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8/4/2019 Plight of Present Projects in Pakistan
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/plight-of-present-projects-in-pakistan 1/3
http://www.dawn.com/2011/07/29/cuts-in-psdp-led-to-power-water-crises-govt.html
http://www.economist.com/node/21525408
For Essay About Terrorism
THE recent report of the International Crisis Group (ICG) Aid and Conflict inAfghanistan is a critical appraisal of the efforts made during the past 10 years in thatunfortunate country.
It warns, “There is no possibility that any amount of international assistance to the Afghan
National Security Forces (ANSF) will stabilise the country in the next three years unless there
are significant changes in international strategies, priorities and programmes.”
http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20110822-israeli-arab-crisis-approaching?utm_source=freelist-f&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20110823&utm_term=gweekly&utm_content=readmor
e&elq=fbecfd81ee7348f7b964ed37cc019b2d
http://www.sam.gov.tr/perceptions/volume%20xi/Au_Win06_aylin_unver_noi.pdf
quote
only dead fish go with the flow
Examples of private sector micro – credit based micro-generation of energy.
The Grameen Shakti, for example, is the world’s largest and fastest-growing micro-generationrenewable energy programme developed by the private sector in Bangladesh. This and other
private-sector programmes with micro-credit based business models are now collectively
installing over 25,000 solar home systems, 1,000 biogas systems and 10,000 improved cookingstoves in Bangladesh on a monthly basis. Micro-renewable programmes are also being
effectively run by the private sector in India, Nepal and Sri Lanka.
Another significant example is that of the Suzlon wind turbine manufacturing company. Suzlon
was established in India by a textile businessman in 1997. By the end of 2009, with its presence
in 23 countries and a staff pool of 23,000 workers, the company was ranked third in the world in
terms of wind turbine equipment suppliers.
8/4/2019 Plight of Present Projects in Pakistan
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FUTURE economic needs of Pakistan and balance of power with india
IN a May 2011 Asian Development Bank report Asia 2050: Realising the Asian Century, itis projected that per capita income in India by 2050 will be $41,700 and in Pakistan $7,900.
If this happens, let the establishment, politicians and people be forewarned that it will becatastrophic for Pakistan. Make no mistake about it, to maintain our independence, integrity,
wellbeing and creditability we will have to match India’s success with our own GDP growth rateof eight to 10 per cent per year every year for the next 40 years.
bureaucracy
http://home.insightbb.com/~davidprince/bureaucracy2.pdf
for economic recovery keyness states
below link is about American economy
http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2011/09/obam
as-jobs-speech
Degenerating Super Power
Prof Paul Kennedy, author of the famous work The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, points out
that America’s reaction to that terrorist outrage eroded its strength, as did its aggression on Iraq.
Views of independent historian about quaid azam and his being a
great leader
He says, “Of all the personalities in the last act of the great drama of India’s rebirth toindependence, Mohammad Ali Jinnah is at once the most enigmatic and the most important.
…[I]t is barely conceivable that events would have taken the same course, that the last strugglewould have been a struggle of three, not two, well-balanced adversaries, and that a new nation
state of Pakistan would have been created, but for the personality and leadership of one man, Mr
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Jinnah. …[T]he irresistible demand for Pakistan, and the solidarity of the Indian Muslims behind
that demand, were creations of that decade [1937-1947] alone, and supremely the creations of
one man.”
It is relevant how Alfred Broachard evaluated Kemal Atatürk’s role in the making of modern
Turkey: “Without Napoleon, without De Gaulle, there would still be a France. WithoutWashington, there would certainly be the United States. Without Lenin, it is certain that there
would be the Soviet Union; but without Atatürk, it is certain that there would have been no
Turkey.”
In the first instance, circumstances make, not create, the character what it is, and what it tends tobecome. But the character, once it has emerged on the scene, begins to play an increasingly
crucial role. On the strength and because of his inherent attributes, he moulds, shapes and
exploits to the utmost the circumstances he inherits to suit, advance and achieve his ultimate
purposes and objectives. In the final analysis, then, circumstances alone cannot create a historiccharacter which rises to the occasion, helps crystallise the historical forces, causes a new
integration by harmonising them with each other, brings about their confluence andconfiguration, and, finally, works through a series of bold decisions and heroic actions.
As J. Christopher Harold said of Napoleon, Jinnah was both “a product … of circumstances” and
“man who, pursuing his own destiny, shaped circumstances that governed the course of history”.
GROWING FEELINGS AMONG MUSLIMS OF INTEGRATION
A Pew Research Centre survey found last year that Muslims in most countries consider
themselves Muslims first and citizens of their countries second.