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Pakistan court grants bail to 26/11 accused Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi: Reports

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you can't expect much from the judiciary in Pakistan, which in itself is infested by terrorist sympathizers!

Exactly... Only Military Court can deliver justice in terror related cases in Pakistan as the civilian Judge may be either complicit or, afraid to take the right call. Such groups have become to big for civilian administration to tackle.
 
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Don't mistake our support and solidarity to all those families who lost their angels as a support to Islamic republic of Pakistan.
the recent bullshite from Hafiz saeed and this distressing and ill timed decision to give bail to this fanatic has really tested those Indians who were feeling sorry for the massacre of the children in Peshawar.

I fear that these back to back events will invite trolling and hatred on the web.

well.. this image alone says a lot about the churning taking place within the justice system of Pakistan! Not good at all..

View attachment 177167
I would have kissed Qadri as well..

a needle tipped with some poison in my mouth to bite him on the cheek (of course with antidote for myself already administered)
 
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Hours after a Pakistan court granted bail to Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, accused by India of plotting the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, the hashtag #PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail took off, in a show of solidarity across borders.

Tweets from Pakistan supported the hashtag as an important message after #IndiaWithPakistan, which became viral in an outpouring of grief from Indians after the massacre of 132 children by Taliban gunmen who stormed a school in Peshawar on Tuesday.

Among those who tweeted with the hashtag was Alizeh Iqbal Haider, a member of the Pakistan National Assembly and a spokesperson for Pakistan People's Party leader Bilawal Bhutto.




Pakistani writer Fatima Bhutto, the niece of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, tweeted:

#IndiaWithPakistan was an important moment of solidarity. So should #PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail be



Indians on twitter acknowledged the gesture with strong calls to unite against terrorism.

"Terrorists don't belong to any nation they don't have any religion. Dear Pakistan, Thank you for this tag #PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail," said one tweet.

JP Ranjan tweeted:

#PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail. MT :"@cyalm: Until Pakistan learns to feel others' pain, it will never stop hurting itself. Mumbai. Lakhvi."



An anti-terror court in Islamabad granted bail to Lakhvi saying the prosecution has been unable to provide evidence against him. Lakhvi, among seven people arrested in the Mumbai attacks trial in Pakistan in 2009, had applied for bail yesterday. On twitter, many Pakistanis criticized the decision.

#PakWithIndiaNotoLakhviBail: A Cross-Border Show of 'Hashtag Solidarity'
 
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Exactly... Only Military Court can deliver justice in terror related cases in Pakistan as the civilian Judge may be either complicit or, afraid to take the right call. Such groups have become to big for civilian administration to tackle.

I doubt if some judge wants to die or a lawyer. It's the govt that needs to grow a pair (forget about the blow back and go after these animals).
 
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READ comment of your fellow Indian whom i replied before pointing fingers at me . Its just been a day or 2 and your media started its usual dirty game as well as your officials. if it was a genuine sympathy your Indians would not have tried to hijack the human tragedy

For your information both Peshawar and Mumbai stem from same mentality i.e utter disregard to humanity. So, we are outraged by the timing of this release.
 
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What disappointing me is the fact the the civil society of Pakistan has not stepped up , letting this terrorist go free 48 hrs after this horrific incident is mind boggling. had this happened anywhere else it would have been condemned by society in general , but i do not see any one raising their voice.
while many Pakistani members here have expressed their displeasure about this creature being freed , there seem to be no broad consensus.


this thread is not about politics , especially AAp tards.

Pakistani Civil Society is too small and constantly under threat. Many of them have publicly denounced this verdict ( If twitter can be considered ). Today they are protesting at Lal-Masjid but their media is not covering it. We can only hope the tribe of rational people in Pakistan grows. But unless that happens, only solution ( lesser evil ) seems to be military.
 
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the recent bullshite from Hafiz saeed and this distressing and ill timed decision to give bail to this fanatic has really tested those Indians who were feeling sorry for the massacre of the children in Peshawar.

I fear that these back to back events will invite trolling and hatred on the web.
Things are going to settle after sometime. I don't expect Pakistan changing it's policy regarding India and kashmir. You might go full throttle against TTP but i don't see Pakistan compromising it's "strategic asset"
 
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I doubt if some judge wants to die or a lawyer. It's the govt that needs to grow a pair (forget about the blow back and go after these animals).

Civilian Government can never go after such groups as these groups have become very influential and can damage that party in elections. Biggest drawback of democracy is appeasement and such groups thrive on that only.
 
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YOU SPOKE MY MIND
this decision is a slap on the victims of Peshawar massacre.

I give you the reason. Jamat Islami
over decades well before Zia .. it has seeped into the Pakistani establishment, education and judiciary. it miticulasouly worked on recruiting people of power in our country. the people who have a say.

at one time they were at their prime during Zia but that took a reverse during Musharraf time but the damage was done.

this is why despite having a laughable political mandate, this cult commands so much power in Pakistan and its leaders openly praise cannibals, rapists and refuse to express any grief for the victims (reference to Munawar Hassan who declared Osama as greatest Martyr)

What seems to be Pakistan's plan to sort this problem? Would Imran Khan make sure courts work and punish terrorists? Is Pakistan Army on the same page? How are common Pakistanis reacting to this bail?
 
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Hours after a Pakistan court granted bail to Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, accused by India of plotting the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, the hashtag #PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail took off, in a show of solidarity across borders.

Tweets from Pakistan supported the hashtag as an important message after #IndiaWithPakistan, which became viral in an outpouring of grief from Indians after the massacre of 132 children by Taliban gunmen who stormed a school in Peshawar on Tuesday.

Among those who tweeted with the hashtag was Alizeh Iqbal Haider, a member of the Pakistan National Assembly and a spokesperson for Pakistan People's Party leader Bilawal Bhutto.




Pakistani writer Fatima Bhutto, the niece of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, tweeted:

#IndiaWithPakistan was an important moment of solidarity. So should #PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail be



Indians on twitter acknowledged the gesture with strong calls to unite against terrorism.

"Terrorists don't belong to any nation they don't have any religion. Dear Pakistan, Thank you for this tag #PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail," said one tweet.

JP Ranjan tweeted:

#PakWithIndiaNoToLakhviBail. MT :"@cyalm: Until Pakistan learns to feel others' pain, it will never stop hurting itself. Mumbai. Lakhvi."



An anti-terror court in Islamabad granted bail to Lakhvi saying the prosecution has been unable to provide evidence against him. Lakhvi, among seven people arrested in the Mumbai attacks trial in Pakistan in 2009, had applied for bail yesterday. On twitter, many Pakistanis criticized the decision.

#PakWithIndiaNotoLakhviBail: A Cross-Border Show of 'Hashtag Solidarity'
Going through the hashtag many Pakistanis claim this was made to trend by Indians.
 
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Exactly... Only Military Court can deliver justice in terror related cases in Pakistan as the civilian Judge may be either complicit or, afraid to take the right call. Such groups have become to big for civilian administration to tackle.

Precisely! Judge who sentenced that Mumtaz Qadri (killer of Salman Tasir) had to leave the country soon after. & the one who hugged & kissed the killer is a judge now! irony of sorts...says a lot about the state of affairs in that country!
 
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