Thursday, March 29, 2007

Is it 'Bye-bye Pakistan ?'

March 28, 2007: Nuclear Pakistan breaking up. Last week, the World Sindhi Institute held a seminar in Washington, DC to mark the 40th anniversary of the Lahore Resolution, a document that promised sovereignty for the future Pakistan's ethnic minorities. However, Pakistan soon became a continuing dictatorship, led by one general after another, that squashed the autonomy of the ethnically distinct regions of Pakistan. Many speakers, representing the Baluchi, Sindhi, Pashtun, Kashmiri, and Balti peoples of Pakistan, stressed that an alliance of Pakistan, America, and Saudi Arabia works against the interests of the oppressed nations of Pakistan.

Baluchis, Kashmiris, Sindhis, Pashtuns, and Gilgitis/Baltis prepare to say goodbye to Pakistan, leaving a nuclear armed Punjabistan allied with Saudi Arabia.

A spokesperson for the World Sindhi Institute said that Pakistan is currently unraveling -- lawyers have been on strike and there have been mass resignations from the judiciary as the Punjabi military government in Islamabad cracks down on dissent and the media. The Sindh region suffers from internal colonization, especially now that 62 percent of the oil produced in Pakistan is found in Sindh. The Sindhi spokesperson said the United States does not see Pakistan as a multi-ethnic state and supports the 1.2 million active duty and retired Pakistani military personnel who run practically every facet of Pakistani society. In 1971, Bengalis in East Pakistan rebelled against the Pakistani military state and declared independence as Bangladesh. Now, large portions of remaining Pakistan stand to also break away as "other Bangladeshes." Although Pakistan is a nuclear state, the weapons are in the hands of the dominant Punjabis.

If Pakistan breaks up, Punjabistan will remain as a nuclear state allied to its financial supporters in Saudi Arabia -- the country that also backed the Taliban and "Al Qaeda." A number of individuals representing Pakistan's nations agreed that Pakistan is based on the "Three A's" -- Allah, the Army, and America.

A spokesman for the Pashtuns of Pakistan stressed that his region was influenced by Islamic terrorists receiving financial support and Wahhabist Islamic indoctrination from Saudi Arabia. It was agreed that if Saudi funds were cut off, the Islamic groups would rapidly lose interest in Saudi Wahhabism. Pakistan's ISI has waged a ruthless campaign against the ethnic minorities. A number of Sindhis and Baluchis have been "disappeared" by the U.S.-supported military regime of General Pervez Musharraf.

IMO: All this ill behooves Saudi Arabia, which should be setting a good example and not destabilising Islam for greed and short term financial gain, but it appears to be behaving intentionally against the will of Allah. Some interesting theology here. Maybe Saudia Arabia needs some female imams.

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