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Jashn-e-Azaadi Mubarak! & Happy Birthday Defence.pk!


Ae Watan pyaray watan
Ae Watan pyaray watan, pak watan, pak watan
Ae meray pyaray watan
Ae watan paak watan, pak watan, pak watan
Ae meray pyaray watan, ae watan pyaray watan
Tujh say hay meri tamanoo ki duniya pur noor
Tujh say hay meri tamanoo ki duniya pur noor
Azm mera kabhi meray iraday hay ghayoor
Meri hasti may anaa hay meri masti may shaoor
Jaan fiza mera takhayal hay to shirin hay sukhan
Ae Watan pyaray watan
Ae Watan pyaray watan, pak watan, pak watan
Ae meray pyaray watan
Ae watan pyaray watan..
Tu dil afroz baharon ka tar-o-taaza chaman
Tu dil afroz baharon ka tar-o-taaza chaman
Tu mehaktay huay phoolo ka suhana gulshan
Tu nawaraiz aanadil ka bahaarii maskan
Rang o ahang say ma�amoor teray koh-o-daman
Ae Watan pyaray watan
Ae Watan pyaray watan, pak watan, pak watan
Ae meray pyaray watan
Ae watan pyaray watan..

Mera dil teri muhabbat ka hay jaan baksh diyaar
Mera dil teri muhabbat ka hay jaan baksh diyaar
Mera seena teri hurmat ka hay sangeen fasaar
Meray maahboob watan tujh pay agar jaan ho nisaar
May yeh samjho gaa tikhanay laga sarmaya�e-dhan
Ae Watan pyaray watan
Ae Watan pyaray watan, pak watan, pak watan
Ae meray pyaray watan
Ae watan pyaray watan..
 
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:pakistan: HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY to all Pakistanis and everyone here may GOD bless Pakistan !! :pakistan:
 
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:pakistan: Jashn-e-Azadi Mubarak Ya'll! :pakistan:

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happy independance day bros ,the fact that our independance days are close also reminds me the days we fought the colonal empire ignoring our differences but fate never let us stay together.lets hope our relations remain close as our independance days and our common culture and i wish we knew each other better and am waiting for the days when there are no hindu,muslim,christian or other extremists and we all feast on prosperity and friendship:smitten:i am optimistic that we will argue on the welfare of each other rather than arguing in hatred.......


your friendly indian brother wishes you a happy independance day.......
(ramzan,diwali):cheers:
 
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What the people of Pakistan deserve


THIS Independence Day as we tune into patriotic song and dance or witness the festive youth in the streets, out on a daylong celebration, it is the resilience of the people despite the odds confronting them which must be saluted. Here is a nation that comes together as one, in spite of everything that tries to divide it. This is true especially when there is a cause that demands a national response, be it the earthquake tragedy which altered our northern terrain in 2005, or now the tremors shaking the presidency and the parliament which will reshape Islamabad’s political landscape in the days ahead. The bravery with which the people have been weathering the many storms is commendable. There have been highs and lows, the latter arguably outnumbering the former; nonetheless, on the positive side of unfolding events, we have moved ahead on the road to democracy, for one.

It has been a tough year. But first to developments that inspire optimism: Pakistan at 60 was confronted once again with making a choice between autocratic rule clothed as it may have been in a quasi-democratic dispensation and a democratic order that would truly represent the will of the people. It has been a year when exiled, popular leaders came home to a tumultuous welcome; a year when civil society waged an uncompromising struggle for establishing the rule of law, and won considerable ground against the arbitrary dismissal of the Chief Justice of Pakistan by Gen Musharraf. The pre-Nov 3 judiciary finally had an opportunity to redeem itself by restoring its sacked chief despite immense pressure to impeach him. Gen Musharraf, who came to power as a result of a military coup in 1999 and was subsequently elected president by his handpicked deputies in parliament, was forced to resign his army post. His re-election by the outgoing parliament was opposed equally forcefully by democratic forces and civil society; increased public pressure then ensured that those who might have planned to rig the February election were left frozen in their tracks. The subsequent triumph of the people’s will in the fairest election held since 1970 was a watershed.

On the pessimistic side of events, strengthening law and order and the bid by civil society to enforce the rule of law by reinstating the 60 odd judges sent packing on Nov 3 has remained a pipedream. Imposition of emergency rule, abrogation of the Constitution, though partially, and the gagging of the independent media has come back to haunt the nation. Extremists have gained much more ground than it was believed possible; they have struck with impunity at a time and place of their own choosing; the writ of the state has receded in the north-west; the insurgency in Balochistan has continued, with little effort made to reach out to the aggrieved nationalist elements there. Pakistan lost one of its finest and most talented leaders in Benazir Bhutto, with only reluctant efforts made to bring her killers to justice. Spiralling inflation and staple food shortages have stalked the people perhaps like never before; the economy showed signs of decline, with the rupee weakening, foreign exchange reserves dwindling and foreign investment significantly receding. The foreign policy has remained a slippery territory; bilateral relations between Pakistan and two of its neighbours, Afghanistan and India, have hit snags; those with the US have remained at their ambivalent best; incursions into Pakistani territory by Nato forces have continued from Afghanistan, as has the trust deficit between Islamabad and Washington/ Kabul.

As we write these lines, the ruling coalition is set to bring an impeachment motion before parliament against a president it sees as an obstacle in the way of carrying out the will of the people. The president is believed to be weighing his options, including resignation. Good governance may have been elusive before and after the February election, but a democratically elected government is more likely to respond to the people’s needs and aspirations than an autocratic setup. This is the hope Pakistanis hang on to. They have paid a heavy price for deviations and diversions made off the path of democratic rule. The country can ill-afford any more political adventurism. Today, as we celebrate freedom from colonial rule that ended 61 years ago, it is time to bury once and for all its homegrown, devilish incarnation: autocracy. Those in the government, the opposition, the presidential camp and the barracks must let the democratic process, and not individual or institutional ego, take its course as they weigh the choices before them — because the people deserve better.
 
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Code:
Happy Independence Day!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Khuda kary mairy arz-e pak peh
khilay wo ghul jisay andessha-e zawal na ho


PAKISTAN

ZINDABAD

:pakistan:

The celebration of Independence Day for Pakistan is not just the celebration of independence but also it is a celebration of the successes of developments, Pakistan achieved during the last 61 years of independence with a promise to perform better in those areas where the nation couldn’t get enough success :tup:
 
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Independence Day

Today is the day we celebrate, pray, promise that from the moment we were born, we were and we are proud Pakistanis.

This day awakens and freshens up our patriotism and love for our beloved HOMELAND.

Prove your solidarity and integrity with Pakistan.

Promise to Allah that we as a part of Pakistan would each continue to Nation's Integrity and Sovereignty.


May Pakistan remain strong and away from harm.

Long Live Pakistan. :pakistan:

Ameen
 
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On our 62nd Independence Day on Thursday, all the omens were grim. The Taliban in Swat warned that no one should celebrate 14th of August or he would be attacked and killed. To prove this in Lahore, a suicide bomber hit policemen in Allama Iqbal Town, killing nine and maiming over 35. The interior ministry has warned that there may be more attacks because the terrorists had moved into the big cities and were ready for action. One report actually says that one incident may be caused by using a car snatched from a female officer of an intelligence agency (sic!). The earlier week was full of reports of uncovered caches of weapons, explosives and suicide-jackets.

The NWFP government has condemned America for violating Pakistan’s “territorial integrity” by attacking inside the Tribal Areas. Another attack by a drone near Wana also killed terrorists from outside the tribal agency, some Arabs and some Punjabis from the sectarian and jihadi organisations. Just a day before August 14, the sectarian war going on in the Kurram Agency claimed 28 more people, bringing the count for the week to nearly 200. The three-year-old war has killed thousands there while the government is unable to help the besieged inhabitants of Parachinar, the agency’s headquarters.

As the NWFP assembly condemned the NATO forces in Afghanistan, it did nothing to resolve the crisis faced by the Kurram Agency. The governor — whose office is becoming politically controversial — has been unable to come to the help of the Parachinar population that is now even without medicines. The wounded are piling up in the local hospital and operations are being performed without medical supplies. The medical stores of Kurram sent crores of rupees for medicines to Peshawar. The medicines were bought and are lying packed in Peshawar but have not been despatched for the past three months. Under pressure, people in Parachinar say they are not being rescued because they are Shia.

The warlord of Bajaur, Maulvi Faqir, is getting more ferocious as his men come under attack from the army. He has vowed revenge after he lost 18 of his warriors to aerial bombing and has told the local population that they would be targeted by his men if they don’t resist the Pakistan army. The NWFP assembly ignored the fact that the Taliban in Swat had attacked the house of the well known ANP leader, Afzal Khan. It failed to recognise that the Taliban going in from our Tribal Areas had virtually conquered half of Afghanistan, as reported by the BBC TV on Independence Day. While the rest of the country is gradually responding to reconstruction, the eastern and south-eastern regions of Afghanistan have virtually fallen to the Taliban.

Down in Sindh, the PPP is celebrating the resolution passed by the Sindh Assembly in a no-confidence vote against the president. But it is in denial of the claim made by the Tehreek-e Taliban leader, Maulvi Umar of South Waziristan, that his warriors would soon take over the province. Its general approach, together with the PMLN, is that of making “peace deals” with the Taliban, but it is too busy unseating the president and letting the army do whatever it can to save the country from being conquered internally. Against this background, it is chastening to see the National Assembly once again putting on the war-paint over Kashmir.

The National Assembly, while condemning India over the latest incidents in Kashmir, neglected to take note of the bombings that hit Quetta in the week preceding Independence Day. The spate of grenade-throwing and time-bombing in the past week has been unprecedented in recent history. Baloch nationalist militants have given out a warning, after killing two people in Hub with a bomb blast, that they would cause bombs to go off across Balochistan on Independence Day. As if in response, one ANP minister resigned from the cabinet in Islamabad and the PMLN “returnee” ministers quietly decided not to attend the cabinet meeting on Wednesday.

In view of the way the country’s leaders are behaving — and that includes politicians and the media — people expected to do business in Pakistan are quietly dollarising their rupees and making ready to leave and live in Dubai where they have bought apartments. Ironically, housing schemes coming up in Dubai have advertised “fair bargains” in Pakistani papers inside Independence Day supplements. As the rupee plummeted to 76 to a dollar on the kerb, the message was frightening: come for R&R as your country goes down fighting the wrong wars.

Everybody seeking revenge and demanding aggressive action in foreign policy claims he has 160 million people behind him. But on the eve of Independence Day, when GEO TV interviewed the first 15 people on the street, it was told the priorities chosen by politicians and TV anchors were all wrong. The political glands in Pakistan are secreting juices that may satisfy the heart but fail to appeal to the mind. The economy, which is the priority of the 160 million, exclusively demands an exercise of the intellect. *
 
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