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View Full Version : China will never leave pakistan in a lurch



ktlight
20th May 2011, 07:24
This came in the email to me.

ISLAMABAD: The chief of the Chinese apex political advisory body declared on Thursday that Pakistan would never be left in the lurch and the strategic cooperation between the two countries would be taken to new heights.

“No matter how the global situation may change, the resolve and determination of the government and the people of China in developing its friendly relations with Pakistan will never be swayed,” Chinese People`s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) chairman Jia Qinglin said at a reception held in honour of Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani and his delegation.

The reception was hosted by the Chinese People`s Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries and Pakistan`s embassy in China to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the establishment of Sino-Pakistan diplomatic relations.

Mr Jia said China had always given priority to developing cooperation with Pakistan. “China will stand together with Pakistan to seize the opportunity presented by the 60th anniversary. We want to carry forward our tradition of friendship in all areas of our strategic partnership and cooperation and take our bilateral ties to a higher plane.”

He said Pakistan and China were true friends that had a history of rendering sincere assistance to each other in difficult times. “The Chinese people will never forget that it was Pakistan which provided an air corridor to China, giving access to the rest of the world, when China was under external blockade in the 1950s and 1960s.

“And it was Pakistan and other developing countries that stood up for justice and worked through various channels to make important contributions for China`s permanent seat at the United Nations Security Council.”

He said the government and people of China felt the pain for Pakistani people.

China also made all out efforts to help out Pakistan when it faced temporary difficulties, he said. “So, such friendship in the face of difficulties has become a valuable asset shared by both China and Pakistan. The friendship between the two countries has taken a deep root in the hearts of the people of the two countries and we are fully convinced that with the joint effort of the two countries and their people the friendship will pass from generation to generation and enjoy inexhaustible vitality and vigour.”

He said the strategic partnership and cooperation between the two countries was at a new historical starting point now.

Mr Jia said that stronger cooperation between the two countries had not only served fundamental interests of the peoples of two countries, but had also regional and global peace.

Prime Minister Gilani said: “We will march forward hand-in-hand to take our partnership to new heights and to ensure for generations a glorious future of peace and prosperity.”

He said friendship with China was the cornerstone of Pakistan`s foreign policy.

In recent times, the leadership of the two countries has taken steps to enhance cooperation, especially in defence, technology and trade.

He said the two countries had marched together to resist and defeat the designs of those who wanted to transgress the values of humanity. “We have worked together steadfastly for safeguarding our independence and territorial integrity and for promoting peace and stability in the world and in our region. Once again, in these troubled times, we collectively face new challenges with a firm conviction in our belief that truth and justice will prevail.”

Earlier, addressing a gathering at the Peking University and answering questions there, the prime minister said that peace in the world and the region was not possible without Pakistan.

He said Pakistan was not fighting the war on terror for its own benefit only but for the world, and had paid a heavy price for it.

He said every suicide attack in Pakistan – a phenomenon that was not there prior to the war on terror – took away investment from the country.

He said the world must recognise the sacrifices rendered by Pakistan, like China was doing.

AFP adds: Mr Gilani called on Chinese firms to invest in Pakistan`s energy sector.

“There is great potential for the participation of Chinese corporations in the development of the energy sector in Pakistan. This includes hydro, thermal and renewable,” he told a joint business forum in Beijing.

“Joint ventures, with equity participation of Chinese corporations and financial institutions, can transform Pakistan`s economic landscape and would certainly prove to be a win-win scenario,” the prime minister said.

karelia
20th May 2011, 07:33
Thanks for that. I see this as a not so subtle warning to the ptw. The Pakistanis are mighty fed up with us interference methinks.

oceanz
20th May 2011, 07:43
I briefly saw a headline today that US Nationals have been killed in a roadside bomb blast in Pakistan.

oceanz
20th May 2011, 08:16
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/world/8251694/one-dead-five-hurt-in-pakistan-blast


Taliban bomb targets US cars in Pakistan17:36 AEST Fri May 20 20113

The Taliban bombed a US consulate convoy in Peshawar, killing one person and wounding 11 others in the first attack on Americans in Pakistan since Osama bin Laden's death.

A US embassy spokesman said no US personnel were seriously wounded in the rush-hour attack in the volatile northwestern city, which runs into the tribal belt that Washington has branded a global headquarters of Al-Qaeda.

Police said two foreigners were lightly wounded. One of two armoured vehicles was damaged by what a bomb disposal official said was 50 kilos of low-grade explosives packed into a car and detonated by remote-control.

"Two vehicles of the US consulate were on their way to the consulate when they were attacked," US embassy spokesman Alberto Rodriguez told AFP.

"One vehicle was damaged. There is no death among our personnel and there are no serious injuries," he added.

"Only one car was hit. In that car there were US citizen diplomats and a Pakistani driver," he said.

Witnesses said the US consulate car skidded off the road after the blast, which happened at around 8:25 am (local time, and smashed into an electricity pylon on a pedestrian footpath.

Senior officer Liaquat Ali said a local man riding on a motorbike was killed and 11 others wounded, including two foreigners, although not seriously.

He said that the two foreigners received "minor injuries."

The bomb gouged a foot-deep crater out of the roadside, cracked the front wall of a nearby house and shattered the windows in two others, said an AFP reporter on the scene.

A private car was partially damaged and the motorbike of the one person who was killed was flung about four metres from the blast site.

Hukam Khan, in charge of the bomb disposal squad in Peshawar, said the 50 kilos of explosives were planted in a car before being detonated.

"They were not good quality explosives, that's why there was relatively little damage," he told AFP.

The Pakistani Taliban swiftly claimed responsibility, in a telephone call to AFP, and threatened further attacks against Western targets.

"Our first enemy is Pakistan, then the United States and after that, other NATO countries," said spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan.

The United States leads a NATO force of around 130,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan that is trying to put down a 10-year Taliban insurgency. Pakistani logistical and military support is considered vital to the war effort.

"Our men have penetrated all Pakistani cities and we will launch more such attacks in the future," Ehsan said.

Friday's attack came exactly a week after the Taliban claimed a devastating bomb attack that killed 98 people outside a police training centre in the northwest as the first revenge for bin Laden's death.

One day earlier, US special envoy Marc Grossman held talks with Pakistan's leadership in Islamabad, stepping up efforts to smooth over a crisis sparked by the US Navy SEALs raid that killed the Al-Qaeda chief on May 2.

In the second high-profile American visit to Pakistan in days, the envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan held talks with President Asif Ali Zardari, Pakistan's army chief General Ashfaq Kayani and other senior cabinet ministers.

US Senator John Kerry visited on Monday and later insisted that Pakistan was stepping up efforts to battle extremists and help stabilise Afghanistan.

US officials have long accused Pakistan of sheltering militants active in Afghanistan, although they say so far there is no evidence that the country's intelligence services were complicit in hiding bin Laden.

Pakistan's civilian and military leaders were left angry and embarrassed over the unilateral US raid that killed Al-Qaeda's chief, who had been living, possibly for years, in a military academy town two hours' drive from Islamabad.

It rocked the country's seemingly powerful security establishment, with its intelligence services and military widely accused of incompetence or complicity over the presence of bin Laden in a suburban house in the city of Abbottabad

oceanz
20th May 2011, 11:48
A picture is worth a thousand words...


http://www.stuff.co.nz/blogs/opinion/cartoons/1251886/Tom-Scott

Today's and yesterdays cartoon.



http://www.nzherald.co.nz/news-cartoons/news/article.cfm?c_id=500814&objectid=10724269
http://media.nzherald.co.nz/webcontent/image/gif/201120/arch.gif
http://media.nzherald.co.nz/webcontent/image/gif/201119/CartoonR.gif

Lord Sidious
20th May 2011, 15:26
Interesting, so Peshawar is al qaeda central?
Can anyone tell me about this place, the cia and the mujahideen?

ktlight
20th May 2011, 15:42
Interesting, so Peshawar is al qaeda central?
Can anyone tell me about this place, the cia and the mujahideen?

I will email your response back to the person who sent the email to me, and see what he says. He is from Pakistan and deeply interested in conservative politics.

GlassSteagallfan
20th May 2011, 20:05
I applaud China's cooperation with Pakistan and Afganistan. Did you know that China has been mining copper and investing in infastructure in Afganistan while we fight the boogey man?

I applaud Russia's cooperation with China, India, Pakistan, Afganistan, et al.

If we could somehow dump Osama bin Obama, pass Glass-Steagall (HR 1489), we may be able to have the Four Powers Agreement which will ultimately lead to international cooperation among nation-states of the planet.

http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/ab171/rexrex166/Other%20Pics/Laroucheplan.jpg

The following map depicts:
RED - those moving ahead with technology - pro nuclear orientation
GREEN - Green Movement/Pro-Genocide Orientation
BROWN - Mixed/Uncertain

http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/ab171/rexrex166/Other%20Pics/lpacmap.jpg

ktlight
21st May 2011, 10:40
Interesting, so Peshawar is al qaeda central?
Can anyone tell me about this place, the cia and the mujahideen?

I will email your response back to the person who sent the email to me, and see what he says. He is from Pakistan and deeply interested in conservative politics.

Well, Lord Sidious, I got a not much of a response. Here it is:

I personally have never been there, only upto islamabad, but I hear and read that the northern areas are dangerous and peshawer is suppose to be the capital of northern areas. but I find interesting to read about what is going on and how many innocent and culprits are dying. you can always go to www.dawn.com and read about it. I have learned in life to keep away from troubled areas.

Wikileaks presents Pakistan Papers on dawn.com.

Sorry I haven't been more helpful.

Lord Sidious
21st May 2011, 17:01
Peshawar is where the CIA swapped heroin for stinger anti aircraft missiles in the late 70's onwards after the soviet invasion of afghanistan.
They had a base station there and I bet it is still there.
Funny that the spawn of the cia, al qaeda is there too, no?

Referee
21st May 2011, 18:01
It seems to me that this and the Libya conflict are meant to antagonize China.

cayman
21st May 2011, 18:18
Wingman-Ship, nothing more