Pak Tea House » Archive
Joy to the World of Cricket
India’s proudest possession Tendulkar has gone two decades being a blend of the sublime and the precise, incapable of ugliness or of being dull; and those are among the least of his achievements By Peter Roebuck, November 14, 2009 cricinfo Sachin Tendulkar has been playing top-class cricket for 20 years and he’s still producing blistering innings, still looking hungry, still demolishing attacks, still a prized wicket, still a proud competitor. He has not merely been around for two … Read entire article »
Filed under: Cricket
Defending President Zardari
By SYED SHAHID HUSAIN (November 13 2009): Politicians are all corrupt, civilians are all bloody and useless and the mess the country is in has been created by both. This is the conventional wisdom assiduously instilled in the minds of the people of our proudly independent nuclear armed country. … Read entire article »
Pakistan's Super Anchors
By Bilal Qureshi با دوستان هایی از این دشمنان ما نیاز ندارد. The meeting between Pakistan’s ‘super anchors’ and Hillary Clinton was, well, disastrous, not for America or Clinton, but for these talk show hosts. Hillary was calm, controlled, measured and she answered all sorts of questions thoroughly and intelligently. … Read entire article »
Filed under: journalism, Media, Pakistan, USA
Building Bunkers.. Inside-Out
The threat Within By Ayesha Siddiqa, Dawn Online A few days ago I came across a letter to the editor in Dawn in which the writer had protested against the use of the word ‘Taliban’ to describe the brutal killers currently terrorising the nation. In the writer’s view, such people should be termed ‘zaliman’. I thought I would advise the writer to watch more television and read newspapers to get rid of his anger against the Taliban. … Read entire article »
Shireen Mazari's "Shoddy" Journalism Condemned!
Thursday, November 12, 2009 (The News) Journalists lead dangerous lives in Pakistan. They are targeted by the terrorists whose actions they report and by politicians and bureaucrats whose failings and indiscretions they expose. All this is to be expected. What a working journalist may not expect, however, is to be stabbed in the back by one of his own, as has recently happened to Matthew Rosenberg, a journalist working for the Wall Street Journal. Mr Rosenberg … Read entire article »
Filed under: journalism, Pakistan
The War Within
A re-edited version of this was published as the cover story “Can Pakistan Be Saved?” in India Today… By Hasan Zaidi in Karachi The massive car bomb that ripped through the congested Meena Bazaar in Peshawar on October 28, leaving human limbs, charred torsos and bloodied women and children under rubble in its wake, was probably the starkest reminder to ordinary Pakistanis of what they are up against. The hellish scene of helter-skelter panic, bodies being carried … Read entire article »
Anchorless Rambling
By Raza Rumi We did it again. A hallmark of Hillary Clinton’s visit to Pakistan was her meeting with the stars of the Pakistani media – the all-knowing anchors who have taken it upon themselves to be the “representatives” of Pakistan. Forget the President elected by all the legislatures, the Prime Minister who enjoys the confidence of the National Assembly, and even the Foreign Minister, who at the end of the day was elected from a … Read entire article »
Filed under: Democracy, Islamism, journalism, Media, Pakistan
We Want Answers
We want answers Pakistan and its people Where are those souls? The missing people Dr Aafia, Amina’s husband Where are they all? Only in echoes and memories The missing souls Abducted and tortured Through years of absence From their homes and loved ones Through years of solitude In distant lands, in distant hands For crimes not proven For games, not ours In our names, for your gains We want answers Pakistan and its people We Want Answers Pakistan and its people To all what you have done To all what you have destroyed In our names, for … Read entire article »
Filed under: Democracy, human rights, Justice, Pakistan
Crisis of Conviction
Conviction, consensus, leadership: How democracy should work By Farrukh Khan Pitafi (Cross-Post, written Oct 13, 2009) Recently an article by Farahnaz Isphahani titled “Democracy does deliver” (dated September 29, 2009) appeared in a section of the press. Having read some of Ms Isphahani’s previous security papers I can appreciate her mastery over words. However if I was expecting something ethereal from this piece I was sorely disappointed. What she lauds as a diplomatic win and which she considers a proof of democracy’s deliverance unfortunately is nothing more than the assurance of further foreign aid and not any historic empowerment of this nation. If my memory serves me right aid was given during the time of the recent dictator too. Similarly events like the FoDP also used to take place including Musharraf’s groundbreaking address … Read entire article »
Filed under: baluchistan, Democracy, journalism, Justice, lawyers movement, Pakistan, USA
Short Open Letter to Anwar al-Awlaki
In response to his blog posting “Nidal Hassan Did the Right Thing.” I would post this letter as a “comment” on that blog entry, but I do not trust that that blog is legitimately his. Some of the blog postings are so shortsighted and simplistic that I do not expect that they are from Anwar al-Awlaki or any scholar in his/her right mind. Compare the loose accusations in the Nidal Hassan entry with the careful … Read entire article »
Filed under: Pakistan
The demons of Major Nidal Malik Hasan
This is a New York Times story that gives first glimpses of the internal demons haunting Major Nidal Malik Hasan, and the time line of events leading up to wanton murders at Fort Hood. All text is copied from New York Times website, all rights reserved with New York Times Company (AZW) Fort Hood Gunman Gave Signals Before His Rampage Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company By James C. McKinley Jr. and James Dao Nov. 9 (New York Times) — KILLEEN, Tex. — It was still dark on Thursday when Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan left his aging apartment complex to attend 6 a.m. prayers at the brick mosque near Fort Hood. Afterward, he said goodbye to his friends there and asked forgiveness from one man for any past offenses. “I’m going traveling,” he told a fellow worshiper, giving … Read entire article »
“Where Have All the Friendships Gone…”
Uri Avnery writing for Outlook India © 2009 Menassat According to a Chinese saying, if someone in the street tells you that you are drunk, you can laugh. If a second person tells you that you are drunk, start to think about it. If a third one tells you the same, go home and sleep it off. Our political and military leadership has already encountered the third, fourth and fifth person. All of them say that they must … Read entire article »
Filed under: Palestine-israel, Religion




Recent Comments