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Sania Mirza to marry Shoaib Malik?

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yes this part i do agree with based on personal experience.

any reason why girls from pak are not married in ind...??

now ppl - lets not get into drama of they are loyal to their man blah blah...i actually want to know the reason if there is any
 
any reason why girls from pak are not married in ind...??

now ppl - lets not get into drama of they are loyal to their man blah blah...i actually want to know the reason if there is any

I'm trying to be unbiased on this topic so i will say pakistani girls marrying indian men do happen I just gave some examples of my own family look at somy ali she's pakistani and she dated salman khan didn't she ? anita ayub was also once married to an indian man and even asim mentioned pakistani actress noor married an indian in dubai.Though most cases seem to be pak men with indian women i dunno why :undecided:
 
lol i'm feeling uncomfortable with the questions and this debate heating up i think i'll leave this topic before i'm accused of being an indian agent :coffee:
 
well i dunno where you are but it's not one in a million it happens alot i'm sure any other unbiased pakistani will vouch for that too .Theres around 16 million mohajirs in pakistan they all have relations in india and it's often happens they like to search for partners and marry their kids to people from their old hometowns in india.

Nice to hear your perspective, I sadly haven't come across any mohajirs in the U.K and never knew they married Indian girls. I'm from London bro and i hardly ever see them two communities marrying at all hopefully some Pakistani people living in the U.K can share their opinions on this matter. I'm a pretty social guy especially with the Pakistani community so i would definitely have picked up on any marriage between the two communities.

any reason why girls from pak are not married in ind...??

now ppl - lets not get into drama of they are loyal to their man blah blah...i actually want to know the reason if there is any

Honestly dude as for Pakistani girls in U.K, they in my opinion are the most loyal girls of all nationalities i've had the pleasure of seeing in England. They are angels for putting up with us men and since i've had the courtesy of being raised by one, not only do they make great wives but are also willing to sacrifice anything for the success of their marriage and as a bonus they make absolutely wonderful mothers.

This is the opposite with Indians from my experience, the Indian guys seem more loyal to their women while their women are busy hitting it off with every other nationality bar Indian men themselves.

Honestly bro don't take this the wrong way but most girls from other ethnicities not just Pakistanis say Indians are really skinny, unattractive, small and weak. I can't say that's the case for all but here in the U.K it certainly does seem the case but i promised to an Indian bro i wouldn't generalise so 'Beauty is in the eye of the Beholder'. The constant portrayal of Indians in the Western media as being geeky/nerds and the Apu running the Kwik E Mart certainly doesn't help on how people from different nationalities perceive Indians.
 
Once marked for glory, Shoaib Malik has battled the initial storm to be with Sania Mirza, but will he drive into the sunset with her? An entire subcontinent is watching...

It is not known whether Sania Mirza or the now-happily-divorced Ayesha Siddiqui are aware that as a child growing up in the early '80s in the dusty bylanes of Sialkot, Shoaib Malik's sole passion was to fly kites. Perhaps it was here that he realised a kite always rises against and not with the wind.

Opposition, discord, two-timing and turbulence are nothing new for those adept at surfing the irresolute waves of Pakistan cricket - a world mired in flagrant double cross, prone to imploding under its own stresses. Shoaib, former Pakistan skipper, man of many roles, victim and instigator of many a smoke-and-mirror game, has risen to being its Everyman.

As an international batsman of some repute, he is the antithesis of every past Pakistani great. Shoaib is not mercurial in his strokeplay nor given to being a man of violent passions on the field of play. The keenest eye has to strain hard to spot any glimpse of beauty or grace in his batting, yet his quiet effectiveness brooks no arguments. His off-breaks, often subject to scrutiny and hauled up for their illegality, are flattish and workmanlike, but quite perfect for modern cricket's restrictive needs.

This was where he began, with the ball, in a one-day debut in Sharjah against the West Indies in 1999. Throughout - even now as he resolutely serves a legal notice to the Pakistan Cricket Board for having banned him from international play for a year - Shoaib has been adept at working his way up. His strength, this flexibility, has also been his weakness: there are enough performances of character, yet few standout moments in a decade-long career.

Shoaib's biggest backer was his father, Malik Faqueer Hussain, or Malik Salim as Shoaib refers to him, a shopkeeper of modest means who sold local footwear. He used to drop Malik junior to the playgrounds on the bicycle and people would say, "**** beta pagal hain (both father and son are mad)." Shoaib started off, like millions of budding Pakistani cricketers, with tape ball cricket. Then, in 1993, he attended Imran Khan's Pepsi coaching clinic in Sialkot and his life turned around. From there it went like a dream - from the trials for the Under-15 World Cup in Lahore to the series against the England Under-19 s, from impressing Wasim Akram and Moin Khan with his tweakers in the Wills Cup to, eventually, a national berth.

In all this, Shoaib never forgot his father's support. When Malik Salim died of throat cancer in 2006, Shoaib broke down in an interview, acknowledging how his father used to pack cricket gear into his school bag instead of books. There are rumours Salim was vehemently against Shoaib jilting Ayesha, but they remain, much like everything else in this relationship, more shadowplay than acknowledged fact.

Always a prolific scorer against India, his effectiveness as a handy middle-order bulwark soon began to emerge. In Tests, he averages a modest 36. 11 from only 29 games. In ODIs, where he is more effective, centuries have come as an opener, at one-down and at number four, though his most entertaining innings remains the 41-ball 82 against South Africa in 2003, at No. 6. In 2006, he had a glorious run against India, scoring 90, 95 and 108 in successive home ODIs. The first Test hundred too came that year, against Sri Lanka, but the Shoaib we know today would not have emerged without the late Bob Woolmer's tutelage, and Pakistan's shambolic 2007 World Cup campaign in the wake of which he was made captain.

Shoaib was only 25, and marked for greatness by none other than Imran Khan for his "sharp cricketing brain". But sadly, when he lost the captaincy in February 2009 after a string of indifferent performances and perennial infighting, the PCB accused him of being "aloof", stating there was "nothing exciting in his captaincy". He couldn't command a place by virtue of form alone and he had problems with seniors, notably Mohammad Yousuf, once his best friend in the team. "It was unanimously decided he should play just as a player," the PCB said.

Even the highs of that period, notably the run to the final in the World T20 in Johannesburg, were soured by Shoaib's often blunt and uncultivated comments, like when he said after Pakistan lost the final to India: "I want to thank you back home [in] Pakistan and where the Muslim lives all over the world." Outrage followed, but he would soon follow it up with a bloomer in Durban when, after his team lost to India this time in a bowlout, he said he had no idea what the rules were. Back in 2005, in Hyderabad, he had accepted marrying a local girl during a game before immediately retracting his statement. Increasingly, it was becoming clear Shoaib's reliability had always been a matter of perspective.

Today, professionally and personally, he seems to be at his lowest ebb. A string of defeats to Australia have resulted in another knee-jerk reaction from the administration and a one-year ban for unspecified reasons, though local media speculated he was suspected of match-fixing. With the impending marriage to Sania will come intense media and public scrutiny, especially in Pakistan. Perhaps even talk of his past foibles and anxieties about a looming culture clash. Yet Shoaib is nothing if not resilient. That famed suppleness and flexibility may again see this man through. His cricketing career proves he may often tie himself in knots, but is equally adept at untangling them. A lasting cross-border marriage with the glamour queen of Indian sport may silence the cynics like never before. The unlikely hero may yet have the last laugh.

Shoaib Malik: The storm rider.

:yahoo:
 
I'm trying to be unbiased on this topic so i will say pakistani girls marrying indian men do happen I just gave some examples of my own family look at somy ali she's pakistani and she dated salman khan didn't she ? anita ayub was also once married to an indian man and even asim mentioned pakistani actress noor married an indian in dubai.Though most cases seem to be pak men with indian women i dunno why :undecided:

haa haa but salu miyan is still unmarried...shaadi kahan hui...i am sure there are cases but we hear the other way round wali stories mostly...
 
Honestly dude as for Pakistani girls in U.K, they in my opinion are the most loyal girls of all nationalities i've had the pleasure of seeing in England. They are angels for putting up with us men and since i've had the courtesy of being raised by one, not only do they make great wives but are also willing to sacrifice anything for the success of their marriage and as a bonus they make absolutely wonderful mothers.

hey what u mentioned - is not a pakistani girl...but a mother - mother is one who will cut her skin for her kids - it is true for any part of the world...and sacrifice- please indian women are sooo damn loyal as well, that they will but up with any crap to keep their husband and his family happy...infact they are so blindly loyal that i get angry at times...have u not heard the phrase that is so popular in india - patti parmeshwar hota hai - husband is God...imagine...!!!
 
hey what u mentioned - is not a pakistani girl...but a mother - mother is one who will cut her skin for her kids - it is true for any part of the world...and sacrifice- please indian women are sooo damn loyal as well, that they will but up with any crap to keep their husband and his family happy...infact they are so blindly loyal that i get angry at times...have u not heard the phrase that is so popular in india - patti parmeshwar hota hai - husband is God...imagine...!!!

Bro i only mentioned a few words about that, seriously come to the U.K and see the Indians for yourself it will be an eye opener, you'll come here and say to yourself PakistaniPacifist was telling me the truth.
 
Bro i only mentioned a few words about that, seriously come to the U.K and see the Indians for yourself it will be an eye opener, you'll come here and say to yourself PakistaniPacifist was telling me the truth.

sample size is too low probably for me to analyze this...also someone who was born and brought up in UK cannot have same thought process as someone who was brought up in India...

tho - there are exceptions in every part for the world...there are surely some horrible wives in india too...but in general they are foolishly loyal.
 
For all those claiming Indian politicians are all cool about this

Sania-Shoaib Wedding | Pakistan Enemy | Anti-India Marriage | Pramod Muthalik | Sri Rama Sene - Oneindia News

Bangalore, Apr 10: Shiv Sena may have let go of the Sania-Shoaib marriage controversy, but down south Sri Rama Sene chief Pramod Multhalik continues to slam the tennis ace for her choice of husband.

In an interview with Kannada TV news channel, Suvarna News, Muthalik questioned why and how Sania Mirza could not find a single man out of the 120-crore strong population of India.


Narrowing it down further, Muthalik wondered why the tennis star thought she could not find a life partner out of 15 crore Indian Muslims.

He argued that Sania Mirza was being anti-national by choosing a husband from an enemy country.

"Sania Mirza is not an ordinary youngster. She represents India in the field of tennis. She is indebted to India for her success and she has to act as a role model to others. Being in her position, it is a disgrace that she chose to marry someone from Pakistan and her decision is a shame for our country," he opined on Friday, Apr 9.

Pramod Muthalik, who was earlier part of the Bal Thackeray-led Shiv Sena, broke off to form Sri Rama Sena when the border issues between Maharashtra and Karnataka emerged.

He is known best for his moral policing brigade and the famous Mangalore pub attack incident.

Recently, when he tried to disrupt Valentines Day celebrations in Bangalore Muthalik was left red faced after youth Congress workers attacked him and smeared black paint on his face.

Sene chief has been criticizing Sani Mirza's decision since the time she and the Pakistani cricketer announced their wedding plans.

The much-contested and controversy-hit Sania-Shoaib marriage is set to take place on Apr 15.
 
Shadi ho rahi hai Sania jee ke aur Asim bhai Indian bhaiyoun se mazaak kar rahay hain :confused:

bhai kuch to khayal karo ab woh hamaray Saalay lagte hain :rofl:
 
for all shoaib supporter this is from your own pakistani media.(video link)

every shoaib supporter should see this video and this is not from indian media(only first 4 min.).


Siasat.pk • View topic - Sawal Yeh Hai - 3rd April 2010-Topic: The Evil Shoaib Malik?

it loos like everybody in pakistan has not the same mentality what this thread was showing(here some ppl was just troling/flameing which includes some senior member also.).still some shane voices are left in pakistaan.


:cheers::cheers:

:lol::lol:


already posted .this is a youtube link of the same video.

 
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