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Crimes of state of Iran against Pak Watan

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*Awan*

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  • Purpose of this thread is to act as reference on crimes of state of Iran against State of Pakistan
  • Request to Moderators: Please don't delete this thread,let world know our side of story

Recruiting Pakistani Shias to fight in Iraq and Syria

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps have equipped nearly 200,000 young men with arms in Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and Pakistan, in order to face terrorism, General Commander Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari said.
In a speech during the memorial service of one of the Iranians killed in Syria, Jafari said: “The current developments in the region, the formation of Daesh and Takfiri groups, and the events that occurred in the past years are paving the ground for the emergence of Imam Mahdi, and you can now see the positive results in the readiness of nearly 200,000 young armed in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen.”
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He explained that “the Islamic revolution in Iran faced many threats and risks,” adding that Iran has prepared thousands of fighters in and out of Iran to defend what he called “the axis of resistance”.​


Iranian hard-line media has reported that Pakistanis killed in the fighting in Syria and buried in Iran were members of the Zeynabiyoun Brigade, which has reportedly been established by Pakistanis fighting in Syria.

On April 9, seven Pakistanis killed in Syria were buried in Qom.
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The hard-line Mashreghnews.ir website identified them as Taher Hossein, Jamil Hossein, Javid Hossein, Bagher Hossein, Seyed Razi Shah, Ghader Ali, and Ghabel Hossein, and said they were from Pakistan's Parachinar region.
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Two weeks later, on April 23, Iranian media reported that five more Pakistanis killed in combat in Syria had also been buried in Qom. The reports said a large number of citizens, including Pakistanis residing in Qom, had attended the procession.

The names of the two brigades that include Afghans and Pakistanis have relatively recently popped up in Iranian hard-line news sites.

Ali Alfoneh, senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, says establishment of the Fatemiyoun and Zeynabiyoun brigades suggests that the number of Afghans and Pakistanis who have joined the fighting in Syria has increased.

Alfoneh believes that the Afghans and Pakistanis are being buried in Iranian cities and the presence of Iranian officials and their families at their funerals is evidence that they have been recruited from among the country's refugees and immigrants.

Iran has passed a law allowing the government to grant citizenship to the families of foreigners killed while fighting for the Islamic republic, the official IRNA news agency reported Monday.
“Members of the parliament authorised the government to grant Iranian citizenship to the wife, children and parents of foreign martyrs who died on a mission… during the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988) and afterwards,” it said.
Citizenship must be awarded “within a maximum period of one year after the request”, IRNA added.
Iran’s outgoing conservative-dominated parliament will serve until late May.
No figures are available on the number of foreign fighters killed during the Iran-Iraq war, but Afghans, and even a group of Iraqis, fought alongside Iranian forces against the regime of Saddam Hussein.
The law could apply to “volunteers” from Afghanistan and Pakistan who are fighting in Syria and Iraq against militants including the Islamic State group and al-Nusra Front.
Shia Iran is a staunch supporter of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and provides financial and military support to his regime.
Tehran says its Fatemiyoun Brigade, comprised of Afghan recruits, are volunteers defending sacred Shia sites in Syria and Iraq against Sunni extremists like those of IS.
The Islamic republic denies having any boots on the ground and insists its commanders and generals act as “military advisers” in Syria and Iraq.
Iranian media regularly report on the death of Afghan and Pakistani volunteers in Syria and Iraq, whose bodies are buried in Iran. More than three million Afghans live in Iran, one million as legal migrants.

@Khafee @Hakikat ve Hikmet
 
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Ormara Attack
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Baba Ladla

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KARACHI: Baba Ladla was known for playing football with the heads of his opponents--- long after he was done killing them.
Such was folklore in Lyari. Until the gruesome video of his rival gangster Arshad Pappu’s murder emerged in 2013. People who watched the gore realized that every bit of those rumours were true.
Baba Ladla was just a street name. In 1977 when he was born in Lyari’s Chakiwara area his parents named him Noor Muhammad.
Some say Baba Ladla joined Rehman Dakait’s gang-war group after failing to find a job—a route many young boys in Lyari have been forced to opt. Others deny this is why he took up crime.
In the late 80s, gangster and druglord Haji Lalu tutored his son Arshad Pappu, Abdur Rehman alias Rahman Dakait and Noor Muhammad alias Baba Ladla.
The three entered the murky underworld together, but in 1997 differences propped up between Haji Lalu and Rahman Dakait over a kidnapping incident. Haji Lalu and his son Arshad Pappu parted ways.
After Rehman Dakait was killed on August 9, 2009, Baba Ladla became Lyari’s uncrowned king. His network of terror included kidnapping for ransom, extortion, target killing and drugs.
As Baba Ladla got stronger, Uzair Baloch of the banned Aman Committee took him under his support. Ladla helped make Uzair so powerful in Lyari that even the PPP had to cave in to his demands when the party wanted to nominate its candidates for the May 11 general elections. During this period rival gang leader Arshad Pappu was killed brutally. But after 2013, in the holy month of Ramzan a bomb blast during a football match, created fissures between Uzair Baloch and Baba Ladla.
After this Baba Ladla joined a gang run by Ghaffar Zikri and some gangsters from Arshad Pappu’s defunct gang.
Three characters played the central role in Lyari’s story: Uzair Baloch, Arshad Pappu and Baba Ladla. Their power had made the Lyari gangs a migraine for the law enforcement agencies.




Uzair Baloch

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Uzair Baloch confesses to spying for Iranian intelligence agencies
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Mehran Base attack
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Now connect the dots.


Kulbhushan Jadhav


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Indian RAW's Kulbhushan S Jadhav sentenced to death for espionage & sabotage against Pakistan



Cannibalization of Pakistan

Shias have different sub-sects like
  • Asna ashri aka 12wers (Majority)
  • Bohri
  • Ismaili
  • Zaidi etc
In Pakistan and Iran majority are 12wers
Core believes of 12wers are

  • Salat (Prayer) – meaning "connection", establish the five daily prayers, called namāz in Persian and Urdu
  • Sawm (Fasting) – fasting during the holy month of Ramadhan, called rūzeh in Persian.
  • Zakat (Poor-rate) –charity. Zakat means "to purify".
  • Khums ("Fifth" of one's savings) – tax.
  • Hajj(Pilgrimage) – performing the pilgrimage to Mecca
  • Jihād(Struggle) – struggling to please God.
  • Commanding what is just
  • Forbidding what is evil
  • Tawalla – loving the Ahl al-Bayt and their followers.
  • Tabarra – dissociating oneself from the enemies of the Ahlu l-Bay
Shias of my watan send Khums money to Iran a big hit on our foreign reserves. Govt should track this money.

Millionaire Mullahs
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It's rumble time in Tehran. At dozens of intersections in the capital of Iran thousands of students are protesting on a recent Friday around midnight, as they do nearly every night, chanting pro-democracy slogans and lighting bonfires on street corners. Residents of the surrounding middle-class neighborhoods converge in their cars, honking their horns in raucous support.

Suddenly there's thunder in the air. A gang of 30 motorcyclists, brandishing iron bars and clubs, roars through the stalled traffic. They glare at the drivers, yell threats, thump cars. Burly and bearded, the bikers yank two men from their auto and pummel them. Most protesters scatter. Uniformed policemen watch impassively as the thugs beat the last stragglers.

These bikers are part of the Hezbollah militia, recruited mostly from the countryside. Iran's ruling mullahs roll them out whenever they need to intimidate their opponents. The Islamic Republic is a strange dictatorship. As it moves to repress growing opposition to clerical rule, the regime relies not on soldiers or uniformed police (many of whom sympathize with the protesters) but on the bullies of Hezbollah and the equally thuggish Revolutionary Guards. The powers that be claim to derive legitimacy from Allah but remain on top with gangster like methods of intimidation, violence and murder.

Who controls today's Iran? Certainly not Mohammad Khatami, the twice-elected moderate president, or the reformist parliament. Not even the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei--a stridently anti-American but unremarkable cleric plucked from the religious ranks 14 years ago to fill the shoes of his giant predecessor, Ayatollah Khomeini--is fully in control. The real power is a handful of clerics and their associates who call the shots behind the curtain and have gotten very rich in the process.

The economy bears more than a little resemblance to the crony capitalism that sprouted from the wreck of the Soviet Union. The 1979 revolution expropriated the assets of foreign investors and the nation's wealthiest families; oil had long been nationalized, but the mullahs seized virtually everything else of value--banks, hotels, car and chemical companies, makers of drugs and consumer goods. What distinguishes Iran is that many of these assets were given to Islamic charitable foundations, controlled by the clerics. According to businessmen and former foundation executives, the charities now serve as slush funds for the mullahs and their supporters.

Iran has other lethal secrets besides its nuclear program, now the subject of prying international eyes. Dozens of interviews with businessmen, merchants, economists and former ministers and other top government officials reveal a picture of a dictatorship run by a shadow government that--the U.S. State Department suspects--finances terrorist groups abroad through a shadow foreign policy. Its economy is dominated by shadow business empires and its power is protected by a shadow army of enforcers.

Ironically, the man most adept at manipulating this hidden power structure is one of Iran's best-known characters--Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who has been named an ayatollah, or religious leader. He was the speaker of parliament and Khomeini's right-hand man in the 1980s, president of Iran from 1989 to 1997 and is now chairman of the powerful Expediency Council, which resolves disputes between the clerical establishment and parliament. Rafsanjani has more or less run the Islamic Republic for the past 24 years.

He played it smart, aligning himself in the 1960s with factions led by Ayatollah Khomeini, then becoming the go-to guy after the revolution. A hard-liner ideologically, Rafsanjani nonetheless has a pragmatic streak. He convinced Khomeini to end the Iran-Iraq war and broke Iran's international isolation by establishing trade relations with the Soviet Union, China, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. In the 1990s he restarted Iran's nuclear program.

He is also the father of Iran's "privatization" program. During his presidency the stock market was revived, some government companies were sold to insiders, foreign trade was liberalized and the oil sector was opened up to private companies. Most of the good properties and contracts, say dissident members of Iran's Chamber of Commerce, ended up in the hands of mullahs, their associates and, not least, Rafsanjani's family, who rose from modest origins as pistachio farmers. "They were not rich people, so they worked hard and always tried to help their relatives get ahead," remembers Reza, a historian who declines to use his last name and who studied with one of Rafsanjani's brothers at Tehran University in the early 1970s. "When they were in university, two brothers earned money on the side tutoring theological students and preparing their exam papers."

The 1979 revolution transformed the Rafsanjani clan into commercial pashas. One brother headed the country's largest copper mine; another took control of the state-owned TV network; a brother-in-law became governor of Kerman province, while a cousin runs an outfit that dominates Iran's $400 million pistachio export business; a nephew and one of Rafsanjani's sons took key positions in the Ministry of Oil; another son heads the Tehran Metro construction project (an estimated $700 million spent so far). Today, operating through various foundations and front companies, the family is also believed to control one of Iran's biggest oil engineering companies, a plant assembling Daewoo automobiles, and Iran's best private airline (though the Rafsanjanis insist they do not own these assets).

None of this sits well with the populace, whose per capita income is $1,800 a year. The gossip on the street, going well beyond the observable facts, has the Rafsanjanis stashing billions of dollars in bank accounts in Switzerland and Luxembourg; controlling huge swaths of waterfront in Iran's free economic zones on the Persian Gulf; and owning whole vacation resorts on the idyllic beaches of Dubai, Goa and Thailand.

But not much of the criticism makes its way into print. One journalist who dared to investigate Rafsanjani's secret dealings and his alleged role in extrajudicial killings of dissidents is now languishing in jail. He's lucky. Iranian politics can be deadly. Five years ago Tehran was rocked by murders of journalists and anticorruption activists; some were beheaded, others mutilated.

Some of the family's wealth is out there for all to see. Rafsanjani's youngest son, Yaser, owns a 30-acre horse farm in the superfashionable Lavasan neighborhood of north Tehran, where land goes for over $4 million an acre. Just where did Yaser get his money? A Belgian-educated businessman, he runs a large export-import firm that includes baby food, bottled water and industrial machinery.

Until a few years ago the simplest way to get rich quick was through foreign-currency trades. Easy, if you could get greenbacks at the subsidized import rate of 1,750 rials to the dollar and resell them at the market rate of 8,000 to the dollar. You needed only the right connections for an import license. "I estimate that, over a period of ten years, Iran lost $3 billion to $5 billion annually from this kind of exchange-rate fraud," says Saeed Laylaz, an economist, now with Iran's biggest carmaker. "And the lion's share of that went to about 50 families."

One of the families benefiting from the foreign trade system was the Asgaroladis, an old Jewish clan of bazaar traders, who converted to Islam several generations ago. Asadollah Asgaroladi exports pistachios, cumin, dried fruit, shrimp and caviar, and imports sugar and home appliances; his fortune is estimated by Iranian bankers to be some $400 million. Asgaroladi had a little help from his older brother, Habibollah, who, as minister of commerce in the 1980s, was in charge of distributing lucrative foreign-trade licenses. (He was also a counterparty to commodities trader and then-fugitive Marc Rich, who helped Iran bypass U.S.-backed sanctions.)

The other side of Iran's economy belongs to the Islamic foundations, which account for 10% to 20% of the nation's GDP--$115 billion last year. Known as bonyads, the best-known of these outfits were established from seized property and enterprises by order of Ayatollah Khomeini in the first weeks of his regime. Their mission was to redistribute to the impoverished masses the "illegitimate" wealth accumulated before the revolution by "apostates" and "blood-sucking capitalists." And, for a decade or so, the foundations shelled out money to build low-income housing and health clinics. But since Khomeini's death in 1989 they have increasingly forsaken their social welfare functions for straightforward commercial activities.

Until recently they were exempt from taxes, import duties and most government regulation. They had access to subsidized foreign currency and low-interest loans from state-owned banks. And they were not accountable to the Central Bank, the Ministry of Finance or any other government institution. Formally, they are under the jurisdiction of the Supreme Leader; effectively, they operate without any oversight, answerable only to Allah.

According to Shiite Muslim tradition, devout businessmen are expected to donate 20% of profits to their local mosques, which use the money to help the poor. By contrast, many bonyads seem like rackets, extorting money from entrepreneurs. Besides the biggest national outfits, almost every Iranian town has its own bonyad, affiliated with local mullahs. "Many small businessmen complain that as soon as you start to make some money, the leading mullah will come to you and ask for a contribution to his local charity," says an opposition economist, who declines to give his name. "If you refuse, you will be accused of not being a good Muslim. Some witnesses will turn up to testify that they heard you insult the Prophet Mohammad, and you will be thrown in jail."

Other charities resemble multinational conglomerates. The Mostazafan & Jambazan Foundation (Foundation for the Oppressed and War Invalids) is the second-largest commercial enterprise in the country, behind the state-owned National Iranian Oil Co. Until recently it was run by a man named Mohsen Rafiqdoost. The son of a vegetable-and-fruit merchant at the Tehran bazaar, Rafiqdoost got his big break in 1979, when he was chosen to drive Ayatollah Khomeini from the airport after his triumphal return from exile in Paris.

Khomeini made him Minister of the Revolutionary Guards to quash internal dissent and smuggle in weapons for the Iran-Iraq war. In 1989, when Rafsanjani became president, Rafiqdoost gained control of the Mostazafan Foundation, which employs up to 400,000 workers and has assets that in all probability exceed $10 billion.

Theoretically the Mostazafan Foundation is a social welfare organization. By 1996 it began taking government funds to cover welfare disbursements; soon it plans to spin off its social responsibilities altogether, leaving behind a purely commercial conglomerate owned by--whom? That is not clear. Why does this foundation exist? "I don't know--ask Mr. Rafiqdoost," says Abbas Maleki, a foreign policy adviser to Ayatollah Rafsanjani.

A picture emerges from one Iranian businessman who used to handle the foreign trade deals for one of the big foundations. Organizations like the Mostazafan serve as giant cash boxes, he says, to pay off supporters of the mullahs, whether they're thousands of peasants bused in to attend religious demonstrations in Tehran or Hezbollah thugs who beat up students. And, not least, the foundations serve as cash cows for their managers.

"It usually works like this," explains this businessman. "Some foreigner comes in, proposes a deal to the foundation head. The big boss says: ‘Fine. I agree. Work out the details with my administrator.' So the foreigner goes to see the administrator, who tells him: ‘You know that we have two economies here--official and unofficial. You have to be part of the unofficial economy if you want to be successful. So, you have to deposit the following amount into the following bank account abroad and then the deal will go forward.'"

Today Rafiqdoost heads up the Noor Foundation, which owns apartment blocks and makes an estimated $200 million importing pharmaceuticals, sugar and construction materials. He is quick to downplay his personal wealth. "I am just a normal person, with normal wealth," he says. Then, striking a Napoleonic pose, he adds: "But if Islam is threatened, I will become big again."

Implication: He has access to a secret reservoir of money that can be tapped when the need arises. That may have been what Ayatollah Rafsanjani had in mind when he declared recently that the Islamic Republic needed to keep large funds in reserve. But who is to determine when Islam is in danger?

As minister of the Revolutionary Guards in the 1980s, Rafiqdoost played a key role in sponsoring Hezbollah in Lebanon--which kidnapped foreigners, hijacked airplanes, set off car bombs, trafficked in heroin and pioneered the use of suicide bombers. According to Gregory Sullivan, spokesman for the Near Eastern Affairs Bureau at the U.S. State Department, the foundations are the perfect vehicles to carry out Iran's shadow foreign policy. Whenever suspicion of complicity in a terrorist incident turns to Iran, the Tehran government has denied involvement. State Department officials suspect that such operations may be sponsored by one of the foundations and semiautonomous units of the Revolutionary Guards.

Iran's foundations are a law unto themselves. The largest "charity" (at least in terms of real estate holdings) is the centuries-old Razavi Foundation, charged with caring for Iran's most revered shrine--the tomb of Reza, the Eighth Shiite Imam, in the northern city of Mashhad. It is run by one of Iran's leading hard-line mullahs, Ayatollah Vaez-Tabasi, who prefers to stay out of the public eye but emerges occasionally to urge death to apostates and other opponents of the clerical regime.

The Razavi Foundation owns vast tracts of urban real estate all across Iran, as well as hotels, factories, farms and quarries. Its assets are impossible to value with any precision, since the foundation has never released an inventory of its holdings, but Iranian economists speak of a net asset value of $15 billion or more. The foundation also receives generous contributions from the millions of pilgrims who visit the Mashhad shrine each year.

What happens to annual revenues estimated in the hundreds of millions--perhaps billions--of dollars? Not all of it goes to cover the maintenance costs of mosques, cemeteries, religious schools and libraries. Over the past decade the foundation has bought new businesses and properties, established investment banks (together with investors from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates) and financed big foreign trade deals.

The driving force behind the commercialization of the Razavi Foundation is Ayatollah Tabasi's son, Naser, who was put in charge of the Sarakhs Free Trade Zone, on the border with the former Soviet republic of Turkmenistan. In the 1990s the foundation poured hundreds of millions of dollars into this project, funding a rail link between Iran and Turkmenistan, new highways, an international airport, a hotel and office buildings.

Then it all went wrong. In July 2001 Naser Tabasi was dismissed as director of the Free Trade Zone. Two months later he was arrested and charged with fraud in connection with a Dubai-based company called Al-Makasib. The details remain murky, but four months ago the General Court of Tehran acquitted him.

Iran's most distinguished senior clerics are disgusted by the mullahcrats. Ayatollah Taheri, Friday prayer leader of the city of Isfahan, resigned in protest earlier this year. "When I hear that some of the privileged progeny and special people, some of whom even don cloaks and turbans, are competing amongst themselves to amass the most wealth," he said, "I am drenched with the sweat of shame."

Meanwhile the clerical elite has mismanaged the nation into senseless poverty. With 9% of the world's oil and 15% of its natural gas, Iran should be a very rich country. It has a young, educated population and a long tradition of international commerce. But per capita income today is 7% below what it was before the revolution. Iranian economists estimate capital flight (to Dubai and other safe havens) at up to $3 billion a year.
No wonder so many students turn to the streets in protest. The dictatorship has been robbing them of their future.
 
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In the name of Ali R.A Hussain R.A and Israel
  • They are spying on Pakistan, recruiting our shias to fight their wars in Iraq and Syria, launching Indians spies from their soil
  • Supporting Houthies in Yemen who are firing rockets on Saudi capital
  • Support proxies in south of Saudia
  • Support proxies in Bahrain
  • Support proxies in Iraq
  • Support criminal ostrich in Syria, Land of Qutab and Abdals
  • Support terrorist organization in Lebanon
  • Support proxies in Nigeria
Question: Why Shia ONLY say Ya Hussain R.A why not Ya Hassan R.A?
Answer: All the murders of Hussain R.a and his family were ethnic Arabs whereas women who gave poison to Hassan R.A was ethnic Persian.Similarly they do matam in memory of Hussain R.A but don't drink poison in memory of hassan R.A.:undecided::undecided:

Question: Karbala is in Iraq, Hussain R.A is buried in Iraq, Ali R.A is buried in Iraq but why supreme leader of shias should be Persian?
Answer: ?????
Iran the only Muslim country whose area of influence increased after 9-11.

:rofl: yet another 15yo retard with conspiracy theories.
Which is conspiracy theory?
Baba Ladla?
Uzair Baloch?
Pakistanis fighting in Syria nd Iraq?

Smuggling

THE IRANIAN SMUGGLERS TRAFFICKING FUEL INTO PAKISTAN

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KARACHI: The police on Saturday foiled an attempt to transport smuggled Iranian diesel and arrested two culprits involved in the matter.
According to the details, the police started snap checking of vehicles in Manghopir area of Karachi on a tip regarding smuggling of diesel.

During the search of a suspected oil tanker, 30,000 litres smuggled Iranian diesel concealed in specially designed cavities of the tanker was recovered.

The police impounded the tanker, arrested the driver and helper, and started an investigation after registering a case against them.
  1. Two held with 30,000 liters smuggled Iranian diesel in Karachi
  2. THE IRANIAN SMUGGLERS TRAFFICKING FUEL INTO PAKISTAN
  3. Sale of smuggled Iranian, chemically produced fuel rampant

Abuse of Pakistani Passports

  • 14 Iranians arrested in Bahrain for using foreign passports, including Pakistani passports
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14 Sep 2018
Last Updated: 01:23 AM
Views: 587
Manama, Sept.13 (BNA): The Ministry of Interior has affirmed in a statement that its report issued on 8 September, relating to the arrest of 14 Iranians who had entered Bahrain with Asian passports and fake names, is based on documentary evidence and proof.

If the statement by an Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman which claimed that Iran could not confirm what had been mentioned in the MOI statement, and alleged that “Bahrain hasn’t presented evidence to the Iranian government or additional information.”

The evidence and documents relating to those arrested and some of them mentioned here affirm the previous MOI statement and follow the standards of transparency, credibility and the procedures of documentation. Part of the solid evidence are the scanned IDs of some of the 14 Iranian nationals who were arrested for using Asian passports of fake information they bought to enter the Kingdom. May God protect Bahrain from all evils and harm.​

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Spying for Iran
A Pakistani man was convicted in Germany Monday of spying for Iran to search out potential attack targets for the Revolutionary Guards.
The defendant, 31-year-old Mustufa Haidar Syed-Naqfi, was sentenced to four years and three months in prison “for working for a foreign intelligence service”, a spokesperson for Berlin’s superior court said.
The court found he spied “against Germany and another NATO member”, France, for the Quds Force, the foreign operations wing of the elite Revolutionary Guards.
Syed-Naqfi compiled dossiers on possible attack targets — a German lawmaker who is the former head of a German-Israeli organisation.—AP​




Useful Idiots
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women who gave poison to Hassan R.A was ethnic Persian
I must admit, i don't know much about such old history... i learned something new.

Please include, the secret contract of IPI gas pipeline which Zardari signed, without presence of India.
Shouldn't FO share it with public?

There's admission of Dr. AQ Khan that Benazir's military secretary Mahdi lead transfer of nuclear technology and C-130 was used to send hrdware to holy land.

There are also rumors that Benazir passed some intel. to RAW over the Khalistan movement, resulting in Amritsar massacre, followed up prosecution of Sikhs.
 
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Baba ji aram karo tuwadi Iran vich girlfriend thay ni gwachi???[emoji23][emoji23][emoji23][emoji23]

O nai yara otha di koi kuri sanu lift ee ni krandi :rofl:

This Indian agent is active on Social Media and Forums just when IK is visiting Iran.

@waz Please take notice of this idiot who is totally going insane, even targeting the sect over his personal grudge.
 
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I must admit, i don't know much about such old history... i learned something new.

Please include, the secret contract of IPI gas pipeline which Zardari signed, without presence of India.
Shouldn't FO share it with public?

There's admission of Dr. AQ Khan that Benazir's military secretary Mahdi lead transfer of nuclear technology and C-130 was used to send hrdware to holy land.

There are also rumors that Benazir passed some intel. to RAW over the Khalistan movement, resulting in Amritsar massacre, followed up prosecution of Sikhs.

When Arabs conquered Iran they took women of royal house with them.At that time Umar R.A said princess will be for the prince so that particular women was married to Hassan R.A
When Hassan R.A made peace treaty with Hazarat Amir Muawiya R.A then particular group of people who wanted civil war to be continued convinced this women to poison her husband. They were able to convince her by saying arabs killed your family and destroyed your country this the time to take your revenge.

On pipe line deal only thing I know is it was last days of zaradari government when he signed the deal.


yes Benazir had a close door meeting with Rajiv Gandhi. At that time Ehtzaz Ehsan was interior minister and he was the one keeping track of all the sikhs entering into and getting out of Pakistan, so he is the who gave sikhs list to India
 
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Chalo kiray tuwada mu mitta o jay tha tension ni leni
O nai yara otha di koi kuri sanu lift ee ni krandi :rofl:

This Indian agent is active on Social Media and Forums just when IK is visiting Iran.

@waz Please take notice of this idiot who is totally going insane, even targeting the sect over his personal grudge.
 
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O nai yara otha di koi kuri sanu lift ee ni krandi :rofl:

This Indian agent is active on Social Media and Forums just when IK is visiting Iran.

@waz Please take notice of this idiot who is totally going insane, even targeting the sect over his personal grudge.

Can you post link of my profile of other social media sites and forums where I am doing propaganda against your Holy land.

Instead of attacking me why you can't refute the material that I posted.
 
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pictures and banners of iranian mullahs from Pakistani imam bargahs should be removed. Ban should be imposed on any such activities.

I don't mind if you put banners of Saudi Mullahs in your mosques, even you've put. Because that's religion, not country. And know what? you're an absolute idiot being wannabe Qutb ud din. Kids nowadays are crazy.
 
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Can you post link of my profile of other social media sites and forums where I am doing propaganda against your Holy land.

Instead of attacking me why you can't refute the material that I posted.

Because I do not have time for this. And I don't care about idiots like you who've no other thing to do in life.
 
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