Sharing an elevator the other day, a colleague suddenly
turned to me and asked: "So, just how
much longer does Pakistan have?" My
interlocutor is not the first person to pose that question, but coming from a savvy
veteran of the international arena, his out-of-the-blue query was jolting.
comment by anonymous,received via e-mail
This is just reaffirmation of all we have been saying.
But Pakistan is going nowhere it is going to be on the world map as a failed
state. It's not going to disappear, dissolve or wither away automatically.
Unlike Baluchistan doesn't exist at all as a
sovereign entity and any opportunity it had was given away or destroyed by
greedy Sardars and it corrupt leaders, self centred incompetents who put
themselves before their people at all times, including the present.
Would the international community hand over the land of Baluchistan from one set of thieves to another just as bad? No, these Sardars, leaders need to reform themselves before trying to get back, that which they lost.
Would the international community hand over the land of Baluchistan from one set of thieves to another just as bad? No, these Sardars, leaders need to reform themselves before trying to get back, that which they lost.
The Baluch leaderships should had the opportunity given Raisani a good slapping. But no, that's not the ways the system works in Baluchistan, It's all about their individual power.
Just like the 'moderate' and 'good' religious people in all religions are supporting extremists. The Baluch activists too are supporting leadership’s corrupt practices by being a voice of common sense and reason.
Leaders don't come from the "moderate and good", they come from radical thinkers and visionaries 'who get things done'.
Received by e-mail-Anonymous
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