Heheh... Ap thora just awam k crises ko deikhay... Industrial revolution sirf un ki ho rahi ha
sobo bhaai jo kuch main daikh sakta hon ... wo aap nahin daikh saktey ...industrial revolution ........On Wed, Oct 5, 2016 at 6:44 PM, Sweet Poison <mc090410137@gmail.com> wrote:Hehe nice joke... Pakistan tiger hahaha... Ap. Na aj kia pia tha... Mujhy bhi woi pilay
On 5 Oct 2016 6:29 p.m., "Jhuley Lal" <jhulaylall@gmail.com> wrote:kon kehta hai pakistan failure state hai .....pakistan is going to become ASIAN Tiger ....pori dunia ki nazar pakistan per haiRussian ke presedent kehtey hain keh ...Iqtasadi rah daari porey khitey ki taqdeer badley gi ...india pakistan ki taraqi daikh ker jal jal ker siwaa ho ker mar raha hai ...On Wed, Oct 5, 2016 at 6:03 PM, Sweet Poison <mc090410137@gmail.com> wrote:Janab hum tajrabah ko sir ma marna ha k itni bar bananay k bawajood Pakistan failure state ha
On 5 Oct 2016 5:58 p.m., "Jhuley Lal" <jhulaylall@gmail.com> wrote:itni qualities kisi aur main hain to batao3 bar prime misnster2 bar chief ministerdirector security in 1980governor in 1981itna senoir politision koi aur hai to bataoo ...itna siyaasat ka tajarba kisi aur ke paas hai to batao ... ???On Wed, Oct 5, 2016 at 5:55 PM, Sweet Poison <mc090410137@gmail.com> wrote:So sad..
On 5 Oct 2016 5:45 p.m., "Jhuley Lal" <jhulaylall@gmail.com> wrote:Nawaz Sharif
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaMian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif (Urdu: میاں محمد نواز شریف, pronounced [nəˈʋaːz ʃəˈriːf]; born 25 December 1949)[1] is the 12th and current Prime Minister of Pakistan, in office since June 2013. A veteran politician and industrialist, he previously served as Prime Minister from November 1990 to July 1993 and from February 1997 to October 1999. Sharif is the president of Pakistan Muslim League (N), which holds a parliamentary majority since 2013. As owner of the Ittefaq Group, a leading business conglomerate, he is also one of the country's wealthiest people.[2][3][4][5]
Born into a wealthy Punjabi family in Lahore, Sharif studied business at GCU and later law at Punjab University before entering politics in the later 1970s. In 1981, Sharif was appointed by the military government as the Minister of Financefor the province of Punjab. Backed by a loose coalition of conservative's, he was elected as the Chief Minister of Punjab, after the end of martial law in 1988, he was elected again as the Chief Minister of Punjab, as a nominee of the center-right Pakistan Muslim League. In 1990, Sharif led the conservative alliance, IJI, to victory, leading him to become the Prime Minister. Investigation into the election would later revel that the election was rigged in favour of Sharif by the Pakistani intelligence through channeling millions of rupees into his election campaign.[6]
Sharif's first administration came to an end when then President Ghulam Ishaq Khan attempted to dismiss Sharif on corruption charges. Sharif successfully challenged the dismissal in the Supreme Court,[7] but both men were ultimately persuaded to step down in 1993 by army chief Abdul Waheed Kakar.[7] Sharif served as Leader of the Oppositionbetween 1993 and 1996 and led the Muslim League to a Supermajority in Pakistan's National Assembly.[8] His government amendment the constitution to restrict's the powers of the presidency to dismiss governments.[9] His second administration is notable for holding Pakistan's first nuclear tests in response to neighbouring India's second nuclear tests as part of the tit-for-tat policy.[10] Wh
en Western countries suspended foreign aid, Sharif froze the country's foreign currency reserves to prevent further capital flight, but this only worsened economic conditions.[11][12] With rising unemployment and record foreign debt,[13] Sharif's second term also saw tussles with the judiciary and themilitary. Sharif was summoned for contempt by the Supreme Court in 1997 after making a speech in parliament criticising recent decisions by Chief Justice Sajjad Ali Shah. Sharif also forcibly relieved Chairman joint chiefs GeneralJehangir Karamat from command over a policy issue and replaced him with Pervez Musharraf in 1998.[13] However, after Pakistan's haphazard performance in the Kargil War, his relations with Musharraf also deteriorated. When he attempted to relieve Musharraf from his command on 12 October 1999, the military instead ousted Sharif's government, exiling him to Saudi Arabia.[13]
Sharif returned in 2008, and his party contested the elections in 2008, forming a provincial government in Punjab under Sharif's brother, Shehbaz, that remained in office until 2013. He successfully called for Musharraf's impeachment and the reinstatement of Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry. Between 2008 and 2013, Sharif led the country's main opposition party. In 2013 general elections his party achieved a largest number of votes and he formed a government. He became the 20th prime minister of Pakistan, returning to the position after fourteen years, for an unprecedented third time.[14][15] Sharif's third term has brought macroeconomic stability with the help of substantial loans from IMF, and signed multi-billion investment deals to construct the CPEC and to remedy chronic power shortages.[16] In 2015, his government launched a military offensive to remove extremist groups in northwestern Pakista
n and lifted the moratorium on the death penalty.[17][18] Sharif's third term is also underpinned by social centrism rather than the social conservatism which guided his prior two terms.[19][20]
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