Current Issue

  •  Sharif Dares Pakistan Army over Mumbai Terror attacks

    Nawaz  Sharif  is  serving the interest of Pakistan’s enemies.Unable to neutralize the might of Pakistani Military foreign powers have unsuccessfully used Nawaz Sharif to discredit our armed forces.In exchange they willensure him access to his stolen wealth. Nawaz Sharif reads out the dawn article and says what is wrong with what I have said and this apologist of a Pm says Nawaz statement is misquoted. This country is unfortunate to have a man in the PM house for whom his master is more important than his country. Nawaz Sharif is not only hurting PMLNN, all politics and Pakistan’s interest but also insulting a nation’s intelligence; a disgraced politican kicked out of office for laying and corruption is demanding a National Commission to divert attention away from his corruption. Pakistan’s top civil and military leaders on Monday condemned a suggestion by ousted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif that Islamist militants who killed 166 people in India in 2008 had crossed the border from Pakistan. Nawaz Sharif, former Prime Minister and leader of Pakistan Muslim League (N) gestures during a news conference in Islamabad, Pakistan May 10, 2018. The comments - in which Sharif implied he was removed from office by the Supreme Court last year for trying to end military support for anti-India militants - led to uproar in Pakistan, where criticising the military is increasingly considered a “red line” that cannot be crossed.

    The National Security Council (NSC), in a special meeting on Monday called by the military, rejected Sharif’s comments in an interview with Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper as “incorrect and misleading”, the prime minister’s office said in a statement.

    The participants unanimously rejected the allegations and condemned the fallacious assertions,” the office said, referring to military and civilian leaders.“(NSC) observed that it was very unfortunate that the opinion arising out of either misconceptions or grievances was being presented in disregard of concrete facts and realities. The statement was a rare rebuke of Sharif by a government run by his own party, highlighting political tension in the run-up to a general election expected in July. Sharif’s criticism of the military has caused divisions within his party, analysts say, with some members unhappy about his confrontational approach. Opposition leader Imran Khan demanded that Sharif be put on trial. “He hurt the national interest of Pakistan by violating his oath as an ex-prime minister and should be proceeded against for treason,” Khan said at a news conference. The Supreme Court disqualified three-time prime minister Sharif from office in July last year over unreported sources of monthly income of less than $3,000 from a United Arab Emirates company, a salary he denied ever receiving. The military, which has ruled Pakistan for about half its history, denies any interference in civilian politics.

     India blamed the Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) for the 2008 attack on the city of Mumbai. Ten gunmen spent three days spraying bullets and throwing grenades around landmarks. India said the gunmen were Pakistani and had arrived on the Mumbai waterfront by rubber boat after crossing the Arabian sea from the Pakistani city of Karachi in a trawler. India blamed Pakistan for failing to act against those behind the raids. Pakistan admitted the attacks were planned on its soil but denied any official involvement, and did not confirm the gunmen had set sail from Karachi. Some Western powers and India have accused the military of supporting Islamist groups for use as tools in achieving foreign policy objectives, but the military denies that.  Sharif, in the Dawn interview, obliquely criticized the military by denouncing “parallel governments”. He said there should only be one constitutional government. The United States also blames LeT for the Mumbai attacks and has offered $10 million for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Hafiz Saeed, who heads Muslim charity Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), which Washington says is a front for LeT. Efforts by Pakistan to put on trial those India says are responsible for the Mumbai attack have stalled, while Saeed operates largely freely in Pakistan. Sharif, asked about his ouster, brought up issues of security and foreign policy - which the military controls. “Militant organizations are active. Call them non-state actors, should we allow them to cross the border and kill 150 people in Mumbai? Explain it to me. Why can’t we complete the trial?,” Sharif said, according to Dawn. “We have isolated ourselves. Despite giving sacrifices, our narrative is not being accepted,” Sharif said. Sharif on Monday morning told reporters that he stood by his comments, according to Daily Pakistan and Geo TV. But after the NSC meeting, Prime Minister Abbasi said he had met Sharif and the former leader told him he was “misquoted

    Sahid Khaqan Abbasi: Nawaz Sharif's Statement About Mumbai Attack Was 'Misreported'

    Abbasi said this while talking to senior journalists after an emergency meeting of the National Security Committee (NSC) - Pakistan's top civil-military body - that condemned Sharif's "fallacious" statement and termed it as "incorrect and misleading. akistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said on Monday that former premier Nawaz Sharif clarified to him that his statement about the Mumbai terror attack was "misreported". Abbasi said this while talking to senior journalists after an emergency meeting of the National Security Committee (NSC) - Pakistan's top civil-military body - that condemned Sharif's "fallacious" statement and termed it as "incorrect and misleading". harif, for the first time, questioned Pakistan's policy to allow the "non-state actors" to cross the border and "kill" people in Mumbai as he publicly acknowledged in an interview that militant groups are active in the country. Abbasi said he also held a meeting with Sharif after the NSC meeting and asserted that Sharif did not say what was reported in the media about the Mumbai attack. "A few sentences (from the newspaper interview) were blown out of proportion and context. I have clarified those (statements)," Abbasi asserted. Stating that the NSC dismissed those words which were misreported, Abbasi said the meeting did not condemn Sharif but incorrect reporting of his interview. "Indian media is giving the issue a different hue, and we should not be a part of it," he said. Abbasi said there was no tension between the civil and military. He said misunderstandings are removed in the light of the facts. He expressed full support for Sharif and said the entire party, including party president Shehbaz Sharif, stands with him. "Nawaz Sharif is still our Quaid (supreme leader). He said that no one forced him to talk to the media and it was his own decision to give the explanatory statement. Abbasi said that he will not resign and complete the term.

    Public Reaction

    Some of the people said thar they started their journey from corruption and ended their journey after doing treason. Few people said that Nawaz Sharif is also like Afghani refugees. He is Namak Halal.  Some said harsh punishment for this traitor, criminal, corrupt and kiler Nawaz Sharif. He has destroyed our country and shall be punished. Nawaz Sharif is serving the interest of Pakistan’s enemies. Ones says Article 6 definitely applies to someone who rejects the national security council announcement. From corruption to Kargil to Dawn Leaks to Mumbai attacks, Nawaz has never stood for his own country.Its time to get this man treated. His suffering is making the entire nation. A person is now threat of national security. Investigation should be carried out into business links of Hassan and Hussain Nawaz with Indian businessman Sajjan Jindal. Being PM he is capable of damaging Pakistan more than anyone else. NS deserves to be hanged for corruption, murders and treason. It is Ghaddar Nawaz Shareef’s habit to lie for the sake of Modi’s happiness. Nawaz Sharif used each and every forum to defame and degrade Pakistan.