Saturday, April 05, 2008

Pak Returns to Hard Stance on Kashmir

So all the flexible words being spoken by Pakistan on Kashmir over the past few years have now evaporated, as the new Pak govt changes back to its old hardline stance on Kashmir. No doubt, we may see a resumption of terrorism in support of this.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow! never thought that written words can have this kind of effect on me, almost made me nostalgic for Musharaf. Last time I read words like "wishes of Kashmiri people", "permanent solution", "Kashmiri issue" was 10 years back. Now those morons have cellphones, their children go to school and they even have tourists and alcohol. I guess thick headed people cannot modify their behavior to suit new reality. Plain fucking stupid.

Anonymous said...

Oh, by the way, can someone remind those morons across the border that India has now survived the war of "thousand cuts". With $240 billion in kitty not even CPM Commie bastards can stop armed forces modernisation.

Shahryar said...

Extract from Banned Jihadi outfits to move SC (By Mazhar Tufail 4/8/2008 ISLAMABAD)

All the religious outfits which were banned by retired General Pervez Musharraf during his military rule would approach the Supreme Court of Pakistan and seek restoration, former head of a banned organisation Lashkar-e-Taiba said on Monday.

"The ban was a step that the retired General took only to please America and now it is abundantly clear that people have rejected his policies," Hafiz Saeed who was chief of the Lashkar and who now heads Jamatud Dawa Islami told The News.

...

When asked whether he was still in contact with the Pakistan Army, as in the past, he said he had no contact with Army at any level now. "In the past we were in touch with the (Pakistan) Army but now we have no contact.

However, we have our own viewpoint on all the important national and regional issues and we want to cooperate with them," he added. About the law and order situation in the country and the suicide bombings and attacks on the security forces the Jihadi leader said it was the result of bad policies followed by the previous government which were aimed at pleasing the US.

...

"The new government should revert to the Afghan policy of 2001, approach the Taliban, hold talks with them. It would lead to stability, not only in Pakistan but in Afghanistan as well. If (Afghan President) Hamid Karzai can offer amnesty to the Taliban in Afghanistan why the Pakistan government cannot do that," he asked.