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Pakistan and UAE are two countries with single soul, Envoy Jamil Khan

lol according to your source total UAE population is 8.2 million and total Indian population according to you is 1.75 million which is equal to 21 % Indians

, so how can it be 40 % Indians in whole UAE according to your previous post, cant you do simple math:disagree::lol:


What is the 25% of 8.2 million ????


Nearly all citizens are Muslims, approximately 85 percent of whom are Sunni and the remaining 15 percent are Shi'a. Foreigners are predominantly from South and Southeast Asia, although there is a substantial number from the Middle East, Europe, Central Asia, former Commonwealth of Independent States, and North America. Although no official figures are available, local observers estimate that approximately 55 percent of the foreign population is Muslim, 25 percent is Hindu, 10 percent is Christian, 5 percent is Buddhist, and 5 percent (most of whom reside in Dubai and Abu Dhabi) belongs to other religions, including Parsi, Baha'i, and Sikh.

United Arab Emirates
 
lots of buttering up going on with UAE - Mirage 2000 deals on card or what ... 2 hearts beating as one ... :smitten:
 
last i heard all the sheiks in UAE were acting like whores buying US arms and flaunting their riches on women and sex and drugs.......

i dont agree with pakistan and UAE having same soul...
 
Instead of Pakistan just bending over like it always does to the arabs maybe they need to look into why there are 1600 Pakistani's in UAE Prisons? Have they been tried? have they been found guilty? Why are they in Prison... over 1600 Pakistani lingering with no hope what so ever..
 
Instead of Pakistan just bending over like it always does to the arabs maybe they need to look into why there are 1600 Pakistani's in UAE Prisons? Have they been tried? have they been found guilty? Why are they in Prison... over 1600 Pakistani lingering with no hope what so ever..

Pakistanis and the Gulf states – The Express Tribune

Pakistanis and the Gulf states - Zafar Hilaly

The other day, a Pakistani labourer in the UAE, who reacted to an insult by making a rude gesture — extending his middle finger — was arrested, jailed for a month and awaits deportation on the completion of his sentence. When the local gauleiter was asked whether the punishment meted out was excessive, he replied that it was not because those who violate the ‘culture and traditions’ of the emirate should be punished. Presumably then, the ladies of the street who ply their trade in the parking lot of supermarkets in the UAE, in open view of customers and clearly with the knowledge of the police, do not violate the culture and traditions of the emirate.

There was another piece of news from the UAE, again concerning Pakistanis. Apparently two schools meant for the children of overseas Pakistanis working in the UAE are being shut down, rendering over 1,000 school children school-less. This happened because the Sheikh who had agreed to ‘partner’ the schools’ Pakistani founders, by donating the land and raising money to build the school, dropped out of the arrangement because of a change of the local law. The person he had recommended as his successor, to satisfy the law which forbids foreigners to run a business or own property without a local partner, also withdrew from the partnership. One does not, of course, know why the replacement ‘sleeping’ partner suddenly ‘woke up’ and ended the partnership, or whether he consulted the Shaikh, but as a result of his action, the schools can no longer operate, to the consternation of hapless Pakistani parents.

These two incidences which transpired on the same day, as reported in the Pakistani press, highlight the hostile attitude of local administrations in the Gulf towards Pakistanis. Nothing new, actually, as the invidious treatment meted out to Pakistani travelers at Gulf airports shows. Some of our suited lot is defensive about it, which is a shame. Our fawning diplomats are worse, forgetting that no one will respect them unless they respect themselves. Noticeably, such antipathy towards our folk does not exist in other Arab states, as I discovered when posted for nearly five years (1986-90) in one of them.

What was extraordinary was that when we met foreign diplomats posted in Islamabad at one time or the other, those from other states, Muslim or not, confined their recollections to pleasant happenings. On the other hand, those from the Gulf States, after saying how much they had enjoyed their posting in Islamabad, invariably ended up by expressing sorrow at some recent development or the other in Pakistan, adding that, but for the foibles of our leadership and lack of good sense, things could be so much better in Pakistan.

The look of pity that their faces reflected was uncomfortably close to contempt. Irked by their selective recollections, I finally sat one of them down and said, “Look, my brother, if you had our population, and no oil, you would have fared worse and had we your population and your oil, we would have done much better. But I do not go about saying so every time we meet.” It seemed to work. I noticed they were less social, which was just as well because the repeated ritual kissing on the cheeks, if you come across five of them in a row, can become an ordeal.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 18th, 2011.

Zafar Hilaly is a retired ambassador. He lives in Karachi.
 
Instead of Pakistan just bending over like it always does to the arabs maybe they need to look into why there are 1600 Pakistani's in UAE Prisons? Have they been tried? have they been found guilty? Why are they in Prison... over 1600 Pakistani lingering with no hope what so ever..

Not to mention the third class treatment dished out to people coming in airlines from southeast asia where they come into separate terminals, ones meant for the "Whites" and one meant for people like us. Also etihad flights coming from pakistan to abu dhabi are also sometimes taken to terminal 2 to avoid pakistanis in shalwar kameez being seen in the much better terminals.

Its a shame though, since the beginning of the UAE, it was southeast asia who built this country from the ground up but now every expatriate is being fired from government jobs to make space for "Watanis" who have no skill other than driving four wheel drives on their side wheels. Sad; country with no culture.
 
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