Minggu, 29 Mei 2011

Kiss and Tears!

There are certain stages in life when you know what are the things that has brought this current stage, You also knows that how can things get better, You also know that who did and why separate the two people living together yet you can not do anything but just wait and pray and hope, perhaps its true that, Love starts with a kiss but end with tears, but perhaps not.

This Post had to be edited ALOT! :P

Tribute to Quiad-e-Azam, M.A Jinnah!

These two Videos are easily the best Tribute to Quiad-E-Azam, Muhammad Ali Jinnah :)







Selasa, 24 Mei 2011

Abdul Qadir's Interview


I played all kind of games on the street, from hockey to marbles, but not cricket. One day while playing marbles, a friend asked me to join his cricket team, which was one man short. They used to send their worst player to open the innings. The first ball I faced hit the stumps, but I was told it was a try ball so I could to stay. I was bowled the next ball as well.
I rate the basic legbreak as my most trusted weapon. It was my stock ball and I had very good control over it. It was my saviour even on my worst days.
I saw people of all ages seemed to be interested in cricket. Even older people asked each other, "What is the score?" That got me interested in cricket.
They say my temperament on the field was more that of a fast bowler.
I joined Dharampura Gymkhana, scored a century in a local tournament and became a regular in the team for the Lahore club competitions. I was often the tournament's best allrounder. But those days my father didn't approve of my playing so I used to wear my cricket kit under my salwar kameez.
Imran Khan said my record would have been much better had the DRS been around back then. Those days the umpires almost always favoured batsmen who put their front leg forward to spinners.
The real breakthrough came when I got admission through cricket into Lahore's famous Government College, the alma mater of several international cricketers. I managed the double of a century and five wickets against Islamia College, our traditional rivals. Habib Bank approached me, and in 1975-76 I took 6 for 67 on first-class debut. Within two years, I was in the Test team.
My 13 runs off Courtney Walsh's last over to win a crucial World Cup tie in 1987 is rated by many as equal to Miandad's last-ball six against India in Sharjah.


People said I had three types of googlies. I wanted to have as much variety as I could and kept practising new deliveries. I tried different angles of the arm and practised one delivery with a different number of fingers.
I told [Anil] Kumble: "You are not a big spinner of the ball. But you are fast in the air, which is your biggest strength. Simply try to twist the fingers and use the wrist more. That will add variety into your bowling."
West Indies were easily the best side in my time. My standout performance against them was in Faisalabad in 1986-87 - 6 for 16 when they were dismissed for 53.
I was selected for my first Test, against England, on the basis of my 67 wickets in the previous domestic season. I bowled well but was unlucky to get 1 for 82. Critics said I was selected too early. But in the second Test I took 6 for 44 in the first innings.
In my first three seasons of first-class cricket, I scored more than 1000 runs at an average of nearly 30, and scored a century. But over time, I paid more attention to bowling. I am only the fourth Pakistani to achieve the double of 1000 runs and 100 wickets in Tests.
I declined very lucrative offers to play for English counties, Australian state teams and in South Africa, where I was offered a blank cheque, because I wanted my country to benefit the most from my art. I didn't want to expose it in the domestic circuits of other countries.
During the 1982 tour of England, Imran suggested I grow a goatee. "It will add to your aura," he said. He was right, because when I did, people remarked that I looked like a magician.
It was only in 1998-99, three years after my first-class career was over, that I played one season for Carlton in Victorian Premier Cricket. I was only the second overseas player to win the Ryder Medal for the best player in Melbourne's club competition.
Imran said that Allan Border, Viv Richards, Arjuna Ranatunga and Steve Waugh, all World-Cup winning captains, all thought I was better than Shane Warne.
Imran Khan leads the Pakistan team out of the the field, England v Pakistan, 5th Test, The Oval, 4th day, August 10, 1987
When I ruptured my tendon during a charity match in London, Nassem Hassan Shah, the PCB chairman, declined to help because I wasn't playing for Pakistan. It cost me about 1.5 million rupees. Towards the end of my international career, I had a head injury during net practice. Again the board refused to help.
My international career coincided with the era of fast bowlers The great spinners like Bedi, Chandra, Underwood, etc. had faded out. But I managed to hold my own among the great pacemen of my time. Many regard me as the first great one-day spinner.
Imran Khan is Pakistan's greatest cricketer. He had great confidence in my abilities and I owe a lot to him. Without him we would not have the fast-bowling culture in Pakistan. Imran guided the fast bowlers and taught them the importance of exercise and running, and the result is a never-ending supply of quality fast bowlers.
I captained Pakistan in ODIs and was once offered the Test captaincy. But since Javed Miandad was a more senior member of the team at that time, I refused the offer.
My most memorable tour was to England in 1982. It was a wet summer but I enjoyed success in almost every match and took nearly 50 wickets in the first-class games before the first Test. It was a major breakthrough for my international career.
All my four sons played first-class cricket. I have great hopes from Usman, my youngest. He played the Under-19 World Cup in 2010, where Pakistan were runners-up. People say his action is not too different from his father's.
Left-hand batsmen bothered me. On our 1983-84 tour, Australia planned well and stuffed their side with lefties, and I was largely ineffective.
I have been running the Abdul Qadir International Cricket Academy and Club since 2005. We have 40-50 boys from all strata of life. The academy team has been to Dubai a couple of times and to Malaysia once. A number of them have graduated to first-class cricket.
In 1987, Razaaullah, a senior member of PCB, rang me and said, "I know a Sahiwal boy by the name of Mushtaq Ahmed who is an exciting legspinning talent and his bowling action is a mirror image of yours." The touring England side was scheduled to play a three-day game at Sahiwal against the Chief Minister's XI. I asked the chairman of the selection committee to include Mushtaq in the team. Mushtaq took six wickets in first innings and was on the national selectors' radar from then on.
Many Indian batsmen played me well, especially Gavaskar, Viswanath, Amarnath and Vengsarkar. Among others, Gatting, Haynes, Aravinda and Ranatunga were the best.
I resigned as chief selector in 2009 after six months on the job. Before accepting the post, I had been assured by the PCB chief that there wouldn't be any interference in the working of the selection committee. But Intikhab Alam, Pakistan's coach, and Yawar Saeed, the manager, continuously intervened and it became intolerable.
Danish Kaneria is purely my product. The PCB boss, Lt Gen Tauqir Zia, had invited aspiring spinners from all over Pakistan to a camp in Lahore. I picked Kaneria and worked on him for one month. Imran Tahir was also my pupil before he left for South Africa.
I was always ready to help anyone. Sharne Warne visited my home in Lahore to get tips. Steve Waugh brought along Stuart MacGill, and Andy Flower asked me to teach Paul Strang.
I wasn't picked for the first game of the 1983 World Cup. I was told by the management that legspinners tend to be expensive in ODIs. I told them whenever they felt I proved costly in a game, they could drop me for the next match. In the next game, against New Zealand, I took 4 for 21 and top-scored with 41 Thereafter I was more or less an automatic choice in Pakistan's one-day side.
Saqlain Mushtaq benefited from a tip I gave him. He used to bowl the doosra with a higher trajectory. I told him to deliver it with the same trajectory as his other balls to avoid it being picked up by batsmen.
I enjoyed lofting spinners for sixes.
My best batting performance was scoring my Test highest of 61 against England in 1987-88. It included four sixes off John Emburey.
Abdul Qadir speaks to the media after quitting as chairman of selectors, Lahore, June 12, 2009
I played my last full season of first-class cricket in 1994-95 and took 52 wickets at little over 20. The PCB asked me to play for Pakistan but I declined as I had already decided that my time was over.
An essential quality for a spinner is the ability to land the ball wherever he wants.
One of the best tributes I ever received was from the greatest spinner of all time, Shane Warne. He wrote, "To the best. Thanks for everything. I look forward to catching up with you. Sincerely, Warne."
Twenty20 is good entertainment. It is also benefitting cricketers and boards, and has brought back crowds to stadiums. I appreciate IPL, but it should be rotated and held in a different country every year.
Once in England, a few old ladies came out of a lift I was waiting for, and one of them screamed, "Is it you, Abdul? My daughter, who otherwise has no interest in cricket, always enjoys watching you bowl. She says, 'Mama, when Abdul is bowling it seems a young lady is dancing on the floor'."


Courtesy: http://www.cricinfo.com/ and taken by Ijaz Chaudhry ...

Senin, 23 Mei 2011

Love.

"I love you without knowing how, or when, or from where. I love you straightfowardingly, without complexeties or pride. So I love you because i know no other way than this..."

Sabtu, 21 Mei 2011

My time at Air University (2)


I was dismissed from the University!! My dreams were shattered, and I was broken.

There were about 20-30 students who were dismissed from the University. I was in Multan when I saw my result, and my SGPA was Just 1.01. Having a GPA above one and below 1.75 meant that I was dismissed from the University but would be allowed to rejoin after a year’s gap. I couldn’t tell anyone about what had happened, my parents only knew that I had a bad result and advised me to study harder. I went back to Islamabad and locked myself in my Hostel’s room praying to God that a miracle happen, and so it did. Some how or the other my parents acme to know from the university that I have been dismissed and they, consoling me asked me to come back and prepare for the next year. I was about to leave that night, when in the evening I received a call from my mother telling me that I, along with other students have been allowed to rejoin the current semester. It was to be our first semester again and we would finish our second semester in the next two summer semesters.

This was not the start of good times but perhaps it was first of the many miracles that had to take place during my University life. I would like to thanks Dr. Tasneem Shah, who according to my knowledge was the real force behind this decision. We started the semester in January, late than the others. We were around 25 students who were in the same class but from different departments. The subjects were the same, Calculus was with Dr. Tasneem Shah, Physics was taught by Mam’ Saima Zaman, C++ by Mam’ Uzma, Workshop Technology’s teachers were the same, whereas Communication Skills was taught by Sir Rashid.



This was the only semester where all my concentration in life was on studies, I did not have any other thought in my mind, I did not have any other distractions, all my concentration was on studies.
Dr Tasneem Shah was very kind to us and whenever we had any sort of problem we talked to him, He was in fact our class advisor. He taught us really well and also introduced us to Mat lab software in the very first semester. He taught us calculus and made this subject very easy for us due to his way of teaching. It was the most interesting subject of the semester for me and we never missed a class.

We as a group of three, Sheraz Ahmad Abbasi, Tehseen Baqir Khan, and me were very strong alliance in that class as we worked very hard together, making notes and visiting professors for solutions. I was a very active student in all of the subjects actually. Workshop technology was a mere formality for me as Sir thought I was a really good student, believe me that Sir marked us for the final by just watching our faces and marking our grades. C++ was easy in the first half but gradually failed away.  Our madam was not at all serious to teach us and was mostly busy on the telephone. I had the top marks in the Mid term exams but after the mid term I understood nothing of this subject and fortunately for me, I requested for an I grade just on time. 

Physics was going smoothly as well and Madam Saima Zaman was also very lenient. That was the most relaxing lecture of all as we had the measure of Madam even in the regular semester. As we had also studied from Madam in the previous semester that was the reason we did not have any problem with her, UNTIL Dr. Abdulla Sadiq came along from no where. He took over as our senior professor of physics and madam was sidelined. His way of teaching was way too high class. We did not understand anything of his and Icing on the cake was that he asked us to give a viva worth 20% marks of the final. No one was able to pass that viva and we knew that trouble was near. Each one of us tried very best to get rid of him one way or the other but failed.  I just had 17 internal marks out of 55 and it took another miracle to pass that. I dropped C++ just because I did not want to fail in physics. Madam was very supportive once again and assured us that she will try her best to give us as many marks as possible. I did pass the paper, although atone stage I was sure that I will fail.

‘Communication skills’ was my favorite subject of the semester. It had always been my favorite as this was the subject due to which I am currently in this University. I got an A grade in this subject and that’s why my GAP was above one. Things were not different even this time as I got the same grade in this subject.

I had some memorable moments this semester. Of course rejoining was one of them, and then the result of Midterm exams was another but the better one was the sports week. It was the first time a sports week was held in our university. It was a five day event and I stayed here for only the first two days. Initially it was very boring as we were bound to the university premises by the authority and we re not allowed to leave the university for the full day. But then without any planning we started doing something that lit up the event all together.

There was a Meena Bazaar to be held in the IAA Lawns and on the first day not many stalls were active. We (Tehseen Baqir, RaafayAshraf, Nauman Khalid, Raheel Abbas, Sami Ur Rehman and a few others) went inside an empty stall and started shouting. There was just a single fan placed there and we sat down and initially did loads of stupid things. Later on as the crowd gathered at the place we thought we could enjoy a lot more than what we already were. We made that stall our own by giving it a name of ‘Come and Shout, get your frustration out.’ Many people including the staff and professors came to our stall and shouted, we also had soothers as a gift for anyone who was willing to shout. We also decorated our stall by empty bottles, rubbish and stolen goods from the girl’s stall next to ours. When in the evening the actual stall holders came (They were the famous KFC) they enjoyed with us a lot as well and also took photos of ours. It was perhaps the most enjoyable time I had in my University life.  

One other Incident that was interesting was with our current Mathematics HOD, Dr. Tasneem Shah. Due to my Ill health he had advised me that whenever I find uncomfortable and am not fit to take the class I should just tell him. One say when I was not willing to take the class I went to his office and told him that I have to go to the hospital for checkup so I cannot take the class. He was wise enough so he started inquiring me. He asked which hospital I have to go, I did not know any hospital name and told him that it’s some hospital in Rawalpindi and my fathers’ friend is the doctor. He asked the doctor’s name which I could not tell as well. Then he asked for my father’s phone number which I told him that my father does not have any cell phone. I was getting tenser when he asked my mother s phone number which I had to give. He also took me to HOD but instead of making me the culprit he told him about my health and that I need to go back home so he asked the HOD to call my mother and tell him, which thankfully the HOD never did.

What happened next, will tell you in part III.

For Part 1, click here

Bad, Worse, Worst.

My blogger blog has not been working for many days now. I cannot sign in to my account directly. Google and Blogger had a fallout to their settings and most of the posts which were posted more recently by bloggers got deleted automatically. Thankfully none of my post got deleted on 13/05/2011. But suddenly yesterday two of my most important posts got deleted and I had this fear that it might be due to the google and blogger error so I searched the link on the different sites I had posted this article and thankfully got one of the article back and reposted it. But yesterday at night I received a call by the writer of that post and I was greeted by abuses that why did I reposted that post. It was the biggest shock for me! Although I had read the texts but I was of the idea that I'll be scolded for removing the posts but it was astonishingly the opposite. It was so sad. I wanted your everything to be even better than mine. I had posted it one many many sites so that it gets more views, but what I got in result was very sad because I did everything with sincerity. Its okay if you did not want your post here I have removed it. Stay Happy!

Kamis, 19 Mei 2011

End of Time.

More about me? Its not that nothing has happening in my life, there has been a lot of things happening but the load of the happenings is such that It does not allow me to write that frequently. Moreover, the blogger blog is having some trouble. Ever since the fallout my blogs' dashboard is not opening and the template designer is also having some problem. I hope things get well soon with the blog as I have put a lot of hard work in it.

My studies have been really tough over the past week or two. Presentations, Quizzes, Assignments, Reports,Viva everything has scattered together. I had to make the technical writing's report three times just because madam did not accept. I also had to spend around five days to make a report on Pak-China relations and although it was interesting the timing and the load was just too much for me to handle.

I have also been feeling sad because one of my cousins passed away a couple of weeks ago and that has really hurt me.

Yesterday was my last class of bachelors degree. Technically It was Last day of my BEMTS!! It has been a tough journey (For me It'll stay a little longer) and one that has made me even stronger. I'll cherish every moment good or bad, I'll miss each and everyone of my classmate Friends or not, I'll learn from everything high or low =)

Rabu, 18 Mei 2011

Pakistan-China Relations

INTRODUCTION



• Islamic Republic of Pakistan:

Pakistan is a country situated in South Asia. Pakistan came into existence on 14 August, 1947 after the British rule ended in the Sub Continent. The total area of Pakistan is 796,096 km. It has a 1,046-kilometre (650 mi) coastline along the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman in the south and is bordered by Afghanistan and Iran in the west. India is situated at the eastern side, China in the far northeast of Pakistan; Tajikistan also lies very close to Pakistan but is separated by the narrow Wakhan Corridor. Strategically it is located in a position between the important regions of South Asia, Central Asia and the Middle East. Pakistan has the seventh largest standing armed force and is the only Muslim-majority nation to possess nuclear weapons. It is also the third largest Muslim country and also the seventh largest in population. It is designated as a major non-NATO ally of the United States and a strategic ally of China. It is a founding member of the Organization of the Islamic Conference and a member of the United Nations, Commonwealth of Nations, Next Eleven economies and the G20 developing nations.


• People's Republic of China:

Chinais the most populous state in the world with over 1.3 billion people. It is located in East Asia. China has 22 provinces, five autonomous regions, four directly administered municipalities (Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, and Chongqing), and two highly autonomous special administrative regions (SARs) – Hong Kong and Macau. Its capital city is Beijing.At about 9.6 million square kilometers (3.7 million square miles), the PRC is the world's third- or fourth-largest country by total area, depending on the definition of what is included in that total, and the second largest by land area. Its landscape is diverse, with forest steppes and deserts (the Gobi and Taklimakan) in the dry north near Mongolia and Russia's Siberia, and subtropical forests in the wet south close to Vietnam, Laos, and Burma. The terrain in the west is rugged and elevated, with the Himalayas and the Tian Shan mountain ranges forming China's natural borders with India, Nepal and Central Asia.

In contrast, mainland China's eastern seaboard is low-lying and has a 14,500-kilometre (9,000 mi) long coastlinebounded on the southeast by the South China Sea and on the east by the East China Sea, beyond which lie Taiwan, Korea, and Japan.



PAKISTAN-CHINA FRIENDSHIP



Pakistan and China enjoy exemplary friendly ties, which have not only sustained changes of governments and the ups and downs in the regional and global situation, but, in fact, have been expanding and becoming even deeper. It is in the interest of both the countries to keep an eye on the new and emerging regional and global scenario and come up with appropriate strategy to meet the challenges. The selection of “Regional Situation and Security” for discussion and deliberations between the Chinese and Pakistani scholars is both important and timely.




China and Pakistan are situated in an area that has great geographical importance and hosts almost half of the world’s population. Along with the human resources, the area is also rich in natural material resources. This
 speaks volumes about the importance of stability in the region and of amiable relations between the countries situated here. The fact that three of the seven declared nuclear states of the world are situated here, and another, Russia, has its own interests in the region because of Central Asian states’ being contiguous to the region, further adds to the importance of this region.

People's Republic of China and Islamic Republic of Pakistan’s relations began in 1950 when Pakistan was among the first countries to break relations with the Republic of China (Taiwan) and recognize the People Republic of China (PRC). The relationship has been described by Hu Jintao as "higher than the mountains and deeper than oceans". Favorable relations with China have been a pillar of Pakistan's foreign policy. Following the 1962 Sino-Indian War, Pakistan's relations with the PRC became stronger and extremely close; since then, the two countries have regularly exchanged high-level visits resulting in a variety of agreements. The PRC has provided economic, military and technical assistance or aid to Pakistan and both of them consider as a strategic ally. We look at how the Friendship between Pakistan and China has evolved over the past 50 to 60 years and also the tough phases both have passed through.



PAK-CHINA RELATIONSHIP OVER THE YEARS



Pakistan recognizes China:

Pakistan was one of the first groups of countries that have recognized China. On May 21, 1951, Pakistan becomes third non-communist country, and first Muslim one, to recognize China.Although communism was not a part of Pakistan’s strategy but Pakistan was quick to realize China’s Importance. The two countries officially established their diplomatic relations when Pakistan cut its ties with Taiwan (Republic of China) at that time and officially recognized People’s Republic of China. Pakistan also voted for China’s permanent seat in the UNO later in the years.


Early Years:

At the start Pakistan’s relationship with China was not as great. China and India were considered close allies and Pakistan was somehow neglected between the two. Bilateral relations wereemphasized at the Bandung Conference in 1955, where talks between the two heads of state played an important role in promoting understanding, and developing friendly relations and cooperation between the two countriesthe period between 1957 and 1969 saw a very important phase in the history of the China-Pakistani relations.

First Pakistani Delegation Visits China; 1953

During this period, historical changes took place in the bilateral relations, and the change of Pakistan from being hostile toward too friendly with China opened a new chapter in the Sino-Pakistani relations. Between 1957 and 1960, Pakistan followed the West with regard to its position on restoration of China's legal status in the UN, and Taiwan Tibet questions, so the political relations between the two countries were setback. . The actualconsolidation of relations started in the early 1960s, when Pakistanchanged its previous stance In 1961, and voted for the bill concerning the restoration of China's legitimate rights in the UN put to the vote the UN General Assembly, and the Pakistani Government took a step forward in the course of improving the Sino-Pakistani relations.


India China War:

In the 1962 When China and Indiafought a war due to the disputed Himalayan territory and the fire was burnt when India had granted asylum to the Dalai Lama.Chinese troops advanced over Indian forces in both theatres, capturing Rezang la in Chushul in the western theatre, as well as Tawang in the eastern theatre. The war ended when the Chinese declared a ceasefire on 20 November 1962, and simultaneously announced its withdrawal from the disputed area.

US rushed military assistance to India, which Pakistan, beingallays of the West, considered detrimental to its security concerns and moved out of the Western orbit (SEATO and CENTO). At that point in time, a commonality of interests seemed to be emerging between Pakistan and China. Pakistan fully supported China during the war. During that time China and India were considered natural allies and had very strong relations but after this war the relations between the two countries have derailed a lot. On the Other hand it was exactly the time when Pakistan and China’s relation began to grow, most probably due to the reason that both the countries wanted an ally against India.



Pak China Border Agreement:

In 1962, the two countries, through friendly talks, reached an agreement in principle on the position and alignment of China-Pakistani boundary. It resulted in China ceding over 1,942 square kilometers (749.8 sq mi) to Pakistan and Pakistan recognizing Chinese sovereignty over hundreds of square kilometers of land in Northern Kashmir and Ladakh. The agreement was not recognized as legal by India, which also claims sovereignty over part of the land. In addition to increasing tensions with India, the agreement shifted the balance of the Cold War by bringing Pakistan and China closer together while loosening ties between Pakistan and the United States.

The agreement was moderately economically advantageous to Pakistan, which received grazing lands in the deal, but of far more significance politically, as it both diminished potential for conflict between China and Pakistan. They determined to reach a temporary settlement, with the idea of establishing a permanent one after the settlement of the region of Kashmir under dispute between Pakistan and India.


A Chinese at the Pakistan-China Border, both the Countries reached an agreement on the Border Issues in 1963

In March 1963, the two countries signed a boundary agreement on China's Xinjiang and the adjacent areas whose defense was under the actual control of Pakistan. The final agreement was signed by foreign ministers Chen Yi for the Chinese and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto for the Pakistani.


The Trans-Karakoram Tract:

It is an area of nearly 5,800 km2 (2,239 sq mi) along both sides of the Shaksgam River, is entirely administered by the People's Republic of China as a part of Kargilik County and Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County in the Kashgar Prefecture of Xinjiang Autonomous Region, but claimed by Pakistan until 1963. It is still claimed by India as part of the state of Jammu and Kashmir. Pakistan gave up its claim to the tract under a border agreement with China in 1963 with the proviso that the settlement was subject to the final solution of the Kashmir dispute.

The tract is one of the most inhospitable areas of the world, with some of the highest mountains. The tract is bounded by the Kun Lun Mountains to the north and by the Karakoram peaks to the south, including Broad Peak, K2 and Gasherbrum. On the southeast it is adjacent to the highest battlefield in the world in the Siachen Glacier region.


Karakoram Highway:

Karakoram Highway is said to be the highest paved international road in the world, It connects China and Pakistan across the Karakoram mountain range, through the Khunjerab Pass, at an altitude of 4,693 m/15,397 ft as confirmed by both SRTM and multiple GPS readings. It connects China's Xinjiang region with Pakistan's Gilgit-Baltistan and also serves as a popular tourist attraction. Due to its high elevation and the difficult conditions in which it was constructed, it is also referred to as the "Ninth Wonder of the World.

An Illustrative view of Karakoram Highway, Also Known as the Ninth Wonder of the World

The Karakorum Highway is known informally as the KKH, and — within Pakistan — officially as the N-35; within China, officially as China National Highway 314(G314). It is also known as the Friendship Highway in China and was built by the governments of Pakistan and China; it was started in 1959 and was completed in 1986 after 27 years of construction. 810 Pakistani and 82 Chinese workers lost their lives.

Karakoram Highway is a symbol of Pakistan-China friendship and this wonder also shows how much Importance both the countries give to each other. Many Chinese Engineers and Workers los there lives in completing this road but not at any stage in the 27 years the Chinese government showed any signs of not helping or taking its hand away from the construction.


Pakistan-India War 1965:

In September 1965 both India and Pakistan fought a war. This war is said to be fought due to the Kashmir issue and also known as the biggest tank war after the World War II. Initially in the war Pakistan had clear success both in the tank war and the Air force wars because there equipment was better than the Indians and was US made. But as the war continued to grow longer Pakistan began to fall back.

This conflict became known as the Second Kashmir War fought by India and Pakistan over the disputed region of Kashmir, the first having been fought in 1947. The war began following Pakistan's Operation Gibraltar, which was designed to infiltrate forces into Jammu and Kashmir to precipitate an insurgency against rule by India. The five-week war caused thousands of casualties on both sides. It ended in a United Nations (UN) mandated ceasefire and the subsequent issuance of the Tashkent Declaration.

Pakistan Army in the Indian Captured Check Post

Pakistan and the United States had signed an Agreement of Cooperation in 1959 under which the United States agreed to take "appropriate action, including the use of armed forces" in order to assist the Government of Pakistan at its request. However, following the start of the 1965 war, the United States was of the view that the conflict was largely Pakistan's fault and therefore, it cut all military supplies to the country. However, Pakistan did receive significant support from Iran, Indonesia and People's Republic of China.

Both before and during the war, the People's Republic of China had been a major military associate of Pakistan and had invariably admonished India, with whom it had fought a war in 1962. There were also reports of Chinese troop movements on the Indian border to support Pakistan.China played a commendable role in its support of Pakistan in achieving a ceasefire in the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war by issuing stern warnings to India. Following the war, China, also in an attempt to compensate for war losses, supported Pakistan with military equipment including tanks and aircraft. In the

1960s, Pakistan-China relations evolved on firm foundations of mutual trust and confidence.



Pakistan-India War 1971:

The Indo-Pakistani conflict was sparked by the Bangladesh Liberation war, a conflict between the traditionally dominant West Pakistanisand the majority East Pakistanis. The Bangladesh Liberation war ignited after the 1970 Pakistani election, in which the East PakistaniAwami League won 167 of 169 seats in East Pakistan and secured a simple majority in the 313-seat lower house of the Majlis-e-Shoora(Parliament of Pakistan). Awami League leader Sheikh MujiburRahman presented the Six Points to the President of Pakistan and claimed the right to form the government. After the leader of the Pakistan Peoples Party, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, refused to yield the premiership of Pakistan to Mujibur, President Yahiya Khan called the military, dominated by West Pakistanis, to suppress dissent.

General Niazi (Pakistan) and General Arora (India), Signing the Born of Bangladesh

China tried to give full military and economic assistance to Pakistan during this war. Chinese helplessness in supporting Pakistan during the Indo-Pakistan War of 1971, because of cold weather and the Russian buildup on its frontiers, however, did not affect the bilateral relationship. China made up for its earlier helplessness by vetoing Bangladesh’s entry into the UN, an event that could take place only after Pakistan itself had recognized Bangladesh. As a result, the popular perception of China as a trusted ally of Pakistan was solidified. Later, on the issue of Bangladesh’s application for membership to the UN, China, on Pakistan’s request, exercised its veto power for the first time to stall the move, which helped Pakistan to secure in a bargain the release of its POWs and the return of troops to their prewar positions.


 Late 1970’s and 1980’s:

The Indian nuclear explosion of 1974 introduced a new dimension to the strategic balance in the region and gave fresh impetus to expanding Pak-China defense cooperation. Between 1971 and 1978, China assisted Pakistan in building two defense-related mega projects, first, the Heavy Rebuild Factory for T–59 tanks, and second, the F–6 Aircraft Rebuild Factory. Chinese intent to make Pakistan self-reliant in the production of a conventional weapons system, without attaching any political strings to its assistance, cultivated deep-rooted respect and goodwill for China in Pakistan.

By 1979, the power center had shifted in China and the Chinese economy was opening up under the new leadership of Deng Xiaoping. Deng’s main plank, that economic relation precedes all other forms of relationship, changed the dynamics of Chinese foreign policy, which shifted closer to the United States.

By the 1980s, China had become the most trusted ally of Pakistan. Throughout the 1980s, Pakistan-China relations continued to develop into a comprehensive relationship. While China improved its relations with India towards the end of the the 1980s, Pakistan did not feel that China’s improving relations with India were at the cost of China’s relations with Pakistan. Although there was a visible shift in the Chinese stance on Kashmir, Pakistani policy makers believed that China’s improved relations with India would act as a restraining factor on Indian belligerency towards Pakistan. Pakistan always supported China on all issues important to Chinese national interests such as sovereignty over Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Tibet and issues relating to human rights and democracy. China always appreciated and counted on Pakistan’s strong support as a trusted friend over all these issues at international forums.


Post-Soviet Years:

Following the withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghanistan in 1988–1989, the regional strategic dynamics changed once again. The US, after having achieved its strategic interest of rolling back communist aggression, claimed victory over the former Soviet Union and abandoned Afghanistan. Pakistan’s support was no longer required by the US, so it came under US sanctions for secretly developing nuclear weapons; an issue to which the US turned a blind eye for a decade during the Afghan War. Throughout the 1990s, Pakistan remained under US sanctions and China was the primary source of Pakistan’s military hardware procurements. During this period, Pakistan-China defense-related cooperation also substantially increased. China’s support for Pakistan’s nuclear and missile programs became a constant irritant in Sino-US and Sino-Indian relations, especially the issue of supply of M-11 missiles and 500 ring magnets to an “unsafeguarded” nuclear facility. China, on its part, despite tremendous US pressure to cut off high-technology links with Pakistan, remained steadfast in its commitment to strengthen Pakistan’s defense capability.


Nuclear Crisis and Kargil War:

In May 1998, Indian nuclear tests destabilized the strategic balance in South Asia. As a prelude to these tests, the Indian defense minister and prime minister described China as a long-term security threat. While commenting on the Indian assertion, the official Chinese media reported that “India’s explosions have sabotaged the fragile trust built up with Beijing over the past decade.” Following the Indian nuclear tests, Sino- Indian relations suffered a severe setback. Deterioration in Sino-Indian relations reinforced Pakistan’s importance in China’s South Asia policy. Pakistan and China held high-level consultations on the situation in South Asia. China expressed its understanding of Pakistan’s compulsion to go nuclear. It gave Pakistan the confidence to reestablish the strategic balance in South Asia by conducting its own nuclear tests.

The depth of Pakistan-China relations was reflected from the fact that it was after Pakistan had acquired demonstrable nuclear weapons capability that the Chinese leadership gave assurance to the visiting US president Bill Clinton in June 1998 of cooperating with the US on the issue of nuclear proliferation. In 1999, during the Kargil conflict between the two nuclear states, India and Pakistan, China adhered to a strict neutral position. China was concerned over the possibility of escalation of the conflict, and asked both countries to defuse tensions.

The Chinese position of neutrality was duly acknowledged by India, and provided both countries with an opportunity to mend their fences and once again improve their bilateral relations. Pakistan also had a complete understanding of China’s interest to improve bilateral relations with India, especially in the context of evolving Indo- US strategic partnership.


 Gwadar Port:

Gwadar is a fishing village on the Arabian Sea coast in the Pakistani province of Balochistan. Balochistan shares borders with Afghanistan and Iran to the west - Gwadar is just 72 kilometers from the Iranian border. More important is Gwadar's proximity to the Persian Gulf. It is situated near the mouth of this strategic body of water, and about 400km from the Strait of Hormuz, a major conduit for global oil supplies.

Pakistan identified Gwadar as a port site in 1964. However, it was only in 2001 that significant steps toward making the proposal a reality were taken, when China agreed to participate in the construction and development of the deepsea port. The arrival of United States in late 2001 in Afghanistan- at China's doorstep - nudged Beijing to step up its involvement in the Gwadar project. In March 2002, Chinese laid the foundation.
Gwadar Port: A gift that can change the future of Pakistan

China's involvement in the Gwadar project is immense. The total cost of the project is estimated at US$1.16 billion, of which China has contributed about $198 million for the first phase - almost four times the amount Pakistan has forked out for this phase - which includes construction of three multi-purpose ship berths. China has invested another $200 million toward building a highway connecting Gwadar port with Pakistan's largest city, Karachi, which is also a port on the Arabian Sea.

The second phase, which envisages nine more berths, an approach channel and storage terminals, will also be financed by China. In addition to its financial contribution, China has sent about 450 engineers and provided technical expertise for the project.

A road from Gwadar to Saindak, said to be the shortest route between Central Asia and the sea, is under construction. Gwadar would provide landlocked Afghanistan and the Central Asian republics with access to the sea. Goods and oil and gas reserves from these countries could be shipped to global markets through Gwadar port. Pakistan's business community seems to be in favor of Gwadar port being designated a free trade zone and an export-processing zone.


 CAC/PAC JF 17 Thunder:

JF Thunder is a light-weight, single engine, multi-role combat aircraft developed jointly by the Chengdu Aircraft Industries Corporation (CAC) of China, the Pakistan Air Force and the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC). It is designated as "JF-17 Thunder" by Pakistan, which is short for "Joint Fighter-17" and as "FC-1 Xiaolong" by China, which is short for "Fighter China-1".

CAC/PAC JF 17 Thunder: A Pak-China Venture

Pakistan and China signed the contract to jointly develop the FC-1 / Super 7 in 1999. Pace of design was very slow, due to the inability to acquire an avionics and radar package from Europe, until the design of the airframe was "de-coupled" from the avionics design in 2001. The maiden test flight of the first prototype took place during 2003 in China, the Pakistani designation Super 7 being replaced with JF-17, and later test flights with a modified design occurred in 2006. Deliveries to the Pakistan Air Force for further flight testing and evaluation began in 2007 and the aircraft's first public aerial display took place that year in Islamabad. The Pakistan Air Force officially inducted its first JF-17 squadron, No. 26 Squadron Black Spiders, on 18 February 2010 with 14 aircraft.

The JF-17 is expected to cost approximately US$15 million per unit and the Pakistan Air Force has a confirmed order for 150 JF-17's, which may increase to 250 aircraft. It was reported in 2008 that many countries have placed an order to obtain the Air Crafts. Russia and China had originally signed an end-user certificate for the Klimov RD-93 engines preventing China from exporting the JF-17 to Pakistan, after protests by Pakistan's adversary, India. In 2007 however, the Russian government reversed their decision after the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, signed the permission for re-export of the engines to Pakistan and six other countries.


Killing of Chinese Engineers:

In the year 2006 Three Chinese engineers were killed by gunmen in Southern Pakistan. The victims, Long Hongbao, Wei Jianpin and Zhao Bin, were shot along with other three colleagues when their car were attacked by gunmen on a road in the town of Hub, some 700 km southeast of Quetta, the Balochistan provincial capital. The engineers were working for a Chinese company to prepare equipments and offer technical service for the construction of a local cement factory which will be accomplished in the first half of this year. In the same year a resident of Swat who sheltered a Chinese engineer was found dead on Wednesday, said witnesses, and blamed Taliban for the brutal murder. The body of the man – identified only as Jamauddin and a resident of Khawazakhela – was found in Changalai area of Khawazakhela. The Chinese engineer was kidnapped by Taliban in Dir earlier this year, but he escaped and was sheltered by Jamauddin. Meanwhile, officials said troops had wiped out “unnecessary checkposts” from Amankot, Malookabad, Baba Chowk and other areas of Mingora.

The Bodies of Chinese Engineers being loaded in the Plane, Three were killed in Terrorist Activities in 2006.


All over the world it was believed that this incident could trigger the Pakistan-China relationship but on the same day the Chinese President, while feeling deep sorrow for the killed Chinese Engineers, vowed that all the engineers will keep on working in Pakistan and no one will be called back. This decision showed clearly that Pakistan and China’s realtions are not time based and that the bond of friendship is not one seasonal.

As fast as, four days after the killing of 3 Chinese engineers in Hub in Balochistan4, and soon before the arrival of President George W. Bush in Islamabad, President Pervez

Musharraf made a short visit to China from February 20 to February 25. The timing of the visit suggested, perhaps, that Pakistan gives greater priority to its strategic partnership with China than it does to its Major Non Nuclear Ally (MNNA) status with the US. During his visit, President Musharraf emphasized on the need to improve relations with China with regard totrade and investment, as well asnuclear energy co-operation and defense co-operation. The Chinesegovernment, in a highly symbolic act,released special postage stamps tocommemorate President Musharraf’svisit and 55 years of diplomaticrelations. Eventually, 13 agreementsand Memorandums of Understandingwere signed in various sectors including energy, trade, defense andcommunications. By these steps all the chances of any misunderstandings between the two countries were laid to rest.


The Current Phase 2000-2011:

After the events of 9/11, Pakistan and China consulted each other on the unfolding situation in the region. On September 18, 2001, a special envoy of the then Chinese president, Jiang Zemin, arrived in Islamabad tomeet General Pervez Musharraf and other officials and discussed the situation emerging as a consequence of the 9/11 attacks. Pakistan’s decision to side with the US and to provide use of its airspace and base facilities had initially raised some concerns in Chinese policy-making circles. However, the exchange of high-level visits clarified the Pakistani position that under no circumstances would Pakistan allow its cooperation with the US to undermine Chinese strategic interests.

During the India-Pakistan military standoff in 2001–2002, China continued with its position of neutrality and played an important role in defusing tensions between India and Pakistan through telephone Diplomacy.

In December 2003, the Pakistan Army in a military operation near the Pak-Afghan border killed HahsanMahsum, the leader of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, while extraditing a number of alleged terrorists to China. In recent years, antiterrorism-related cooperation between the two countries has constantly been expanding. On August 6, 2004, China and Pakistan conducted their first joint antiterrorism military exercise named “Friendship 2004,” in Xinjiang. In April 2005, during Premier Wen Jiabao’s visit to Islamabad, the two sides signed a treaty of friendship, cooperation and good neighborly relations as well as an agreement on combating terrorism, separatism and extremism.

China warns US of war against Pakistan, during which former president, Pervez Musharraf, visits China, Musharraf raised issues of US attacks inside Pakistan.

Pakistan's foreign office (the first foreign issue to speak of Tibet) speaks for more than three times per month on the Tibet issue, calling for the world to stop opposing China and the Olympic Games. Pakistan welcomee China's Olympic Torch warmly, and did not protest against Tibet when the torch arrived. In fact, when the torch passed through the rural hinterland of the capital Islamabad, local villagers showered rose petals upon the procession. As a result, China thanked Pakistan for its continuous support. In the same year During the 2008 Sichuan Earthquake, Pakistan almost emptied its national storage of tents to support China.



In 2009 China donates $260 million (USD) to flood hit Pakistan and further sends 4 military rescue helicopters to Pakistan to assist in rescue operations, it was the first time China has ever sent such rescue operations overseas. Sino-Pak relations proved to be "All-Weathered-Friends". Similarly in 2010 WenJiabao visited Pakistan. More than 30 billion US dollars of deals were signed. Pakistan China friendship center was inaugurated in Islamabad by Prime Minister of China Wen Jiabao.

Even currently in 2011, when Usama Bin Laden was killed in a military operation by US forces in Abbottabad, China was the first country to speak in favour of Pakistan and warned the World against any action against Pakistan and also said that it will defend Pakistan at any cost.



CHINA’S COOPERATION WITH PAKISTAN IN DIFFERENT FIELDS:




Economy:

Some components of the economic relation between the two countries are bilateral trade, mutual investments (direct/portfolio or both), joint ventures and aids/loans provided to each other. Taking into account these variables, contemporary China-Pakistan economic relation appears quite underdeveloped.

In 2003 Pakistan and China signed a $110 million contract for the construction of a housing project on Multan Road in Lahore. Similarly In 2008 Pakistan and China to build first ever train route through the Karakoram Highway, ultimately linking China’s rail route-net to Gwadar Port.



In October 2009, Pakistan and China agreed to 'propel' trade between the two countries. Both sides opposed to all forms of terrorism, extremism and separatism, resolved to cooperation with each other to fight the above-mentioned three forces, said the Statement adding, China conveyed its complete support to Pakistan’s commitment and efforts to fight terrorism and appreciated the sacrifices made by the government and people of Pakistan in this regard. Five Year Development programe on Economic trades and free trade agreement in goods and investments was also signed.

China also agreed to further develop and boost Pakistan’s Mineral and Energy sector as well as broaden financial and banking sector cooperation.

Both sides inked almost twelve agreements/MOUs during the visit in the fields of economic and technical cooperation, free trade, minerals, petroleum and natural resources, environmental protection, radio and television, space technology, agriculture sector, properties exchange between foreign ministries of the two countries, museum of natural history, cricket field and project of X-Ray container/vehicle inspection system.


 Trade:

In the initial years, export from Pakistan was greater. During the Korean War, Pakistan’s exports of cotton and jute had boomed but soon fell back to pre-War levels. Pakistan’s main items of export were raw cotton, raw wool and jute, which had a huge market in China. On the other hand, Chinese products were less popular in Pakistan because of strict import control regulations and competition from western products. The main items of Chinese exports to Pakistan were machinery, cement and other capital goods. However, Chinese trade suffered as a result because Pakistan used to exchange cotton, hides, wool and rice with coal, iron and steel manufactures, cement and other goods from China. The quality of Chinese finished goods was, however, starkly inferior to the goods coming from other countries and this led to a fall in their demand with suppliers in Pakistan giving minimal preference for Chinese goods. It was one of the major reasons, which stalled the growth of Chinese trade with Pakistan, and it remains true even today.

In May 2001, six major agreements and one MoU were signed. These included agreements on economic and technical cooperation, tourism cooperation, lease of Saindak copper-gold project, supply of locomotives, supply of passenger coaches to railways, white oil pipeline, and a MoU between ZTE and PTCL. China pledged around $1billion to support these agreements and reiterated its commitment to assisting in the construction of Gwadar Port and the Coastal Highway. Prime Minister Zhu Rongji said, “These projects are very important for the development of Pakistan. We will fully support these projects and provide help in this regard.” And support they did eventually, especially in the case of Gwadar and the Coastal Highway.


By the year 2005, Pakistan-China trade had been showing continuous increase and it had reached from around $1 billion in 2000 to $4.5 billion in 2005, which again was in favour of China. From 2000 to 2005, while the FDI in Pakistan increased about 600 percent, China‟s share remained very low.As far as imports are concerned, China has become one of the top five import sources of Pakistan after the opening of its economy. China supplies the bulk of cheap commercial goods all over the world and in the process for Pakistan as well despite a common preference for western goods in Pakistan’s market.


Nuclear Cooperation:

Pakistan hoped that a similar nuclear deal would fructify between Washington and Islamabad. Once it became clear that no such deal would be forthcoming from Washington,Pakistan turned to China as the Indo- US nuclear deal suggested both strategic instability and a security threat. China has already been widely acknowledged as the source ofPakistan’s initial nuclear weapon design, a major partner in the development of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons complex, the major source of Pakistan’s short and medium range solid fuel missile technology, and the likely partner in the development of Pakistan’s Land Attack Cruise Missile tested in 2005.11 China made no dramatic shifts in its nuclear policy and has maintained that it wants to help Pakistan with its growing energy needs.

In 2007 China signed an agreement, to “build co-operation in the peaceful application of nuclear power”, notwithstanding Pakistan’spast record and international suspicion of Pakistan’s nuclear intentions. Pakistan, however, asserts that, having recorded one of the highest levels of economic growth in Asia last year, it will need an eight fold increase in its power requirements.

In January 2006 China and Pakistan negotiated the purchase of 6 to 8 new nuclear power reactors in addition to the Chinese built nuclear reactor now at Chasma in Punjab, built despite a de-facto international embargo. While Pakistan denies any such reports, theIndian press has frequently reported to the contrary, maintaining that China has offered to upgrade Pakistan’s nuclear weapon capa city, as well as help restore the storage facilities destroyed by last year’s October earthquake.


Military and Defense Cooperation:

Pakistan’s relationship with China has been the anchor of its defence and foreign policy over the last 40 years. Defence co-operation is especially important for Pakistan as China serves the purpose of a high- value guarantor against India.14 China has proven to bea reliable supplier of conventional military equipment for Pakistan, selling F-7 fighters, a version of the T- 96 main battle tank, and subsidizing the future construction of four frigates for the Pakistan navy. Further to China committed to deliver the first small batch of JF-17 (Thunder) Aircrafts to Pakistan in 2007.

Pakistan also promised to expand military co-operation and defence production with regard to aircrafts, fighter bombers, tanks, and heavy artillery. The probable sale of F-10s was also discussed. It has been opined that this enhanced military cooperation could herald a shift in the centre of gravity from Europe to Asia, with China at the forefront followed by Pakistan.Pakistan's missile development programme was started in the 1980s with the active assistance from the Chinese. Sino-Pak missile collaboration goes back to 1986 when Pakistan started assembling the RBS-70 Mk 1 and Mk 2 air defence missiles systems.


Collaboration in the area of longer range missiles with the Chinese began once Pakistan became involved in financing their M-9 and M-11 missiles programmes. The Karakoram-8 (or K-8) was a joint venture between the China National Aero technology Import Export Corporation (CATIC), China Nanchang Aircraft Manufacturing Company (CNAMC) and the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) established in 1986.

The indigenous development of the MBT Al Khalid was also started with the help of the Chinese. This began in 1988 when Pakistan started building a manufacturing plant at Taxila (completed in 1992). The Pakistan Navy, on 23 May 2006 Pakistan clinched a $600 million defense deal with China, which includes the construction of four F-22P frigates for the Pakistani Navy, the upgrading of the Karachi dockyard and the transfer of technology for the indigenous, the first frigate would be delivered to Pakistan in 2008 and the other three by 2013, along with transfer of technology.



 CONCLUSION:

The People's Republic of China's relationship with Pakistan has often been regarded as all weather and time tested. This friendship for both the Asian countries holds great importance and is priceless in terms of common interest and geo-strategic alliance.

In recent years the friendship has deepened even further and China has several defense treaties with Pakistan. China has been a steady source of military equipment and has cooperated with Pakistan in setting up weapons production and modernization facilities. The trade between the two countries has increased over the last decade but there is a place for improvement between the economic and trade sector.

The need of the time is that both countries stick with each other and make this brotherly relation even stronger. Pak-China relation is not only brought up on the political level but people of both the countries share a deep and special bond. It was obvious from the visit of Chinese President and the reception He got from the people of Pakistan that all the people of Pakistan have a special place for China in their hearts. Chin has supported Pakistan on all the issues and Pakistan on the other hand has supported China fully. In short it is fairly true that Pakistan-China friendship is tested and tried one and absolutely “higher than the mountains and deeper than oceans.”

Minggu, 01 Mei 2011

Usam Bin Laden Is Dead!

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani security official on Monday told AFP that he could confirm Osama bin Laden had been killed in a "highly sensitive intelligence operation", but provided no immediate further details.


"Yes I can confirm that he was killed in a highly sensitive intelligence operation," the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The official said he was unable to immediately confirm where, how or when bin Laden was killed.

Asked whether Pakistani intelligence participated in the operation he said only: "It was a highly sensitive intelligence operation."
US television network quoted sources as saying that bin Laden was killed in an operation based on actionable US intelligence targeting a mansion outside Islamabad. (AFP)