" If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India" Nawaz Sharif

Machar

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Prime minister for a third time, Pakistan’s Nawaz Sharif wants peace with India and even the Taliban – but don’t expect him to have changed.



Arms race between Pakistan and India 'must end' says Nawaz Sharif

From an armchair in Pakistan’s version of the Oval Office, Nawaz Sharif points towards the forested slopes of the Margalla Hills. “They are the foothills of the Himalayas,” says the man who reacquired the rights to this office — and to this view — when he returned for a third stint as prime minister in June.

This comeback has given Mr Sharif arguably the toughest job in the world: governing a nuclear-armed nation of 180 million people, beset by terrorism, economic crisis and a perilous confrontation with India.

Only last week, the army was hunting for Islamist gunmen in the hills outside Mr Sharif’s window in the capital, Islamabad. Meanwhile, Pakistani and Indian forces are once again clashing along the “Line of Control”, running through the disputed territory of Kashmir, barely 50 miles to the east.

In his first interview since returning to office, Mr Sharif, calm, deliberate and assured, makes clear that he sees his election victory as a mandate for peace with India. He talks with genuine feeling about the need for reconciliation with Pakistan’s oldest enemy.




“There will be progress and there has to be progress,” says Mr Sharif. “If we have to prosper, there has to be progress on this.”
He says: “We didn’t have any India-bashing slogans in the elections. We don’t believe in such slogans. There have been such slogans in the past — 10 years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago — but not now. In fact, I very clearly spoke about good relations with India even before the elections were happening.”


He goes on: “I made my position very clear: if we get a mandate, we will make sure we pick up the threads from where we left off in 1999 and then reach out to India, sit with them, resolve all our outstanding issues, including the issue of Kashmir, through peaceful means.”


In fact, the 63-year-old politician wants to pick up the threads of his last government in almost every respect. That premiership ended when he was thrown out of power and into jail by his army chief, General Pervez Musharraf, in 1999. This bruising downfall lumbered Mr Sharif with the traditional penalty of political failure in Pakistan — a battery of criminal convictions (all overturned), six months behind bars and seven years’ exile in London and Saudi Arabia.


Having achieved political resurrection by winning the election in May, Mr Sharif might be expected to pose as a new man, wiser and more mature than the politician who was cast out of office. In fact, he does not follow this script. On his telling, Mr Sharif offers continuity not change; after all, he believes his previous governments were success stories. “We did deliver,” he says. “We were able to meet the expectations of the people to some extent. That is why we were re-elected in 1997 and that is why we have been re-elected in 2013.”
“If I take you back to Nineties, our party came up with very bold reforms in the country, economic reforms. They were really revolutionary reforms.”


During his first premiership between 1990 and 1993, Mr Sharif privatised Pakistan’s banks, insurance companies and key industries. In his mind, he brought the free market not only to his homeland, but to India as well.



“India was taken aback, frankly. India felt that India must also have same reforms in India as Pakistan,” he says.



“There was tremendous pressure on the Indian government, I know, that India should also copy the reforms that Pakistan has introduced.”



So you are not a new man — you are the same Nawaz Sharif who ran Pakistan in the Nineties? “I am the same politician who’s trying to pick up the threads of where I left off,” he replies.



And you offer continuity not change? “You can call it continuity; you can call it change that still continues and we are now going to make sure that we take it to its logical conclusion.”



You are carrying on the good work that you did in the Nineties? “That was my humble contribution and I will continue to make that humble contribution. We hope that work will also start soon, that we will have a motorway from the northern regions of Pakistan right down to Karachi.”


[SUP]Nawaz Sharif with his entourage at his offices at the Prime Minister’s residence in Islamabad, Pakistan. (MAX BECHERER FOR THE TELEGRAPH)[/SUP]


Pakistanis who have less than fond memories of Mr Sharif’s premierships might recall how he failed to complete a full term (his first stint ended when the president sacked him for alleged corruption). They might marvel at the chutzpah of leader who simply offers more of the same. But, regardless of the baggage he carries, Mr Sharif has the opportunity presented by a clear election victory. What will be his most important economic reform? Mr Sharif replies that when David Cameron rang with his congratulations, he named his “first three priorities” as “number one economy, number two economy, number three economy”.



As a businessman in his own right, this should be his strongest subject — but he is not wholly convincing. Mr Sharif offers a long disquisition on how he wants foreign investors, including British companies, to cure Pakistan’s endemic power cuts by building new generating capacity, using the hydro-electric potential of the country’s great rivers.



Yet Pakistan is a place where dodging energy bills is pursued with the same diligence as tax evasion. Less than 0.5 per cent of the population pays any tax; fabulously rich citizens, including politicians, brazenly avoid contributing to the national treasury. British taxpayers, by contrast, will give 446 million to Pakistan as UK aid in 2015.



Fixing tax collection is not a top priority for Mr Sharif. “I have not yet discussed this matter because, you see, these are very initial days,” he says.


“We will have to lower the taxes in the country, the income tax, corporate tax and all the taxes.”


He adds: “There is a lot of leakage in our taxes, it is said that it’s somewhere between 500 and 1,000 billion rupees (3 billion to 6 billion).”


Some people might be surprised you haven’t discussed this problem more than two months after taking office? “It’s not easy to plug this leakage,” replies the prime minister. “We are in the process of doing that. I think this exercise will take some time. We’ve been just been in office for eight to nine weeks. We are very conscious of this problem,” he says, adding that he is most grateful for British aid.
But Mr Sharif acknowledges that security is essential for economic success. Pakistan’s struggle against radical Islamists, including the Taliban and a host of other extremists, has claimed more lives here than anywhere else in the world. “We are fighting all these elements because look at what they’ve done in different parts of the country,” says Mr Sharif. “More than 40,000 people have lost their lives in this battle against terror.”


His government will produce a new national security strategy in the next “few weeks”, he says, and the emphasis will shift away from force and towards negotiation with the Taliban.


“Of course we’re fighting each other,” he says. “I believe that there may be no harm in exploring the other option of having dialogue with them if they’re at all serious, and if we find them serious enough — and if we think that talks can yield positive results.” As for Pakistan’s tortured relations with America, he describes the drone campaign on the Afghan frontier as the No 1 “irritant”, adding: “The drones are counter-productive, they are violating our sovereignty and we must respect each other’s territorial sovereignty and if the drones are challenging our sovereignty this is not a fair thing.” Drone strikes might indeed end on Mr Sharif’s watch, if only because America has eliminated almost every target.


The good news is that Mr Sharif is the first prime minister in Pakistan’s history to take over from an elected government that lasted a full term. Today, the country is ruled by democratic politicians according to the constitution, not sinister generals.


If Mr Sharif achieves peace with India and a settlement with the Taliban — two monumental ifs — he could yet be a transforming leader. He seems aware of the burden of responsibility. “I have to make sure we do the right things,” he says. “We have to make sure we tread the right path, pursue the right policies — and not make any mistakes.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...is-to-prosper-we-must-stop-bashing-India.html



اسلام آباد…وزیر اعظم نوا ز شریف نے اس خواہش کا اظہار کیا ہے کہ پاکستان اور بھارت کے درمیان امن قائم ہو اور دنوں کو کشمیر کے مسئلے کا پر امن حال نکالنا چاہیے لیکن اس کے لیے بھارت کو سنجیدگی کا مظاہرہ کرنا ہوگا۔ان کا یہ بھی کہنا تھا کہ وہ اپنی انتخابی کامیابی کو بھارت کے ساتھ امن کے مینڈیٹ کے طور پر دیکھتے ہیں اگر خوشحالی چاہئیے تو بھارت کے ساتھ تعلقات میں پیش رفت ہونی چاہئیے،ایک برطانوی اخبار کو دیے گئے انٹرویو میں وزیر اعظم نواز شریف نے کہا کہ انھوں نے انتخابات سے قبل اور انتخابات کے بعد بھارت کے خلاف کوئی نعرہ نہیں لگایا۔ وزیر اعظم نے کہا کہ دونوں ممالک دفاعی سازو سامان پر پہلے ہی کافی اخراجات کرچکے ہیں،وہ جنگی طیاروں ، آبدوزوں اور دوسرے سازو سامان پربڑی رقم خرچ کرنے کی دوڑ میں لگے رہے۔ اب دونوں حکومتوں کو چاہیے کہ وہ یہ رقم عوام کی فلاح و بہبود کے لیے استعمال کریں۔اس کے لیے دفاعی بجٹ میں کٹوتی کرنی پڑی تو کریں گے۔لیکن اس میں بھارت کو بھی آگے بڑھنا ہوگا۔انھوں نے کہا کہ دونوں ممالک کو ماضی کی غلطیوں کو بھول کر تعلقات میں بہتری لانے کے لیے مذکرات کی میز پر آنا چاہیے، اس کے لیے بھارت کو بھی کوشیشں کرنا ہو گی۔اس سوال پر کہ پاک فوج ان تعلقات کو قبول کرے گی یا نہیں۔وزیر اعظم نواز شریف نے کہا کہ بھارت کے ساتھ تعلقات اور دفاعی بجٹ میں کٹوتی پرحکومت اور فوج کا ایک ہی نکتہ نظر ہے۔وزیر اعظم نے کہا کہ دہشت گردی کے خلاف جنگ میں 40ہزار افراد نے اپنی جانوں کا نزرانہ دیا ہے۔دہشت گردوں کے ساتھ بات چیت کے لیے تیار ہیں۔اگر دہشت گرد بات چیت میں سنجیدہ ہوں تو ان کے ساتھ مذکرات میں کوئی نقصان نہیں۔ڈرون حملوں سے متعلق پوچھے گئے سوال پر وزیر اعظم کا کہنا تھا کہ ڈرون حملے ہماری خود مختاری کی خلاف ورزی ہیں۔افغان سرحدی علاقے میں یہ حملے امریکا کے ساتھ ہمارے تعلقات میں دراڑ ہیں۔

http://beta.jang.com.pk/JangDetail.aspx?ID=114947​
 
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amir_ali

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

Only last week, the army was hunting for Islamist gunmen in the hills outside Mr Sharif’s window in the capital, Islamabad.

Is he referring to Sikandar here???


The drones are counter-productive, they are violating our sovereignty and we must respect each other’s territorial sovereignty and if the drones are challenging our sovereignty this is not a fair thing.” Drone strikes might indeed end on Mr Sharif’s watch, if only because America has eliminated almost every target.

!!!NS sb people are making fun of u, u need to take a hard and specific stance on drones
 
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Rizwan2009

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

اگر پاکستان ميں خوشحالي لاني ہے تو ايک ہمہ گير احتساب کي سخت ضرورت ہے پاکستان کے سياستدان فوج عدليہ بيوروکريسي سب کا سخت احتساب ہوگا تو پاکستان کے عوام خوشحال ہوسکيں گے
 

amber123

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

It is mandatory for Nawaz Shrief under NRO 11:

To fulfil US guided agenda to create suitable environment in the region conducive enough to grant a major role to India an Afghanistan and beyond.

To connect India with Central Asian states through trade and strategic interests....................

To have normal relations with for personal corporate interests................
 

masti

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

Truth and Reality is that we Pakistanis dont bash India . Its India and there Indian media which bash Pakistan 24/7 . And in India all the political parties win on anti-Pakistan slogans . This traitor and enemy of Pakistan Nawaz Sharif should be hanged publicly . Our politicians and media r too soft on India , in India its totally opposite which is extreme hatred on Pakistan , we must be agressive on our real , open and biggest enemy India .
 

ambroxo

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

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Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

There are two problems
1. Lack of accountability in Pakistan. The army is not accountable to govt. The jihadi group especially saeed, janghwi, sipahe salawa feel more empowered after NS victory.
We have been seeing many border shootouts recently where 6-7 Indians and 1-2 Pakistanis have been killed but the very beginning of incident was provoked by an elite Pakistan missionary Special commandoes from army who unnecessarily shot 5 Indian soldiers.

2. Lack of trust for pakistan in India.
The Indian media rants and hypes up anti Pakistan sentiments.

In-order to have better relation both the problems need to be addressed!
 

drkjke

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
see .I told this a week ago but no one believed.govt and army included are in this game.this present tension with indis aeems a drama to me staged under American patronage...now people will be more "receptive" to Kashmir solution due to threat of so called war.and the coming solution of Kashmir according to my info is that Kashmir will become independent state.and pakistans borders will shrink to GT road..mangla dam we will also lose...this is why Nawaz was given chance this time it seems.but remember that army is in this plan also,.without armys consent nothing happens in Pakistan..if Kashmir gets independent than we will have another American prixy state on our head and india ont lose mucha s its already americans pet and its so big that losing Kashmir will not effect it.but Pakistan will lose remaining rivers coming from Kashmir too...this is the fruit you people reap for supporting americans war against islam and demonizing your own brother mujahideen
 

drkjke

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

There are two problems
1. Lack of accountability in Pakistan. The army is not accountable to govt. The jihadi group especially saeed, janghwi, sipahe salawa feel more empowered after NS victory.
We have been seeing many border shootouts recently where 6-7 Indians and 1-2 Pakistanis have been killed but the very beginning of incident was provoked by an elite Pakistan missionary Special commandoes from army who unnecessarily shot 5 Indian soldiers.

2. Lack of trust for pakistan in India.
The Indian media rants and hypes up anti Pakistan sentiments.

In-order to have better relation both the problems need to be addressed!

the trouble with trusting any Indians remarks is that you peoples track record is very bad.you people are known as king of liars across the world.see how indian parliament attack you blamed on Pakistan and later it was revealed it was done by you peoples yourselves,examples are countless.alas that subcontinent people consider lying to be an art,they don't even consider it a minor character flaw.....anyway pakistan army supporting any Islamic group is biggest joke of the century,when under kayanis command this army is fighting only against islamists and leaving eastern border largely unguarded since many years..infact kayani etc is fighting a war to save india,as these islamists are the real threat to indian terrorist designs across this region
 
whenever this SoB opens his mouth regarding hindustan ( and many other includin IK) it becomes a shame for ppl.I TELL EVERY 1, NO UNILATERAL EFFORTS FOR GOOD RELATIONS WITH HINDUS....
 
Re: Nawaz Sharif: If Pakistan is to prosper, we must stop bashing India

the trouble with trusting any Indians remarks is that you peoples track record is very bad.you people are known as king of liars across the world.see how indian parliament attack you blamed on Pakistan and later it was revealed it was done by you peoples yourselves,examples are countless.alas that subcontinent people consider lying to be an art,they don't even consider it a minor character flaw.....anyway pakistan army supporting any Islamic group is biggest joke of the century,when under kayanis command this army is fighting only against islamists and leaving eastern border largely unguarded since many years..infact kayani etc is fighting a war to save india,as these islamists are the real threat to indian terrorist designs across this region


In India there is a tug of war between two agency ( political reasons). The comments of 1 person regarding 26/11 was mere a political gimmick. Had it been an Internal planned attack , the opposition party would have publicized this issue, and brought down the govt.
1 person can give any views but their views can be only taken seriously until there are proved conclusively. The tape of illyas kashmiri , many phone call conversations, the proof of involvement of ISI major/colonel in 26/11 proved in one of the court in USA did point fingers at some of rogue elements in pakistan army/isi


In reality, Illyas kashmiri(the prime accused of 26/11) is in jail in Pakistan and the recent spat of killing of 5 solider is also true.
In Pakistan, there are 2 groups of people in army,one who is anti taliban and terrorism but others who support them(hamid gul followers).
It's too perplex to know what does pakistan army desire, whereas Indian army documents every work and works under complete government supervision


I have some pakistani punjabi friends and they too accept that hafeez saeed and their training camps existed in pakistan Kashmir, punjab.


The official stance of Indian govt is still the same. The recent assassination of 5 Indian soldiers have hurt the relations. The Indian govt will never take Pakistan stance seriously
 
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khawaja07

Councller (250+ posts)
Hamz**** kya baqwaas kar rahah hai... is week mein INDIA nein itnein LoC peh itnay jawaan shaheed kiye hein aur yeh kehta hai keh stop bashing......Kasam seh mera isko qatal karnay ka dil chah raha hai.....
 

aazad.mubassir

Minister (2k+ posts)
نواز شریف نے فوج کے بجٹ میں کٹوتی کا اشارہ دیا ہے
اب فوج جماعت الدعوه اور طالبان کو کوئی اسائنمنٹ دینے کا سوچ رہی ہوگی
 

miafridi

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
I think he is right in saying that bashing india strategy hasn't yielded much, but at the same time NS is not doing much to solve issues with india which is what making people bash Nawaz sharif. He should show that he is doing something if he wants to come as a respected figure among the masses.
 

Pracha

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
These family parties have bankrupted us financially and now they are accepting the constant bullying from India through appeasement.