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Pakistan from (and in) the eyes of a Saudi Professor!!

war&peace

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Hey Guys!!
Some of my foreigner (locals here) friends referred me to this article written by a Saudi Professor Tariq A. Al-Maeena in which he has said certain things about Pakistan that my friends wanted me to clarify. So I want to share it with you and want to know your opinion about this article. Please try to keep following questions in your mind while reading the article and commenting about it.
  1. Is he being truthful?
  2. Should brothers treat each other this way?
  3. Does brotherhood and ummah exists at any level after reading this article?
  4. Why a KSAian views us - the Pakistanis as such?
  5. Have our Indian friends been right all along that we are treated as slaves by Arabs?
Click here for the article http://saudigazette.com.sa/article/512628

Please read the article before commenting (hint: I have used a little bit of sarcasm). Otherwise you will risk being turning your self into a sour moron!!
@PakSword @Verve @Arsalan @Zarvan @MastanKhan
 
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Following my article a couple of weeks ago in which I complimented the Pakistani cricket team for snatching victory from the jaws of defeat against their formidable arch-rivals India, I received a couple of comments that left me puzzled.

One was from a Westerner while the other critic was an Asian. The gist of it was essentially dressing me down for complimenting what they both termed as a “failed state”. They both individually felt that there was not much to Pakistan’s credit to mention, and perhaps that was why I praised their team’s victory.

But let’s take a closer look at this country before we rush to judgment. Pakistan has been listed among the next 11 countries that along with the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) have a high potential of becoming among the world’s largest economies in the 21st century.

In the last five years, Pakistan’s literacy rate has grown by 250 percent, the largest increase in any country to date. According to a poll organized by the Institute of European Business Administration, from 125 countries, Pakistanis have been ranked the “fourth most intelligent people” across the globe. The Cambridge exams of both A and O levels have been topped by Pakistani students and this is a record yet to be broken. The world’s youngest certified Microsoft Experts, Arfa Kareem and Babar Iqbal, are from Pakistan. The seventh largest pool of scientists and engineers come from, you guessed it, Pakistan. The fourth largest broadband Internet system of the world is in Pakistan.

Pakistan is the first and only Islamic country to attain nuclear power. It is also notable for having some of the best-trained air force pilots in the world. The country’s missile technology is one of the best in the world. The country has produced a large quantity of various types of missiles since it has become a nuclear power. It also boasts of the sixth largest military force in the world.

In cooperation with China, Pakistan has produced the PAC JF-17 Thunder aircraft, a lightweight, single-engine, multi-role combat aircraft developed by the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC). The JF-17 can be used for aerial reconnaissance, ground attack and aircraft interception. Its designation “JF-17” by Pakistan is short for “Joint Fighter-17”.

It has also constructed the world’s largest warm-water, deep-sea port situated on the Arabian Sea at Gwadar in Balochistan province. Tarbela Dam is the world’s largest earth-filled dam and second largest dam overall. The Karakoram Highway, connecting China and Pakistan, is the highest paved international road in the world. The Khewra Salt Mine, the second largest salt mine in the world is in operation in the Punjab region of Pakistan. The world’s largest irrigation network is present in Pakistan. It serves 14.4 million hectares of cultivated land. The irrigation system is fed by water from the Indus River.

Land of some of the oldest civilizations (Indus Valley and Mohenjo-Daro), Pakistan is a multilingual country with more than 60 languages spoken. It is the sixth most populated country in the world and the second-most populous Muslim-majority country. It also has the second-largest Shia population in the world. The Edhi Foundation, a non-profit social welfare program in Pakistan, founded by Abdul Sattar Edhi in 1951 runs the world’s largest ambulance network. The country also boasts of the world’s youngest civil judge, Muhammad Illyas.

Pakistan is one the biggest exporters of surgical instruments in the world. About 50 percent of the world’s footballs are made in Pakistan. Nestle Pakistan is one of the largest milk processing plants which generates large revenue every year.

Among its natural wonders, Pakistan has the highest mountain ranges in the world. The world’s second highest and the ninth highest mountains, K2 and Nanga Parbat respectively, are in Pakistan. The Thar Desert is among the world’s largest sub-tropical deserts. The world’s highest polo ground is in Shandur Top, Pakistan at a height of 3,700 meters.

In 1994, Pakistan became the first country of the world to hold four World Cup titles tournaments in different mainstream sports simultaneously. The sports included cricket, hockey, squash and snooker.

The Lonely Planet, a global tourist guide, has listed Pakistan as being tourism’s “next big thing for more years than we care to remember. But world media headlines always send things off the rails.”

Perhaps my critics too have been unfairly influenced by media headlines. I urge them to take a second look at this country before they rush to judgment. Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder.
@Emmie @Farah Sohail @django @Kaptaan
 
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Following my article a couple of weeks ago in which I complimented the Pakistani cricket team for snatching victory from the jaws of defeat against their formidable arch-rivals India, I received a couple of comments that left me puzzled.

One was from a Westerner while the other critic was an Asian. The gist of it was essentially dressing me down for complimenting what they both termed as a “failed state”. They both individually felt that there was not much to Pakistan’s credit to mention, and perhaps that was why I praised their team’s victory.

But let’s take a closer look at this country before we rush to judgment. Pakistan has been listed among the next 11 countries that along with the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) have a high potential of becoming among the world’s largest economies in the 21st century.

In the last five years, Pakistan’s literacy rate has grown by 250 percent, the largest increase in any country to date. According to a poll organized by the Institute of European Business Administration, from 125 countries, Pakistanis have been ranked the “fourth most intelligent people” across the globe. The Cambridge exams of both A and O levels have been topped by Pakistani students and this is a record yet to be broken. The world’s youngest certified Microsoft Experts, Arfa Kareem and Babar Iqbal, are from Pakistan. The seventh largest pool of scientists and engineers come from, you guessed it, Pakistan. The fourth largest broadband Internet system of the world is in Pakistan.

Pakistan is the first and only Islamic country to attain nuclear power. It is also notable for having some of the best-trained air force pilots in the world. The country’s missile technology is one of the best in the world. The country has produced a large quantity of various types of missiles since it has become a nuclear power. It also boasts of the sixth largest military force in the world.

In cooperation with China, Pakistan has produced the PAC JF-17 Thunder aircraft, a lightweight, single-engine, multi-role combat aircraft developed by the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC). The JF-17 can be used for aerial reconnaissance, ground attack and aircraft interception. Its designation “JF-17” by Pakistan is short for “Joint Fighter-17”.

It has also constructed the world’s largest warm-water, deep-sea port situated on the Arabian Sea at Gwadar in Balochistan province. Tarbela Dam is the world’s largest earth-filled dam and second largest dam overall. The Karakoram Highway, connecting China and Pakistan, is the highest paved international road in the world. The Khewra Salt Mine, the second largest salt mine in the world is in operation in the Punjab region of Pakistan. The world’s largest irrigation network is present in Pakistan. It serves 14.4 million hectares of cultivated land. The irrigation system is fed by water from the Indus River.

Land of some of the oldest civilizations (Indus Valley and Mohenjo-Daro), Pakistan is a multilingual country with more than 60 languages spoken. It is the sixth most populated country in the world and the second-most populous Muslim-majority country. It also has the second-largest Shia population in the world. The Edhi Foundation, a non-profit social welfare program in Pakistan, founded by Abdul Sattar Edhi in 1951 runs the world’s largest ambulance network. The country also boasts of the world’s youngest civil judge, Muhammad Illyas.

Pakistan is one the biggest exporters of surgical instruments in the world. About 50 percent of the world’s footballs are made in Pakistan. Nestle Pakistan is one of the largest milk processing plants which generates large revenue every year.

Among its natural wonders, Pakistan has the highest mountain ranges in the world. The world’s second highest and the ninth highest mountains, K2 and Nanga Parbat respectively, are in Pakistan. The Thar Desert is among the world’s largest sub-tropical deserts. The world’s highest polo ground is in Shandur Top, Pakistan at a height of 3,700 meters.

In 1994, Pakistan became the first country of the world to hold four World Cup titles tournaments in different mainstream sports simultaneously. The sports included cricket, hockey, squash and snooker.

The Lonely Planet, a global tourist guide, has listed Pakistan as being tourism’s “next big thing for more years than we care to remember. But world media headlines always send things off the rails.”

Perhaps my critics too have been unfairly influenced by media headlines. I urge them to take a second look at this country before they rush to judgment. Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder.
@Emmie @Farah Sohail @django @Kaptaan
And the pity is so much more could have and should have been achieved if not for clowns like our so-called leaders,,,,, we really should have been the first Muslim nation to put a satellite in orbit on the back of our own SLV, this will always piss me off.Kudos and nice share bro.
 
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"One was from a Westerner while the other critic was an Asian. The gist of it was essentially dressing me down for complimenting what they both termed as a “failed state".. "

Complete story
Indians can't tolerate anyone praising pakistan .
They force the world to think pakistan is a failed terror nation but they forget not everyone is headless idiot like them .
 
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Hey Guys!!
Some of my foreigner (locals here) friends referred me to this article written by a Saudi Professor Tariq A. Al-Maeena in which he has said certain things about Pakistan that my friends wanted me clarify. So I want to share it with you and want to know your opinion about this article. Please try to keep following questions in your mind while reading the article and commenting about it.
  1. Is he being truthful?
  2. Should brothers treat each other this way?
  3. Does brotherhood and ummah exists at any level after reading this article?
  4. Why a KSAian views us - the Pakistanis as such?
Click here for the article http://saudigazette.com.sa/article/512628
@PakSword @Verve @Arsalan @Zarvan @MastanKhan

I want some clarification about why do you have these questions. Everything this guy has said is true, but what has that got to do with brotherhood or ummah? Also these are not just the view of a guy from KSA these are facts ( except the 250% rise in literacy rate )

Pakistan is a great country with huge potential, the only reason that the pace of growth is so slow is because the people at the helm of controls in this country have been incompetent at best and criminals at worst. Pakistan needs people like IK and Asad Umer to captain this ship to prosperity but it will still be a long and bumpy road as the dust of more than 70 yrs of malpractice is entrenched deep in the society now and it will take atleast a generation for things to change.
 
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I want some clarification about why do you have these questions. Everything this guy has said is true, but what has that got to do with brotherhood or ummah? Also these are not just the view of a guy from KSA these are facts.

Pakistan is a great country with huge potential, the only reason that the pace of growth is so slow is because the people at the helm of controls in this country have been incompetent at best and criminals at worst. Pakistan needs people like IK and Asad Umer to captain this ship to prosperity but it will still be a long and bumpy road as the dust of more than 70 yrs of malpractice is entrenched deep in the society now and it will take atleast a generation for things to change.
This is to get some fishes hooked. My intelligent audience is able to understand that so I'm not afraid. The facts are not seen by the rest of the world thus a few voices of sanity and love need to be commended. We need more people like him who are able to see through the negative media coverage. There are a lot of people among us, who echo the sentiments and opinions of our enemies and claim that Pakistan is a failed state. Furthermore, even bigger is the group of people who go breathless in claiming that how all the Arabs deride us.
 
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What are you talking about? Are you talking about the article or the comments section - did you even read the article? The article is nothing but praise about Pakistan. If I missed something please highlight the text. Furthermore, it has only two hundred views, it is highly unlikely that it has been read by 200 intelligent people. Unless you are dyslexic or a complete moron, the Saudi (if he's an actual Saudi) wrote nothing but good about Pakistan, so ALL of your idiotic questions are meaningless.

By the way, don't get me wrong, I love Saudi bashing, but ONLY for the right reasons.

Note: Comments section is open to every other idiot, why not go ahead and leave yours too. And tell your illetrate "foreigner" friends to comment too. They seem to to be as clueless as you.

@Saif al-Arab @Horus

P.S. God forgive me for writing good about Saudis. :P

Hey Guys!!
Some of my foreigner (locals here) friends referred me to this article written by a Saudi Professor Tariq A. Al-Maeena in which he has said certain things about Pakistan that my friends wanted me clarify. So I want to share it with you and want to know your opinion about this article. Please try to keep following questions in your mind while reading the article and commenting about it.
  1. Is he being truthful?
  2. Should brothers treat each other this way?
  3. Does brotherhood and ummah exists at any level after reading this article?
  4. Why a KSAian views us - the Pakistanis as such?
  5. Have our Indian friends right all along that we are treated as slaves by Arabs?
Click here for the article http://saudigazette.com.sa/article/512628
@PakSword @Verve @Arsalan @Zarvan @MastanKhan
 
.
And the pity is so much more could have and should have been achieved if not for clowns like our so-called leaders,,,,, we really should have been the first Muslim nation to put a satellite in orbit on the back of our own SLV, this will always piss me off.Kudos and nice share bro.
True that. But don't worry mate.... our nation is auto-correcting itself. The JIT report has started the unstoppable process of purging the guts of the nation from all the corrupt elements and it will only gain momentum over time. Once we get rid of these corrupt imbeciles, no one can stop us. SLV is a low hanging fruit for a missile power like Pakistan, it is only hampered by economic issues and some misplaced priorities but even on this front there is some good news. Pakistan's recent test of liquid fuelled Ghauri missile after a long hiatus indicates that there is some desire to revive the SLV program.

SLV will just be the start, we have to go a long way...beyond our wildest imaginations...just wait a few years...
 
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True that. But don't worry mate.... our nation is auto-correcting itself. The JIT report has started the unstoppable process of purging the guts of the nation from all the corrupt elements and it will only gain momentum over time. Once we get rid of these corrupt imbeciles, no one can stop us. SLV is a low hanging fruit for a missile power like Pakistan, it is only hampered by economic issues and some misplaced priorities but even on this front there is some good news. Pakistan's recent test of liquid fuelled Ghauri missile after a long hiatus indicates that there is some desire to revive the SLV program.

SLV will just be the start, we have to go a long way...beyond our wildest imaginations...just wait a few years...
I understand what you are saying but would have loved to have had the bragging rights of being the first, of course we could and should have done it, but Mushy cancelled the program according to Dr AQ Khan.Kudos bro........Let the purge begin;)
 
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What are you talking about? Are you talking about the article or the comments section - did you even read the article? The article is nothing but praise about Pakistan. If I missed something please highlight the text. Furthermore, it has only two hundred views, it is highly unlikely that it has been read by 200 intelligent people. Unless you are dyslexic or a complete moron, the Saudi (if he's an actual Saudi) wrote nothing but good about Pakistan, so ALL of your idiotic questions are meaningless.

By the way, don't get me wrong, I love Saudi bashing, but ONLY for the right reasons.

Note: Comments section is open to every other idiot, why not go ahead and leave yours too. And tell your illetrate "foreigner" friends to comment too. They seem to to be as clueless as you.

@Saif al-Arab @Horus

P.S. God forgive me for writing good about Saudis. :P
It needs a penny worth of intelligence to understand this article and my questions. If you don't have anything positive to contribute...you can take a long walk.
 
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It's all about how the questions are asked. "Keep it simple stupid" on any public forum. Furthermore, if your objective was to gather sympathy for "Ummah" from an article from a complete nobody with 200 views, in some local newspaper, that too in back alley article section, then you have failed miserably on that count as well.

It needs a penny worth of intelligence to understand this article and my questions. If you don't have anything positive to contribute...you can take a long walk.
 
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It's all about how the questions are asked. "Keep it simple stupid" on any public forum. Furthermore, if your objective was to gather sympathy for "Ummah" from an article from a complete nobody with 200 views, in some local newspaper, that too in back alley article section, then you have failed miserably on that count as well.
Have you even read the article?

And instead of getting personal with me, try to limit your comments to answering the questions I raised and if you lack the ability to understand a bit of sarcasm used to provoke the thought process then it is not my fault. Don't assume that I will be intimidated by your title. Rather as a title holder you are more responsible for following the rules and avoid trolling. Don't get hyper... I have reported your posts.

This article might have 200 views on this site but do you have any idea how many people have shared it on WhatsApp, Facebook and other social media?
Also if you have read this article, the first line makes it clear that it is his second article...By the way the number of views do not change his opinion or quality of work. Saudi gazette is a famous and reputable newspaper.
 
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