Imran Khan defeated their own system and became the PM of Pakistan .. and immediately spit venom .. .. on twitter taking a potshot at our Indian Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modiji,over the cancellation of meeting between India and Pakistan. “Disappointed at the arrogant & negative response by India to my call for resumption of the peace dialogue,” he tweeted. “However, all my life I have come across small men occupying big offices who do not have the vision to see the larger picture.”.. one cannot expect anything more undiplomatic from someone who had buoyed up suddenly.The little crooked mind cannot understand the bigger properly elected PM of the World’s largest democracy. The meeting had been called off because of two “deeply disturbing developments”—the brutal killing of a BSF jawan by Pakistan, and the release of 20 postage stamps in July “glorifying” terrorist Burhan Wani.India was in right in asserting what they knew was right ! Pakistan’s world record holding cricketer Yasir Shah called on Prime Minister Imran Khan here at his Banigala residence.Imran Khan congratulated the team’s leg-spinner for setting the world record of taking the fastest 200 wickets in Test cricket history, having broken the previous record set by Australian bowler Clarrie Grimmett some 83 years ago. Imran Khan himself was a great Cricketer before entering politics.Looking at the way Ishant Sharma bowled a vital no-ball at Adelaide when Aaron Finch was out and now at Perth where more than few times, Aussies were not called for overstepping though the feet appeared clearly over the line, one recalls that tour of 1983 – Imran Khan, Sarfraz Nawaz, Sikhandar Bakht, Jallaluddin – repeatedly overstepped as Indian batsmen found the pace and swing too uncomfortable and lost the series badly. After 2 decades of international cricket, Khan born in Lahore andlater at Oxford, became a fulltime politician.In its long political history, Pakistan peppered with military coups and martial law, elections 2018 were to be the second successive transition of power through a constitutional process from one elected government to another. However, political opponents, the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, and international observers such as the European Union alleged that irregularities and election rigging occurred in many parts of the country, particularly in rural and urban Sindh and Punjab provinces. Cash-strapped Pakistan on Friday received USD 1 billion from its close ally Saudi Arabia as part of a second bailout package to boost the country's dwindling dollar reserves, according to media reports. The latest package has shored up the central bank's foreign reserves, hitting the USD 9.4 billion mark, said State Bank of Pakistan Spokesman Abid Qamar. He said another Saudi financial package was expected in January next year, Dawn newspaper reported. In October, Saudi Arabia agreed to provide Pakistan USD 3 billion in foreign currency support for a year to address its balance-of-payments crisis. Despite that financial boon, there is more trouble - Imran Khan, Pakistan’s prime minister, has appeared to drop his promise to grant citizenship to hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees living on the margins of Pakistani society. On Sunday Khan announced that he would start work immediately to provide passports to the children of refugees born in the country. However, after a backlash from politicians and supporters of the country’s powerful military, he said on Tuesday that no decision had been made. About 2.7 million Afghan refugees have crossed the border into Pakistan since the Soviet invasion in 1979. Without official documentation they are shut out of schools and employment. As many as 1.5 million children born to refugees in Pakistan are denied citizenship. After a strong push-back, Khan said he had raised refugee citizenship “just to initiate a debate”. The founder of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, which swept to power in July, has a reputation for retracting his words, reported Pak Newspapers.
Pak PM Imran's Sister Fined by Supreme Court ~ and Some Acclaim Him Still in India
Posted on the 16 December 2018 by Sampathkumar SampathImran Khan defeated their own system and became the PM of Pakistan .. and immediately spit venom .. .. on twitter taking a potshot at our Indian Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modiji,over the cancellation of meeting between India and Pakistan. “Disappointed at the arrogant & negative response by India to my call for resumption of the peace dialogue,” he tweeted. “However, all my life I have come across small men occupying big offices who do not have the vision to see the larger picture.”.. one cannot expect anything more undiplomatic from someone who had buoyed up suddenly.The little crooked mind cannot understand the bigger properly elected PM of the World’s largest democracy. The meeting had been called off because of two “deeply disturbing developments”—the brutal killing of a BSF jawan by Pakistan, and the release of 20 postage stamps in July “glorifying” terrorist Burhan Wani.India was in right in asserting what they knew was right ! Pakistan’s world record holding cricketer Yasir Shah called on Prime Minister Imran Khan here at his Banigala residence.Imran Khan congratulated the team’s leg-spinner for setting the world record of taking the fastest 200 wickets in Test cricket history, having broken the previous record set by Australian bowler Clarrie Grimmett some 83 years ago. Imran Khan himself was a great Cricketer before entering politics.Looking at the way Ishant Sharma bowled a vital no-ball at Adelaide when Aaron Finch was out and now at Perth where more than few times, Aussies were not called for overstepping though the feet appeared clearly over the line, one recalls that tour of 1983 – Imran Khan, Sarfraz Nawaz, Sikhandar Bakht, Jallaluddin – repeatedly overstepped as Indian batsmen found the pace and swing too uncomfortable and lost the series badly. After 2 decades of international cricket, Khan born in Lahore andlater at Oxford, became a fulltime politician.In its long political history, Pakistan peppered with military coups and martial law, elections 2018 were to be the second successive transition of power through a constitutional process from one elected government to another. However, political opponents, the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, and international observers such as the European Union alleged that irregularities and election rigging occurred in many parts of the country, particularly in rural and urban Sindh and Punjab provinces. Cash-strapped Pakistan on Friday received USD 1 billion from its close ally Saudi Arabia as part of a second bailout package to boost the country's dwindling dollar reserves, according to media reports. The latest package has shored up the central bank's foreign reserves, hitting the USD 9.4 billion mark, said State Bank of Pakistan Spokesman Abid Qamar. He said another Saudi financial package was expected in January next year, Dawn newspaper reported. In October, Saudi Arabia agreed to provide Pakistan USD 3 billion in foreign currency support for a year to address its balance-of-payments crisis. Despite that financial boon, there is more trouble - Imran Khan, Pakistan’s prime minister, has appeared to drop his promise to grant citizenship to hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees living on the margins of Pakistani society. On Sunday Khan announced that he would start work immediately to provide passports to the children of refugees born in the country. However, after a backlash from politicians and supporters of the country’s powerful military, he said on Tuesday that no decision had been made. About 2.7 million Afghan refugees have crossed the border into Pakistan since the Soviet invasion in 1979. Without official documentation they are shut out of schools and employment. As many as 1.5 million children born to refugees in Pakistan are denied citizenship. After a strong push-back, Khan said he had raised refugee citizenship “just to initiate a debate”. The founder of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, which swept to power in July, has a reputation for retracting his words, reported Pak Newspapers.