooperation/collaboration.
 
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Time will tell how well he does his job, but, theoretically, his experience should assist him in overcoming institutional inertia preventing increased inter-institutional cooperation/collaboration.

Will he be able to stop citizens from going missing, specially given his past experience?
 
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Will he be able to stop citizens from going missing, specially given his past experience?
In a country with so much corruption in law enforcement agencies and militant groups recruiting constantly, that’s not really something I would expect the interior minister to accomplish - it requires institutional reforms and a broader social framework to prevent people from going missing when they join militant groups and for police to locate them when they’re kidnapped.
 
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In a country with so much corruption in law enforcement agencies and militant groups recruiting constantly, that’s not really something I would expect the interior minister to accomplish - it requires institutional reforms and a broader social framework to prevent people from going missing when they join militant groups and for police to locate them when they’re kidnapped.

One would have hoped that the much advertised Naya Pakistan would be better for its citizens, but here is another matter where it seems to be similar to Purana Pakistan. What a pity.
 
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