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More flooding in Metro of Aberdeen this time: Sharif brothers responsible

FaujHistorian

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Funny how Pakistani posters loose perspective and jump on the anti-gov bandwagon.




Summer weather in Aberdeen proves why it’s called the Grey City
Richard Hartley-ParkinsonRichard Hartley-Parkinson for Metro.co.ukWednesday 8 Jul 2015 7:52 am
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There was some pretty horrific weather in Aberdeen last night
Cars stranded in Aberdeen after flash floods (Picture: HEMedia)

This week’s hardly seen the blazing sunshine of last week, but looking at Aberdeen much of the UK is still riding the crest of the heatwave.

Yesterday evening there were flash floods after torrential downpours that led to chaos.

A group of 30 children had to be ushered from a nursery while cars were left submerged by the flooding.

The flooding was expected to continue to cause problems this morning despite local councils trying to clear the water.

The fire service said it received more than 40 calls in just 90 minutes related to the flooding while the city’s hospital and airport were both affected.

Firefighters went to help pump water out of the basement and sub-basement of Aberdean Royal Infirmary.

Station manager Charlie Watt said: ‘We have our incident command room set up at Mounthooly and we are liaising closely with our partner agencies to help as many of the people affected as possible.’

Read more: UK Weather: Summer in Aberdeen proves why it's called the Grey City | Metro News
 
the biggest chu**aap amongst desis is they will criticize even a good thing if not their "messiah " did it .

everybody else is chor , dacoit etc etc etc ,
 
We have never had any flooding in Oslo Metro, not even occasionally, even when they were built in late 70's. Without proper planning, you can flood anything with seasonal rains. :lol:
 
Funny how Pakistani posters loose perspective and jump on the anti-gov bandwagon.

What is happening now over rain in Pindi/ISB is just as tragic and silly as what happened when torrential rains caused havoc in KPK, only the sides trying to make political points were opposite. Both are equally pathetic.
 
its really stupid if someone blame PM CM for water leakage . ok engineer or designer project manager i can understand but PM ?

In South Korea, even when an offshore ship sinks, PM resigns. Obviously, they are not following democrazy :D :D :D
 
Are you south Korean? Living in S Korea.

Why don't you give example of North Korea?
They is a liberal democracy in South Korea and a communist dictatorship in the North. In Pakistan, we have civilian dictatorship. That's why no one resigns here or even takes any responsibility when something goes wrong. :sarcastic:

There cannot be any democracy in Pakistan as long you keep inventing your own definitions of it. You wanna see real democracy, visit our history instead:

The Kings Bay Affair was a political issue in Norway that reached its apex in 1963 and brought down the government of Einar Gerhardsen and formed the basis for non-socialist coalition politics in Norway that persisted to the end of the 20th century.

The Kings Bay Coal Mining Company was a coal mining operation based in Ny Ålesund on the Norwegian territory of Svalbard in the Arctic Ocean. Since 1933 it had been a wholly owned crown company, held by the Norwegian government.

Between 1945 and 1963, 71 lives were lost in three major accidents in the mines, and in the summer of 1963 a commission established by the Storting delivered its report finding several deficiencies in the management of the mine. Among other things, the commission found culpability on the part of the minister of industry at the time, Kjell Holler.

The non-socialist opposition to the Labour Party government demanded that Holler be dismissed, but the prime minister Einar Gerhardsen claimed that Kings Bay operations were not accountable to the parliament, since the company was run under a corporate charter rather than a government agency.

This was the pretext, but the underlying issue was constitutional: the non-socialist coalition was protesting against what they perceived as a shift of power away from the legislative in favour of the executive branch in Norway. Having previously enjoyed the confidence of a Labour-dominated parliament since World War II, Gerhardsen was, for the first time in his entire tenure as prime minister, forced to appear before the parliament and answer for his cabinet's actions.

The opposition, previously fragmented, found unity in proposing a vote of no-confidence to the parliament on the rationale that if shareholders can unseat a board for a corporation, then a government that owns a corporation that is mismanaged must be similarly held accountable. For understandable reasons, the Labour party representatives were not inclined to support the vote. Since the non-socialist coalition and the Labour Party each had 74 of the total 150 representatives, the deciding vote fell to the two representatives of the leftist socialist party Sosialistisk Folkeparti.

In an interesting parliamentary twist, Sosialistisk Folkeparti (SF) proposed its own vote of no-confidence, which led to the Gerhardsen cabinet's resignation. Technically, the SF representatives were trying to make the point that they had lost confidence in the current cabinet but not in the party that led it. The photograph, published by Aftenposten, of Gerhardsen leaving the lectern at the Storting as John Lyng approaches it, the two crossing paths, has become an icon in Norwegian political history.

The non-socialist cabinet formed by John Lyng of the Conservative Party of Norway was the first non-Labour government in Norway since World War II, but lasted for only a few weeks, its initial declaration not surviving a vote of no-confidence from the Labour Party and Sosialistisk Folkeparti.

The affair was a dramatic episode in Norwegian history that portended the end of the Gerhardsen dynasty and the emergence of a more articulate and coherent political alternative in the non-socialist camp. It is also credited with galvanizing the radical socialist wing of Norwegian politics in time for the EU debate nine years later.
Kings Bay Affair - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Politicians here were practically following that famous saying of Hazrat Omar that even if a dog dies of starvation at the banks of Euphrates and Tigris, he will be held responsible by G-d. Now compare it with those thousands died due to heatwave in Karachi while your favorite PMLN ministers said they were not responsible? :omghaha:
 
They is a liberal democracy in South Korea and a communist dictatorship in the North. In Pakistan, we have civilian dictatorship. :

So if you assume to know the answer already, then why ask question? :-)

Because such questions are really a disguise. In reality these are statements.

Why disguise?

Or you didn't even know what were you disguising to begin with?
 
So if you assume to know the answer already, then why ask question? :-)

Because such questions are really a disguise. In reality these are statements.

Why disguise?

Or you didn't even know what were you disguising to begin with?

Problem is that majority of Pakistanis still want to support civilian dictatorship of PMLN, PPP and other parties. If you really wanted change and transform Pakistan into a liberal democracy, why vote for these nutty parties to begin with?
 
Problem is that majority of Pakistanis still want to support civilian dictatorship of PMLN, PPP and other parties. If you really wanted change and transform Pakistan into a liberal democracy, why vote for these nutty parties to begin with?

No solution is perfect
nor it is permanent

Nations evolve,
Systems change

Let Pakistan have peace and stability. If it happens by combining Gen. Raheel and PM Sharif. So be it.

Thank you
 

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