Joe Shearer
PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2009
- Messages
- 27,493
- Reaction score
- 162
- Country
- Location
China doesn't have a claim on Gilgit, you Indian buffoon.
Read your history.
It has a solid claim, based on inheriting the claims of Kashgar.
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.
China doesn't have a claim on Gilgit, you Indian buffoon.
You idiot, if that was true we would have given Gilgit to China.Read your history.
It has a solid claim, based on inheriting the claims of Kashgar.
You idiot, if that was true we would have given Gilgit to China.
We gave China Shaksgam Valley because it historically belonged to the Qing dynasty, and the Qing dynasty never agreed to anything to the British did.
Gilgit is Pakistani territory and not Chinese territory.
Then stop giving idiotic claims then which are irrelevant.DO NOT USE PERSONAL INSULTS.
You idiot, if that was true we would have given Gilgit to China.
We gave China Shaksgam Valley because it historically belonged to the Qing dynasty, and the Qing dynasty never agreed to anything to the British did.
Gilgit is Pakistani territory and not Chinese territory.
LOL I wonder who give this Indian joker the priviledge to do a negative rating on a Pakistani!
LOL LOL.
This forum is too easy on Indians!
Then stop giving idiotic claims then which are irrelevant.
I wonder who made you Professional???
I shall be reading up on this.Read your history.
It has a solid claim, based on inheriting the claims of Kashgar.
No, you shut up.You didn't. So shut up and do your reading. I say nothing that is not substantiable. And you are warned; every piece of abuse will attract retribution.
LOL going to wikipedia.Hunza was an independent principality for centuries. It was ruled by the Mirs of Hunza, who took the title of Thum.
The Hunzas were tributaries and allies to China, acknowledging China as suzerain[2] since 1761.[3] When the Hunzas raided mountainous places of Karakorum and Kunlun mountains, including Xaidulla, where some groups of the nomadic Kirghiz were the main inhabitants, they sold some Kirghiz slaves to the Chinese.[4]
From 1847 the Mir of Hunza gave nominal allegiance to China. This resulted from assistance given by Mir Ghazanfur Khan to China in fighting against the Uyghur separatist Afaqi Khoja revolts in Yarkand, following which China granted Hunza a jagir (Land grant) in Yarkand and paid the Mir a subsidy.[5][6]
Yes we gave China Shaksgam Valley
You can check the maps, but you are ignorant
This forum is way too easy on Indians.
No, you shut up.
China HAS NOT CLAIM ON GIGIT-BALTISTAN.
THE PRC HAS NOT CLAIM ON THE REGION except on Aksai Chin.
Stop lying and show me proof.
Yes we gave China Shaksgam Valley
You can check the maps, but you are ignorant
This forum is way too easy on Indians.
Im very critical of CPEC!
Chinese are even importing labourers from China... and now even Chinese owned stores..
What about locals? Only good for shyt jobs at such businesses?
The Gilgit Baltistanis are already dismayed... next is islambad, Balochistan (specifically gawadar) and other regions connecting CPEC.
Whether you believe it or not, my difficulties with CPEC are more to do with wishing Pakistan well than being envious and hoping that it will fail. Ever since it was created, Pakistan has held on to foreign apron-strings; whether in defence, with the Chinese currently replacing the Euro-American bloc, or in economics, with massive subvention from the oil-rich states whenever needed, or in the development of missile technology.
Once again, Pakistan has opted for the escalator instead of taking the stairs. I don't think it will work. All the monetisation of the work will flow back to China; key personnel will be Chinese; control will forever be in Chinese hands.
I am dreading another development.
If you leave aside Indian trolls and Pakistani super-patriots, and study the records and the history of the region, certain very uncomfortable facts will surface. Several of the Pamir Emirates were vassals of Kashgar; China already has a strong historical claim to the Gilgit region. Now, having invited them in, Pakistan will have to figure out how to get them out. All these articles about how strong the Chinese presence is getting in Pakistan as a whole, and all those unpublished, unprinted, untold stories about the Chinese presence in Gilgit really make my fresh creep. I am afraid that this will turn out to be another of those whirlwind courtships and romances that we have seen so often in Pakistani history, and that, as before, Pakistan will be left holding the baby.
My facts are straight.We didn't give away any land to China. Quite the contrary, while China gave away 750 sq. miles of its administered territory to Pakistan, we only waived a few "claims" that anyway were on paper/map only. Get your facts straight.
Whether you believe it or not, my difficulties with CPEC are more to do with wishing Pakistan well than being envious and hoping that it will fail. Ever since it was created, Pakistan has held on to foreign apron-strings; whether in defence, with the Chinese currently replacing the Euro-American bloc, or in economics, with massive subvention from the oil-rich states whenever needed, or in the development of missile technology.
Once again, Pakistan has opted for the escalator instead of taking the stairs. I don't think it will work. All the monetisation of the work will flow back to China; key personnel will be Chinese; control will forever be in Chinese hands.
I am dreading another development.
If you leave aside Indian trolls and Pakistani super-patriots, and study the records and the history of the region, certain very uncomfortable facts will surface. Several of the Pamir Emirates were vassals of Kashgar; China already has a strong historical claim to the Gilgit region. Now, having invited them in, Pakistan will have to figure out how to get them out. All these articles about how strong the Chinese presence is getting in Pakistan as a whole, and all those unpublished, unprinted, untold stories about the Chinese presence in Gilgit really make my fresh creep. I am afraid that this will turn out to be another of those whirlwind courtships and romances that we have seen so often in Pakistani history, and that, as before, Pakistan will be left holding the baby.