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Pakistan accepts India's aid offer for flood relief work

I LIKE IT>>>>>>>

Pak thanks India for aid, sends mangoes for PM

New York: Pakistan has finally accepted India's offer of 5 million US dollars as aid for the devastating floods that have hit the country. And has thanked India. Pakistan Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani on Friday sent five boxes of mangoes to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as a gesture of gratitude.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who is in New York to drum up funding from the international community, confirmed to NDTV's Sarah Jacob that the government of Pakistan had agreed to accept the Indian offer and appreciates the gesture.

The decision came after days of a diplomatic logjam. Yesterday, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh had called up Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani. He offered his condolences and reminded him of the Indian government's offer, saying India was ready to do more.
 
Oh this so good , so now .....we gonna hang him up on the electric pole....:lol:
:pakistan::pdf:

as u wish..he is ur one of ur ministers...do wat u like.....better put him something else....otherwise u would say that we hanged on a non-active electric pole ,BUT u bharatiya passed current and killed our foreign minister.......:yahoo:
 
C'mon guys this is ridiculous,

do you really think flood ravaged families really care where the food or medicines is coming from? or who is sending the relief supplies?

It is very easy to criticize donor country's intentions when you have a roof over your head, two square meals and potable water to drink. Try to put yourself in shoes of your fellow countrymen who are stranded and waiting for relief, before trying to put down aid India is offering.
 
after reading all the post, i think Indians are more concerned about Pakistanis than Pakistani themselves
 
Thr should be a co-ordinated force to deal with such calamities within SAARC region..so the needy can be given relief without much delay..this aid offer from India & acceptance by Pak has taken a ridiculous time.THIS IS SHEER politics..some more funny moves are on
by some VIP's exploiting the masses watch OUT !!!
 
Please do.. The request of the thread starter should be given some extra weightage. :cheesy:

On a serious note, think about it . SOME Indian members are trating this aid incident as a way to supposedly show how unreasonable Pakistan is. On the other hand, some Pakistani members are hating that Pakistan accepted since it leaves THEM open to pot shots on this forum.

C'mon folks. We are talking about life and death situation for thousands and millions of people here. Dont disgrace it by treating it as a gambit in forum wars. Let it go..

Second this completely. Please refrain from trying to score points over a tragedy that has brought so many people so much misery, There will be plenty of other threads where we can do that. India gave $ 5 million. Pakistan accepted it. Hopefully it will make a few people affected by this tragedy, less miserable. End of story. Move on !
 
Now that heat and dust have subsided, time for the serious business at hand.

One of the major crises born out of this natural disaster will be major medical issues. Likely that there will be epidemics of Cholera, Typhoid, Gastro-enteritis etc. The Indian authorities should seriously consider sending medicines to tackle these.
Elsewhere we get to read about GoP importing wheat, sugar, potatoes etc. from India through third countries Why not GoI send this directly across the border? It will save time and cut costs. And any Mr.10% (if any) will not be able to cart it away.

Any news on the 400 doctors and their visa issues? Maybe more doctors can join up. As has been said, they will be extremely useful, since they are familiar with medical patients and their problems in the sub-continent apart from familiarity with language. They can be a huge help.
 
A shameful acceptance

PAKISTAN has accepted the Indian offer of a paltry $5 million in flood aid after India had not got an immediate response from Pakistan, and then moved the heavy guns. The Obama Administration told Pakistan that it should not play politics at this point, and accept the aid. In fact, the State Department spokesman said that the USA expected Pakistan to accept the Indian aid. This came at a time when India has been accusing Pakistani troops of firing across the Line of Control, even though it had engaged in firing first. The aid offer had been repeated by Indian PM Manmohan Singh during his telephone call to his Pakistani counterpart to condole with him over the floods. Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi announced the acceptance of the offer on Friday, apparently in obedience to the USA. It should also be kept in mind that the USA has announced another $60 million in addition to the $90 million it had already announced.

Thus the USA has revealed that it is behind the Indian offer, even though it is just a twelfth of the USA’s addition to its own commitment. Though India likes to claim that it does not want any other power in the region, the route it has chosen to talk to Pakistan ensures that the USA has a role in the region. Being invited into an essentially minor issue by India would please the USA, and make it clear that its new policeman in the region is India. Though Pakistan should perhaps be more concerned that the USA is interfering on behalf of a power which showed its hostility by engaging in a blame-game at this particular juncture, it should also take note of the signal that has been sent by both the USA and India: that money will come to Pakistan when both agree. Part of the American plan for the region is that India must be entrusted with the purse-strings, and this is just the first symptom.

The PPP government has played a reprehensible role, and not only mismanaged the response to the floods, but has also made the receipt of aid a surrender of sovereignty at American and Indian hands. A prompt refusal is even now possible.
 
The reason on which I am happy that Govt. donated 5$ Million is that it will go to US and not to our corrupt or your corrupt people.

When with this money, anyone gets food, shelter it gives me relief. I am sure if this dam.. money was used in our infrastructure it would have been eaten by our corrupt politician.
 
Good news. I would happy to know atleast few hundrer family get benifit of it:)
 
I for one would want Pakistan to act independently on India issue.
If it hates India so much, then let it be known to the world, and refuse the aid out right, except doing all types of dramas.
The double talk and action is evident in all aspects of its policy, what was the need to please USA, or bend to its pressure?
Does any one think that by getting aid this way, it has enhanced its image?
NO, it has shown once again that it is a weak, big talking, unreliable Government with out any substance.

Sorry to say, but my enthusiasm about helping has turned from interest to dismay.:angry:.
 
Mods please close this thread. It was a great gesture from India, I'm happy Pakistan accepted India's offer. That is the end of it, lets keep hate, Kashmir and politics out! I'm sure if there was another situation like this happen in India, Pakistan will surely reach out to help us.
 
Mods please close this thread. It was a great gesture from India, I'm happy Pakistan accepted India's offer. That is the end of it, lets keep hate, Kashmir and politics out! I'm sure if there was another situation like this happen in India, Pakistan will surely reach out to help us.

M.J. Akbar - THE SUNDAY GUARDIAN : Editor, Author and Veteran Journalist: A French chateau and starving Pakistan

Déjà vu: Back to Army in Pakistan-M.J. Akbar

The reservoir of hatred has to be very deep for Pakistan to reject India’s aid at a time when desperate, flood-affected, marauding men snatch precious food from wailing, helpless women; when advertisements for donations are appearing in British and American newspapers; when the United Nations has stepped in to lead a rescue effort; and when the World Bank has offered two billion dollars over the next two years to ameliorate the consequences of an unprecedented national calamity. It took an American rap across the knuckles before Pakistan accepted India’s five million dollars.

Dr Manmohan Singh’s response to this gratuitous insult was a testament to his faith: he offered more. The best answer to visceral animosity is surely a civilised handshake, even if one may have to count one’s fingers after the hand has been shaken.

A caveat is essential. We must not confuse the Pakistani people with the Pakistan government. The government was playing politics with a crisis. The starving have no time for cynicism. The true victims of any such calamity are the poor, for the rich live above water. No poll has indicated that Pakistan’s flood-displaced would rather go hungry and roofless than eat wheat or take shelter under a tent purchased with India’s dollars.

Was Asif Zardari’s fear of Indian money directly related to his fear of the Pakistan Army?

A natural disaster of these proportions can become a defining moment in history. There were many reasons why East Pakistan broke away to create Bangladesh in 1971, but the Yahya Khan regime’s hopeless, and perhaps even prejudiced, neglect of the region after the devastation caused by Cyclone Bhola in 1970 became the conclusive evidence that persuaded Bengalis that they would never get justice in Pakistan. There is already sufficient information from the ground to indicate that Pakistanis are at least as angry with Zardari as Bengalis were with Yahya Khan.

The Khyber-to-Balochistan deluge — stretching across 20% of the country, a space larger than Italy — has begun to reinforce a resurgent public view that the Pakistan Army might have become a more natural institution of governance than the Pakistan People’s Party and the democratic organisations now in power. Its chief Ashfaq Kayani mobilised his troops for relief instantly. Zardari, in a display of astonishing, callous indifference, preferred to go on what can only be described as a working holiday in France and Britain, wherein the holiday invited more publicity than the work. The Army also donated, very quickly, a day’s pay, a thought that did not immediately occur to legislators. Zardari, in sharp contrast, breezed through his expensive jaunt, spending $12,000 per night for his suite in London, and zooming off, with his children and his nominated heir to the Bhutto throne, on helicopters to his chateau in France. A Zardari spokesman explained that this chateau had been in the family possession for 18 years. That then would be around the time when the Bhuttos were in power in Islamabad. Two plus two in Islamabad equals a chateau in France and a lordly estate in England.

Pakistan’s internet is also in flood. The invective against Zardari has to be read to be believed. Alas, the most exhilarating examples cannot be reprinted in a newspaper. It is safe to assume that the credibility of the PPP has been washed away in this flood, and it remains in office from now for purely legal, rather than politically legitimate, reasons. The reputation of the principal Opposition party, led by Nawaz Sharif, which rules Punjab, has been battered by allegations of corruption and maladministration. The main parties have a vested interest in protecting one another. But the fact is that their incompetence has left a huge vacuum, and the only institution capable of filling it is the Army.

The civilian challenge to political parties comes from a far more dangerous force than the Army. To put this in a single sentence: fundamentalist organisations with a terrorist wing, like the renamed Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, reached the affected people long before the government. The only comforting news from internet chatter is the manner in which civil society in Pakistan has mobilised to fill the gap that Islamabad has left. But there is only so much that impromptu citizen action groups can do. They cannot be a substitute for a nation’s government.

Zardari’s fear is valid. Would a coup be as unpopular today as it would have been a year ago? In fact, a year ago it would have been impossible. It might not have become probable even now, but Kayani is a patient man in a country where elected officials are conducting impatient hara-kiri. Zardari has been cozying up to American VIPs like John Kerry, but Washington’s generic dislike of coups is not so strong as to sabotage its self-interest. America is involved in a borderless war in Afghanistan. America’s strategic imperative demands a strong government in Islamabad, and if that means giving recognition to a future President Kayani, so be it.

Asif Zardari’s decision to buy a chateau in France could prove to be a wise investment. It is certainly a far more comfortable address for an ex-President than a VIP jail within a fortress on the Indus.

The columnist is editor of The Sunday Guardian, published from Delhi, and India on Sunday, published from London
 
Acceptance of Indian aid boosts Pak's image: Gilani

Pakistan, which agreed to accept $5 million Indian aid for flood victims following prod by the US, has claimed that the move has enhanced its diplomatic image since refusal would have gone against its insistence on resumption of dialogue.

After dilly-dallying for several days, Pakistan recently accepted India's offer to provide USD 5 million for the millions of victims of the devastating floods that have swept the country.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has said that the move to accept the assistance has enhanced Pakistan's diplomatic image and asked those opposed to taking aid from India to give reasons for their stand.

"I would like to ask the critics of Indian aid on what ground we should refuse it. It will be a narrow approach if we refuse aid from India," Gilani told reporters at his residence here.

But, the move has been criticised by some politicians. "The government has accepted the Indian aid offer on the US call," said Senator Raja Zafar ul Haq, chairman of PML-N party of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

Source
 
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