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Pakistan's Silence On China's Uighur Muslims Is Betraying Its National Character

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What Pakistanis should realize at this point is that Pakistan isn't the protector of all of the muslim nations around the world. We were created for the protection of subcontinental muslims. Why Kashmir belongs to us is more than just Religion, they are subcontinental muslims like us who fought for the freedom of Pakistan (Allama Iqbal) and were unfairly annexed against their will. They are a part of partition's unfinished business that needs to be resolved if Pakistan truly wants to be complete. They are culturally, ethnically and traditionally similar to Pakistanis than Indians as well as being Muslims.

It is this naive mentality that has left us in so much trouble over the past 70 years. We need to look after our own interests and well being. Right now, majority of our beloved Muslim brothers aren't even our allies. If you fear that Pakistanis are being hypocritical, then the other muslims that could've helped us but didn't are equal hypocrites. Before China, they had a chance to help us however did they? If they were such amazing allies they would've been more helpful for our cause? We've been forced to this point and we don't have any other option. China's interest align with us at the moment, they are our most beneficial partner. If we ruin this relationship like some of you idiots want then how the hell will we survive any future international resolutions made against us? Do we have enough Oil like Iran to still manage to stand tall? We're not being hypocrites, we're trying to survive and build this nation up. We're not in it for the money, we're in it for our own survival. We're alone in our cause and that's the simple harsh truth. Even after advocating this image of " Pakistan = Islam, so help us " how many concrete allies came forward when India annexed Kashmir Last year??

Allah says to have faith in him, true. Allah also says to play smart and hard for his help to work. Right now, only the situation of Kashmiri muslims is within our hands and we can only advocate for that. That should be our utmost priority. As a poster already posted here, the issue with Uighurs is that they think of themselves as Turkic first and that is their whole issue. There are Han chinese muslims in China as well. So even if Pakistan plays the muslim card there the Han muslims should also be taken into the equation. Why doesn't the western media highlights them? There are more than one reasons why a East Turkestan is bad news for us.
Pakistan have been very vocal about issues of Muslims worldwide including Palestine, Bosnia, Chechnya among others. These voices no longer carry weight if WE try to be 'selective' in our criticism of these issues - this is utter hypocrisy.

Secondly, do you think that China doesn't want CPEC to succeed? Is China beyond criticism now? Beyond even constructive criticism as well? What is next? WE start pooja of Chinese or something? This is how bilateral relationships no longer remain balanced.

Bilateral relationships are formed on the basis of mutual respect and exchanges, and not on the basis of silencing potential criticism in one state. Is China Lord of this world or something?

Problem is that WE have a WEAK Imaan and WE fear False Gods of Earth 'more' than even Allah Almighty.

Refer to this post for a larger view of why Muslims are in deep shit at a global stage: https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/dow-...gle-day-loss-ever.657179/page-2#post-12153816

Nobody is advocating cutting ties with China or any other friendly state over the issue of Xinjiang - this is not realistic decision. If Muslims of Xinjiang are troublemakers, then reducating them is the way forward (no ifs and buts) and China can seek input from Pakistan in this matter. But Chinese state is increasingly Islamophobic and does not want our input in this matter; they will prefer to silence even constructive criticism over this matter instead.

Also, this: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/06/united-nations-failed-save-rohingya-190628024749391.html

Remember this; when Holy Prophet (PBUH) commenced preaching of Islam, he did not had a grand army at his disposal for the needful - only faith in Allah Almighty. He wasn't afraid and he wasn't irrational but he stuck to the cause of Islam through thick and thin. Slowly but surely things moved into motion and breakthrough came eventually (i.e. conquest of Mecca), and False Gods of the time were taught a lesson as well.

Muslims - all over the world - need to come out from their shell of hypocrisy and strive for Pan-Islamic values and narratives in good faith. Muslims must not forget that each is answerable to Allah Almighty first and foremost. The least WE can do is to voice our concern about ill-treatment of Muslims worldwide.
 
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This online magazine has no credibility. Its editorial board has some big names but this magazine is just tool of syops to spread misinformation and disinformation.
The person who posted this article should had put his analysis first to give perspective. Just copy pasting an article is very lame work.
There should be policy to post articles from sources.
@WebMaster
@waz
@Horus
@Socra
@The Eagle
 
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Inside Pakistan, India is an obsession. Communal violence surrounding the 1947 partition of India claimed up to two million lives. India and Pakistan subsequently fought three wars: In 1965, when India retaliated for Pakistani efforts to infiltrate forces into Jammu and Kashmir, in 1971 against the backdrop of the Bangladeshi War of Independence, and again in 1999, when Indian forces pushed back against a Pakistani offensive in Kargil, along the line-of-control.
1_img117320090331.jpg

As the late Princeton historian Bernard Lewis pointed out, if scholars embraced the same definition of “refugee” that the United Nations applies to Palestinians who have been displaced by Israel, then South Asia would be home to more than two hundred million refugees. Tensions remain evident across the country. In 2000, in Peshawar, a mockup of a Pakistani nuclear missile stood in the midst of a traffic circle with the slogan “I’d love to enter India” written underneath it. In the Pakistani capital of Islamabad today, giant billboard clocks mark the time since India imposed a curfew on Kashmir.

There is no shortage of anti-Indian animus within Pakistan but in recent months it has been China which has humiliated Pakistan in a manner which India never could. Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the long-time leader of the All-India Muslim League and the founding father of Pakistan, conceived the new country as a land for the Muslims. Because Pakistan based its legitimacy more on religion than on ethnicity, it really is the first Islamic state of the modern era.


Pakistanis have historically been at the forefront of advocacy and action against the oppression of Muslims, real or imagined. This is what guided Pakistan to oppose Soviet designs on Afghanistan. Pakistan is among the most anti-Israel and anti-Semitic countries on earth. The Pakistani press regularly covers the plight of Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingya Muslims. Pakistani charities work in Chechnya. There is no shortage of the terrorist groups Pakistan sponsors who target India and are motivated more by religion than nationalism. And, yet, when it comes to China’s incarceration of more than a million Uighur Muslims—solely because they are Muslim—Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan has been silent on one hand and on the other he has both defended China’s repression of its Muslims and persecuted for China the Uighurs in Pakistan.

Sister city twinning is a common diplomatic practice in order to advance tourism and ties between the world’s major cities. China and Pakistan have taken this to a new level with provincial twining. Recently, Pakistan’s mission in Beijing gave a draft memorandum of understanding to the Chinese foreign ministry in order to establish sister province relations between Xinjiang and Gilgit-Baltistan. Not only, therefore, is Khan cowed by Chinese pressure to the point that he must turn a blind eye to the greatest repression of Muslims in the twenty-first century but he now seeks to honor the Chinese province that is at the epicenter of Chinese anti-Muslim repression. Even if Khan is motivated by the implied threat to treat the people of the disputed Gilgit-Baltistan region like China treats the Xinjiang, that does not paper over the implied endorsement of Beijing’s Islamophobic leadership.

The coronavirus abandonment of Pakistani students in Wuhan further humiliates Pakistan. Almost every other country—including India—has evacuated its citizens from the coronavirus epicenter. While Imran Khan spends a great deal on himself, his foreign travel, and the military, he has left Pakistan’s public health infrastructure a shamble. Khan knows that corruption and disorganization mean that medical quarantine will not work in Pakistan, which is why he seeks to keep those potentially infected abroad. China, meanwhile, cares little for the Pakistanis who remain within its territory. To be Pakistani in the age of Imran Khan means to suffer in silence at the back of the line.

Pakistan’s anti-Americanism greased its turn toward China. China, meanwhile, built for Pakistan highways and a port. Pakistan allowed itself to believe that it had become the crown jewel of China’s belt-and-road policy. Now, reality should set in: Rather than preserve Pakistan’s independence and dignity by playing Beijing and Washington off-each other, successive Pakistani governments have fallen so far under China’s grasp that Pakistan is powerless to stand up for its citizens—let alone Muslims. Pakistan sees itself as a major regional power but recent events show that Beijing considers Pakistan little more than a subordinate colony to be exploited but not heard.

The author, Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, where he researches Arab politics, the Gulf Cooperation Council, Iran, Iraq, the Kurds, terrorism, and Turkey. He concurrently teaches classes on terrorism for the FBI and on security, politics, religion, and history for U.S. and NATO military units. This article first appeared last month

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/b...slims-betraying-its-national-character-132082

@The Eagle @waz similar thread with same source already running on PDF please delete this thread thanks
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/paki...etraying-its-national-character.657177/page-5
 
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How desperate they must be!
 
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Religion(especially the fanatic ones) is remnant of the outdated prehistoric beliefs that only holds back the modern society.It only brings animosity ,atrocity and antagony upon masses in the modern age.
I do believe everyone is tied to the yoke of karma but the people that fanatically worship gods instead of being of service to humanity is a curse on humanity.

A nation that sticks solely to religious panaroma instead of fully delving into the greater good of humanity and well being of its citizens will forever be backward.

It's ridiculous how the nations that see most problem with how china's dealing with the extremists among Uyghur of Xinjiang are the most anti-Muslim nations. Meanwhile ,most Muslim nations actually understand there are elements in the Muslim community that have very extremist tendencies and China is just trying to protect their citizens and develop the region from those types through "RE-EDUCATION",instead of shooting them or keeping them in prison.

The country that are heavily religious including the USA are extremely fanatic and semi-deluded, they will make shit up in the name of god and believe it and can commit grave atrocities in the name of their faith , such nations should be treated with extreme caution.
 
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I find it extremely stupidly for the US media to criticize Pakistan on this issue. If the United States is uncomfortable about this, it should first compensate for its mistakes and start taking rational steps. Afghanistan had a huge cost to Pakistan. And did not stop, by taking countless wrong steps on it, it pushed Pakistan to a necessary point.

In a sense, Pakistan's silence about some opressed muslim communities largely related to the irresponsible policies of the USA in the region. Pakistan is left in need of China. What I am talking about is not the Kashmir issue. As long as part of Kashmir remains under Chinese occupation, China's support for Pakistan in that regard is not open to debate.

It is an oxymoron regime, the party state, which desires control over its citizens at a level that no other state has reached. I do not argue that this is a good or bad thing, just that party impose a very different(never seen before) social order. It resembles an ant colony. But the part that interests us is this, China has established a psychological barrier on this issue, and it cannot tolerate any politician talking about it. Pakistan has very deep economic and military relations with China and cannot afford broken relationships. For this reason, China is not a reasonable country. If Pakistan starts criticizing China on this issue, China could respond to this with threats and counter moves.
 
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I find it extremely stupidly for the US media to criticize Pakistan on this issue. If the United States is uncomfortable about this, it should first compensate for its mistakes and start taking rational steps. Afghanistan had a huge cost to Pakistan. And did not stop, by taking countless wrong steps on it, it pushed Pakistan to a necessary point.

In a sense, Pakistan's silence about some opressed muslim communities largely related to the irresponsible policies of the USA in the region. Pakistan is left in need of China. What I am talking about is not the Kashmir issue. As long as part of Kashmir remains under Chinese occupation, China's support for Pakistan in that regard is not open to debate.

It is an oxymoron regime, the party state, which desires control over its citizens at a level that no other state has reached. I do not argue that this is a good or bad thing, just that party impose a very different(never seen before) social order. It resembles an ant colony. But the part that interests us is this, China has established a psychological barrier on this issue, and it cannot tolerate any politician talking about it. Pakistan has very deep economic and military relations with China and cannot afford broken relationships. For this reason, China is not a reasonable country. If Pakistan starts criticizing China on this issue, China could respond to this with threats and counter moves.

If we lose Kashmir we wont border Uygurs any long..Pakistan will lose any little say it has ..any goodwill for the Uygurs wont matter any more if a hostile entity sits in Kashmir. Turkey should trust Pakistan on this, the Turk concern on Uygurs will be addressed with time , it cant be fixed by carving out a new nation out of China..World Uygur Congress is a friend of the enemies of Pakistan and spreading lots of propaganda. Every issue needs to be seen on priority basis..
 
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Inside Pakistan, India is an obsession. Communal violence surrounding the 1947 partition of India claimed up to two million lives. India and Pakistan subsequently fought three wars: In 1965, when India retaliated for Pakistani efforts to infiltrate forces into Jammu and Kashmir, in 1971 against the backdrop of the Bangladeshi War of Independence, and again in 1999, when Indian forces pushed back against a Pakistani offensive in Kargil, along the line-of-control.
1_img117320090331.jpg

As the late Princeton historian Bernard Lewis pointed out, if scholars embraced the same definition of “refugee” that the United Nations applies to Palestinians who have been displaced by Israel, then South Asia would be home to more than two hundred million refugees. Tensions remain evident across the country. In 2000, in Peshawar, a mockup of a Pakistani nuclear missile stood in the midst of a traffic circle with the slogan “I’d love to enter India” written underneath it. In the Pakistani capital of Islamabad today, giant billboard clocks mark the time since India imposed a curfew on Kashmir.

There is no shortage of anti-Indian animus within Pakistan but in recent months it has been China which has humiliated Pakistan in a manner which India never could. Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the long-time leader of the All-India Muslim League and the founding father of Pakistan, conceived the new country as a land for the Muslims. Because Pakistan based its legitimacy more on religion than on ethnicity, it really is the first Islamic state of the modern era.


Pakistanis have historically been at the forefront of advocacy and action against the oppression of Muslims, real or imagined. This is what guided Pakistan to oppose Soviet designs on Afghanistan. Pakistan is among the most anti-Israel and anti-Semitic countries on earth. The Pakistani press regularly covers the plight of Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingya Muslims. Pakistani charities work in Chechnya. There is no shortage of the terrorist groups Pakistan sponsors who target India and are motivated more by religion than nationalism. And, yet, when it comes to China’s incarceration of more than a million Uighur Muslims—solely because they are Muslim—Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan has been silent on one hand and on the other he has both defended China’s repression of its Muslims and persecuted for China the Uighurs in Pakistan.

Sister city twinning is a common diplomatic practice in order to advance tourism and ties between the world’s major cities. China and Pakistan have taken this to a new level with provincial twining. Recently, Pakistan’s mission in Beijing gave a draft memorandum of understanding to the Chinese foreign ministry in order to establish sister province relations between Xinjiang and Gilgit-Baltistan. Not only, therefore, is Khan cowed by Chinese pressure to the point that he must turn a blind eye to the greatest repression of Muslims in the twenty-first century but he now seeks to honor the Chinese province that is at the epicenter of Chinese anti-Muslim repression. Even if Khan is motivated by the implied threat to treat the people of the disputed Gilgit-Baltistan region like China treats the Xinjiang, that does not paper over the implied endorsement of Beijing’s Islamophobic leadership.

The coronavirus abandonment of Pakistani students in Wuhan further humiliates Pakistan. Almost every other country—including India—has evacuated its citizens from the coronavirus epicenter. While Imran Khan spends a great deal on himself, his foreign travel, and the military, he has left Pakistan’s public health infrastructure a shamble. Khan knows that corruption and disorganization mean that medical quarantine will not work in Pakistan, which is why he seeks to keep those potentially infected abroad. China, meanwhile, cares little for the Pakistanis who remain within its territory. To be Pakistani in the age of Imran Khan means to suffer in silence at the back of the line.

Pakistan’s anti-Americanism greased its turn toward China. China, meanwhile, built for Pakistan highways and a port. Pakistan allowed itself to believe that it had become the crown jewel of China’s belt-and-road policy. Now, reality should set in: Rather than preserve Pakistan’s independence and dignity by playing Beijing and Washington off-each other, successive Pakistani governments have fallen so far under China’s grasp that Pakistan is powerless to stand up for its citizens—let alone Muslims. Pakistan sees itself as a major regional power but recent events show that Beijing considers Pakistan little more than a subordinate colony to be exploited but not heard.

The author, Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, where he researches Arab politics, the Gulf Cooperation Council, Iran, Iraq, the Kurds, terrorism, and Turkey. He concurrently teaches classes on terrorism for the FBI and on security, politics, religion, and history for U.S. and NATO military units. This article first appeared last month

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/b...slims-betraying-its-national-character-132082



Why do we need a repeat thread on the topic?

@Mods
This is a duplicate of an existing thread
Merge or delete
 
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I find it extremely stupidly for the US media to criticize Pakistan on this issue. If the United States is uncomfortable about this, it should first compensate for its mistakes and start taking rational steps. Afghanistan had a huge cost to Pakistan. And did not stop, by taking countless wrong steps on it, it pushed Pakistan to a necessary point.

In a sense, Pakistan's silence about some opressed muslim communities largely related to the irresponsible policies of the USA in the region. Pakistan is left in need of China. What I am talking about is not the Kashmir issue. As long as part of Kashmir remains under Chinese occupation, China's support for Pakistan in that regard is not open to debate.

It is an oxymoron regime, the party state, which desires control over its citizens at a level that no other state has reached. I do not argue that this is a good or bad thing, just that party impose a very different(never seen before) social order. It resembles an ant colony. But the part that interests us is this, China has established a psychological barrier on this issue, and it cannot tolerate any politician talking about it. Pakistan has very deep economic and military relations with China and cannot afford broken relationships. For this reason, China is not a reasonable country. If Pakistan starts criticizing China on this issue, China could respond to this with threats and counter moves.
You know what else is not reasonable?
Some people are literally killing other Muslims in big number in his neighbor country and use their victims to threaten EU, guess what they are talking at the same time? Oppressions on Muslim!
This is hilarious in every way.
 
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reality is there can't be denied and can't be cured.
 
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