What's new

We are (annoyed by) Malala!

OPCW, Organization for Prevention of Chemical Weapons has won the Nobel Peace Prize. Let me ask all those who saw a big Drama & Conspiracy for nomination of Malala for the Nobel Prize; you guys must be ecstatic that the Pakistani girl targeted by your favourite Extremists did not win the prize but somebody else?

Any conspiracy was only in the mind of the people with skewed thinking and intense envy. I am sad that a Pakistani did not win it but it is the decision of Nobel Committee and we accept it with good grace.

Malala; no matter, we love you.
 
. .
Zia is responsible for the growing extremism in Pakistan. He introduced it and let it flow free.
koi khuda da kuf kar
itna wadda choot?
you clearly have no idea about what was going on back then.

It was the corruption, gifted by Baynazir bhutto....... the seller of Pakistan's nuclear technology to Indian and Iran.
can i get a bit more info on selling our nuclear tech to india?
 
.
koi khuda da kuf kar
itna wadda choot?
you clearly have no idea about what was going on back then.


can i get a bit more info on selling our nuclear tech to india?

Ask poor AQKhan, who was apprehended, because even US had the blue prints of our nuclear technology sold during the democratic rule of BB.
It is well known that Indian's development in nuclear tech and subsequent tests in 1998, was gift of Pakistan's democratic govt. of 1990's
You can read Pervez Musharraf's book 'in the line of fire'
 
.
Ask poor AQKhan, who was apprehended, because even US had the blue prints of our nuclear technology sold during the democratic rule of BB.
It is well known that Indian's development in nuclear tech and subsequent tests in 1998, was gift of Pakistan's democratic govt. of 1990's
You can read Pervez Musharraf's book 'in the line of fire'


is there any info available on the net that can verify this?
 
.
is there any info available on the net that can verify this?

It was IAEA who stated that India's enrichment design, seem to be copy of Pakistani design and check out the time line, of Pakistan democracy, Indian nuclear tests, AQKhan confession and Iran's love with India.... and hate with Pakistan.
 
.
It was IAEA who stated that India's enrichment design, seem to be copy of Pakistani design and check out the time line, of Pakistan democracy, Indian nuclear tests, AQKhan confession and Iran's love with India.... and hate with Pakistan.
ill see if i can find any info.
 
.
i don't hate Zia, i respect that guy a lot he was one of the best leaders we had.

My friend, only the last line of my entire post was meant for you.

OPCW, Organization for Prevention of Chemical Weapons has won the Nobel Peace Prize. Let me ask all those who saw a big Drama & Conspiracy for nomination of Malala for the Nobel Prize; you guys must be ecstatic that the Pakistani girl targeted by your favourite Extremists did not win the prize but somebody else?

Any conspiracy was only in the mind of the people with skewed thinking and intense envy. I am sad that a Pakistani did not win it but it is the decision of Nobel Committee and we accept it with good grace.

Malala; no matter, we love you.

Yousafzai has been awarded the following national and international honours:
International Children's Peace Prize nominee, 2011[23]
National Youth Peace Prize, 2011[11]
Sitara-e-Shujaat, Pakistan's third-highest civilian bravery award, October 2012[80]
Foreign Policy magazine top 100 global thinker, November 2012[81]
Time magazine Person of the Year shortlist, December 2012[82]
Mother Teresa Memorial Award for Social Justice, November 2012[83][a]
Rome Prize for Peace and Humanitarian Action, December 2012[85]
Top Name of 2012 in Annual Survey of Global English, January 2013[86]
Simone de Beauvoir Prize, January 2013[87]
Nobel Peace Prize nominee, March 2013[88]
Doughty Street Advocacy award of Index on Censorship, March 2013[89]
Fred and Anne Jarvis Award of the UK National Union of Teachers, March 2013[90]
Vital Voices Global Leadership Awards, Global Trailblazer, April 2013[91]
One of Time's "100 Most Influential People In The World", April 2013[92]
Premi Internacional Catalunya award of Catalonia, May 2013[93]
Annual Award for Development of the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID), June 2013[94]
International Campaigner of the Year, 2013 Observer Ethical Awards, June 2013[95]
2012 Tipperary International Peace Award, Ireland Tipperary Peace Convention, August 2013[96]
International Children’s Peace Prize, KidsRights, 2013[97]
Portrait of Yousafzai by Jonathan Yeo displayed at National Portrait Gallery, London[98]
Ambassador of Conscience Award from Amnesty International[99]
2013 Clinton Global Citizen Awards from Clinton Foundation[100]
Harvard Foundation’s Peter Gomes Humanitarian Award from Harvard University[101]
2013 Anna Politkovskaya Award - Reach All Women In War
2013 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought - Awarded by the European Parliament

And the list will continue to grow. What a bloody joke!
 
.
You and @Mav3rick need to be locked behind bars and entertained by Zia's jehadis. :lol:

where can i read it.



i don't hate Zia, i respect that guy a lot he was one of the best leaders we had.

These internet jehadi yahoos need to be neutralized with excess sugary products. We need to make them fat and diabetic, and then make minced meat out of them! :D

OPCW, Organization for Prevention of Chemical Weapons has won the Nobel Peace Prize. Let me ask all those who saw a big Drama & Conspiracy for nomination of Malala for the Nobel Prize; you guys must be ecstatic that the Pakistani girl targeted by your favourite Extremists did not win the prize but somebody else?

Any conspiracy was only in the mind of the people with skewed thinking and intense envy. I am sad that a Pakistani did not win it but it is the decision of Nobel Committee and we accept it with good grace.

Malala; no matter, we love you.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
.
It was the corruption, gifted by Baynazir bhutto....... the seller of Pakistan's nuclear technology to Indian and Iran.

Hon Batman,

Just one correction. Pakistan didn’t sell nuclear technology to India.
Bhaba Atomic Research Centre at Trombay was established in 1954. APSARA, India’s first nuclear Reactor went critical in August 1956. First Nuclear Power Plant (320MW) went critical at Tarapur near Thane in 1962. Indian first nuclear explosion took place on May 18, 1974 at Pokhran. Second test was conducted on 13 May 1998.

On the other hand PINSTCH was established in 1965 & 137 MW KANUPP started working in 1972. Pakistan first nuclear explosions were conducted on 28th May 1998. Pakistan's atomic programme has been in direct response to Indian nuclear ambitions.
 
.
On 2 August 2005, the Pakistani government awarded Mukhtaran the Fatima Jinnah gold medal for bravery and courage.[58]
On 2 November 2005, the US magazine Glamour named Mukhtaran as their Woman Of The Year.[59]
On 12 January 2006, Mukhtaran Mai published her memoir with the collaboration of Marie-Thérèse Cuny under the title
Awards won by Mukhtara Mai

Déshonorée.[60] The originating publisher of the book is OH ! Editions in France and her book was published simultaneously in German by Droemer Verlag as Die Schuld, eine Frau zu sein.
On 16 January 2006, to coincide with the publication of her memoir, Mukhtaran Mai travelled to Paris (France) and was received by Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy.[61]
On 2 May 2006, Mukhtaran spoke at the United Nations headquarters in New York. In an interview with United Nations TV, Mai said that "she wanted to get the message across to the world that one should fight for their rights and for the rights of the next generation."[62] She was welcomed by UN Under-Secretary General Shashi Tharoor, who said, “I think it is fair to say that anyone who has the moral courage and internal strength to turn such a brutal attack into a weapon to defend others in a similar position, is a hero indeed, and is worthy of our deepest respect and admiration.”[63]
On 31 October 2006, Mukhtaran's memoir was released in the United States as In the Name of Honor: A Memoir.
On 15 November 2006, Pakistan's lower house of Parliament voted to alter its rape laws to move them from religious law to penal code, effectively separating rape from adultery. It also modifies the law to no longer require that the victim produce four witnesses of the assault, and it allows circumstantial and forensic evidence be used for investigation. The bill reduced the penalty for adultery from execution to a maximum of five years' incarceration and a 10,000 rupee fine. A modified version of the bill, called the Protection of Women Bill, was signed by Musharraf in late 2006.[64] Critics of the final version of the law complained that "[a] judge can still decide whether rape cases will be heard in a civil or an Islamic court. Rape victims will have to report their complaints to district courts, not at local police stations, compelling many to travel long distances. As a result, many will be discouraged."[65] 24 January 2007
In March 2007, Mukhtaran formally received the 2006 North-South Prize of the Council of Europe for her contribution to human rights.[66] In April 2007, Mukhtaran Mai won the North-South Prize from the Council of Europe.[67]
In October 2010, Laurentian University of Canada decided to award an honorary doctorate degree to Mukhtar Mai.[68]
@Hyperion who is getting punished Zia's Jihadis or Qamar & Maverick.

On 2 August 2005, the Pakistani government awarded Mukhtaran the Fatima Jinnah gold medal for bravery and courage.[58]
On 2 November 2005, the US magazine Glamour named Mukhtaran as their Woman Of The Year.[59]
On 12 January 2006, Mukhtaran Mai published her memoir with the collaboration of Marie-Thérèse Cuny under the title
Awards won by Mukhtara Mai

Déshonorée.[60] The originating publisher of the book is OH ! Editions in France and her book was published simultaneously in German by Droemer Verlag as Die Schuld, eine Frau zu sein.
On 16 January 2006, to coincide with the publication of her memoir, Mukhtaran Mai travelled to Paris (France) and was received by Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy.[61]
On 2 May 2006, Mukhtaran spoke at the United Nations headquarters in New York. In an interview with United Nations TV, Mai said that "she wanted to get the message across to the world that one should fight for their rights and for the rights of the next generation."[62] She was welcomed by UN Under-Secretary General Shashi Tharoor, who said, “I think it is fair to say that anyone who has the moral courage and internal strength to turn such a brutal attack into a weapon to defend others in a similar position, is a hero indeed, and is worthy of our deepest respect and admiration.”[63]
On 31 October 2006, Mukhtaran's memoir was released in the United States as In the Name of Honor: A Memoir.
On 15 November 2006, Pakistan's lower house of Parliament voted to alter its rape laws to move them from religious law to penal code, effectively separating rape from adultery. It also modifies the law to no longer require that the victim produce four witnesses of the assault, and it allows circumstantial and forensic evidence be used for investigation. The bill reduced the penalty for adultery from execution to a maximum of five years' incarceration and a 10,000 rupee fine. A modified version of the bill, called the Protection of Women Bill, was signed by Musharraf in late 2006.[64] Critics of the final version of the law complained that "[a] judge can still decide whether rape cases will be heard in a civil or an Islamic court. Rape victims will have to report their complaints to district courts, not at local police stations, compelling many to travel long distances. As a result, many will be discouraged."[65] 24 January 2007
In March 2007, Mukhtaran formally received the 2006 North-South Prize of the Council of Europe for her contribution to human rights.[66] In April 2007, Mukhtaran Mai won the North-South Prize from the Council of Europe.[67]
In October 2010, Laurentian University of Canada decided to award an honorary doctorate degree to Mukhtar Mai.[68]

@Hyperion who is getting punished Zia's Jihadis or Qamar & Maverick.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
.
koi khuda da kuf kar
itna wadda choot?
you clearly have no idea about what was going on back then.


can i get a bit more info on selling our nuclear tech to india?

Dear Qamar1990, please enlighten me on why I should fear allah(swt)(even though we should fear allah swt all the time) for lying when it really is voicing my opinion and a fact supported by most people and several studies and please do tell me why its all lies?

And I got family living in Pakistan at that time involved within the armed forces and in politics as well with family and most notably my own father living in Gen. Zia Ul Haq's terror regime where people with their own, legit opinion were beaten up and/or killed. If you know people who studied in Punjab University at that time then please ask them on what Zia's cronies and the Jamaatis did during that time.
 
. . .
oh stfu. your white people need to walk the walk.
What makes you think we haven't? Look, I know it's tough to admit one group of people is morally superior to another - especially when one had been educated to be puffed full of pride in the group that is not. (If you don't believe one group of people can be morally superior to another, why not switch places with a convict in your local jail?) It's evident to me that your pride is preventing you from acknowledging important truths. Among them, that not only do Pakistanis not behave, collectively, as well as peoples of many other countries but deny, bizarrely, that they can learn about better behavior from these others.

most us pakistanis are with Malala she is the daughter of pakistan.
What makes you think that's enough? Why won't you stand with her, defend her, and emulate her at home and in your community? Otherwise if and when she gets assassinated you'll either feel defeated, or throw in with the terrorists who killed her, or neuter your feelings so you "won't give a rats ***", yes?

Isn't the most important thing Malala can do for you not to make you proud of being a Pakistani but to prod you to action to make Pakistan a better place?
 
.
Back
Top Bottom