Hmmm, I am sorry to say this to everyone that our school friend Archana has 
completely transformed!!!! Arre yaar kya comparisons kar rahi ho, are you the 
same journalist who used to write such lovely stories???? I mean how can you 
compare the Glasgow airport blast incedent and the current attacks! Britian 
never blamed India because they knew that none of our agencies like RAW or IB 
have ever been involved in such petty things!  Above all why should India do 
such a thing since there is a sizeable amount of indian population living in 
Britain. Whereas, the entire world including the U.S and U.K have clearly told 
that the ISI sponsored LeT is involved in the current terror attack on Mumbai. 
We never blamed Pakistan directly when the IM group was bombing different parts 
of India. Delhi Police killed the terrorist from U.P in Delhi after the Delhi 
blasts and they could have easily given the name of Pakistan for those attacks 
also but they never did!!!! Now,
 the whole world is saying that the Pakistan's ISI is involved since this 
people have tangible proofs and you are not ready to believe. FBI has 
questioned Azmal personally, they have checked all the proofs what the Indian 
security officers have shown to them in this regard plus they have also 
intercepted the phone calls themselves between the ISI bosses in  Pakistani and 
the terrorists during their heinous crime in Mumbai, after all this they have 
declared that Pakistan is involved!!!! But you still dont want to believe the 
facts????? 




________________________________
From: Archana Sharma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, 3 December, 2008 9:22:58 PM
Subject: Re: remember not to buy into politics of hatred


Yeah Disha, very interesting. Yes Pakistan has a major problem and the 
political uncertainty there hasn't helped. 
I do think that if going on war with Pak is justified then UK could have 
attacked India for the Glasgow airport blast. The attackers were boys from 
Bangalore trained in India. But UK never even blamed India.
 
But you guys will love to read this article by Thomas Friedman, a 
Pulitzer-winning journalist and a New York Times Middle East Correspondent. 
Don't see the length just read the first para and the rest you would want to 
read.
 
Calling All Pakistanis  
 
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: December 2, 2008 
On Feb. 6, 2006, three Pakistanis died in Peshawar and Lahore during violent 
street protests against Danish cartoons that had satirized the Prophet 
Muhammad. More such mass protests followed weeks later. When Pakistanis and 
other Muslims are willing to take to the streets, even suffer death, to protest 
an insulting cartoon published in Denmark, is it fair to ask: Who in the Muslim 
world, who in Pakistan, is ready to take to the streets to protest the mass 
murders of real people, not cartoon characters, right next door in Mumbai?
After all, if 10 young Indians from a splinter wing of the Hindu nationalist 
Bharatiya Janata Party traveled by boat to Pakistan, shot up two hotels in 
Karachi and the central train station, killed at least 173 people, and then, 
for good measure, murdered the imam and his wife at a Saudi-financed mosque 
while they were cradling their 2-year-old son — purely because they were Sunni 
Muslims — where would we be today? The entire Muslim world would be aflame and 
in the streets.
So what can we expect from Pakistan and the wider Muslim world after Mumbai? 
India says its interrogation of the surviving terrorist indicates that all 10 
men come from the Pakistani port of Karachi, and at least one, if not all 10, 
were Pakistani nationals.
First of all, it seems to me that the Pakistani government, which is extremely 
weak to begin with, has been taking this mass murder very seriously, and, for 
now, no official connection between the terrorists and elements of the 
Pakistani security services has been uncovered. 
At the same time, any reading of the Pakistani English-language press reveals 
Pakistani voices expressing real anguish and horror over this incident. Take 
for instance the Inter Press Service news agency article of Nov. 29 from 
Karachi: " 'I feel a great fear that [the Mumbai violence] will adversely 
affect Pakistan and India relations,' the prominent Karachi-based feminist poet 
and writer Attiya Dawood told I.P.S. 'I can't say whether Pakistan is involved 
or not, but whoever is involved, it is not the ordinary people of Pakistan, 
like myself, or my daughters. We are with our Indian brothers and sisters in 
their pain and sorrow.' " 
But while the Pakistani government's sober response is important, and the 
sincere expressions of outrage by individual Pakistanis are critical, I am 
still hoping for more. I am still hoping — just once — for that mass 
demonstration of "ordinary people" against the Mumbai bombers, not for my sake, 
not for India's sake, but for Pakistan's sake. 
Why? Because it takes a village. The best defense against this kind of 
murderous violence is to limit the pool of recruits, and the only way to do 
that is for the home society to isolate, condemn and denounce publicly and 
repeatedly the murderers — and not amplify, ignore, glorify, justify or 
"explain" their activities. 
Sure, better intelligence is important. And, yes, better SWAT teams are 
critical to defeating the perpetrators quickly before they can do much damage. 
But at the end of the day, terrorists often are just acting on what they sense 
the majority really wants but doesn't dare do or say. That is why the most 
powerful deterrent to their behavior is when the community as a whole says: "No 
more. What you have done in murdering defenseless men, women and children has 
brought shame on us and on you."
Why should Pakistanis do that? Because you can't have a healthy society that 
tolerates in any way its own sons going into a modern city, anywhere, and just 
murdering everyone in sight — including some 40 other Muslims — in a 
suicide-murder operation, without even bothering to leave a note. Because the 
act was their note, and destroying just to destroy was their goal. If you do 
that with enemies abroad, you will do that with enemies at home and destroy 
your own society in the process. 
"I often make the comparison to Catholics during the pedophile priest scandal," 
a Muslim woman friend wrote me. "Those Catholics that left the church or spoke 
out against the church were not trying to prove to anyone that they are 
anti-pedophile. Nor were they apologizing for Catholics, or trying to make the 
point that this is not Catholicism to the non-Catholic world. They spoke out 
because they wanted to influence the church. They wanted to fix a terrible 
problem" in their own religious community.
We know from the Danish cartoons affair that Pakistanis and other Muslims know 
how to mobilize quickly to express their heartfelt feelings, not just as 
individuals, but as a powerful collective. That is what is needed here.
Because, I repeat, this kind of murderous violence only stops when the village 
— all the good people in Pakistan, including the community elders and spiritual 
leaders who want a decent future for their country — declares, as a collective, 
that those who carry out such murders are shameful unbelievers who will not 
dance with virgins in heaven but burn in hell. And they do it with the same 
vehemence with which they denounce Danish cartoons.


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