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India-Pakistan |
Drone strikes are "unjustified": Khar |
2011-10-30 |
![]() "Our leadership has always condemned these in the strongest terms and unjustified," Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar told students here at a lecture at the University of Western Australia, organized by the Australian Institute of International Affairs. Khar, who is here for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) spoke on the challenges Pakistain was facing after the 9/11 and the ways it was dealing with these. She rejected that Pakistain was into any "Double Game", as alleged by the BBC in the war against terror as it has sacrificed so many precious lives. "Were we not sincere, why the faceless myrmidons and beturbanned goons would be targeting our innocent people and security forces across the country," she said. "We lost 30,000 people besides around 6500 belonging to the security forces, with financial losses running in billions," she told the students. "Still we are being blamed for terrorism." She termed the fight against the faceless myrmidons as taking place in the backdrop of a complex and uncertain regional situation. ![]() She dwelt at length about the reasons leading to the creation of beturbanned goons and faceless myrmidons and attributed it to the vacuum created after the withdrawal of the Soviet forces from Afghanistan. She said Pakistain still has to host around 3.5 million Afghan refugees. Khar said Islam was the most maligned and misinterpreted religion of the modern world. She said it was being viewed quite opposite to what it really preaches -- love and care for the fellow beings, whereas it is seen as a religion of violence. She focused on the way today Pakistain is being perceived by the world and said the nation has a strong resilience and remains determined to rise above all challenges. "We had seen some of the world's worst natural disasters like the earthquake of 2005 and the floods of 2010 and 2011, yet we managed to bounce back." The Foreign Minister in her lecture at the Centre for Mohammedan States and Societies of the University covered wide ranging issues -- including role of women in all spheres of life in Pakistain and the challenges it was confronting, particularly in the wake of the ongoing war in Afghanistan and its fallout on Pakistain. She said Pakistain's biggest foreign policy objective was peace and stability in its neighbourhood. Talking about Pakistain's role in Afghanistan, she said it has "gigantic" interests in its strife torn neighbour and wants to ensure it stays secure and stable as it is in the vital interest of Pakistain. Khar termed economic issues as the second and essentially linked most serious internal challenges confronting the country. She termed the death of Professor Burhanuddin Rabbani ![]() ... the gentlemanly murdered legitimate president of Afghanistan... as most damaging for the Pakistain and Afghanistan relations and termed it a "death blow to the grinding of the peace processor. She said blaming Pakistain was just complicating the matters. She however hoped that President Asif Ali President Ten PercentZardari ... sticky-fingered husband of the late Benazir Bhutto ... in his forthcoming meeting with President Hamid Maybe I'll join the TalibanKarzai ... A former Baltimore restaurateur, now 12th and current President of Afghanistan, displacing the legitimate president Rabbani in December 2004. He was installed as the dominant political figure after the removal of the Taliban regime in late 2001 in a vain attempt to put a Pashtunface on the successor state to the Taliban. After the 2004 presidential election, he was declared president regardless of what the actual vote count was. He won a second, even more dubious, five-year-term after the 2009 presidential election. His grip on reality has been slipping steadily since around 2007, probably from heavy drug use... in Turkey would be able to clear up the misperceptions. Ms Khar however was very clear that Pakistain does not want to see any chaos in Afghanistan post 2014. "That is too horrific a scenario to imagine with grave implications not only for Afghanistan, but also for Pakistain and the region as a whole. She stressed that clarity and strategic coherence were a sine qua non for realizing peace in Afghanistan and added, "We are therefore, working overtime to put our engagement with US back on track." Referring to the recent visit of Secretary Clinton to Pakistain, she said it has helped move the matters forward. "There is no reason for Afghanistan, US and Pakistain not to be working together to achieve our shared objectives," she said. The Foreign Minister expressed the hope that the upcoming conferences in Istanbul and Bonn would achieve their objectives. "This can only be done if we proceed with a clear sense of purpose and do not engage ourselves in the pursuit of objectives which are elusive," she said. |
Posted by:Fred |
#1 "we was gonna do th' right thing, yessir, but den, dose dirty rotten coppers showed up an' we jus' hadda break th' law..." |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2011-10-30 13:10 |