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Punjab Governor acknowledges army's role for peace, economic stability

Punjab Governor acknowledges army's role for peace, economic stability

Business Recorder12 hours ago

LAHORE: Governor Punjab, Sardar Saleem Haider Khan, has said that the Pakistan Army has played a pivotal role in maintaining peace and ensuring economic stability in the country.
He emphasized that all political parties must contribute in a responsible way to Pakistan's development and political stability.
While addressing a delegation of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) office-bearers and ticket holders from Rawalpindi and Islamabad, the governor praised PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto calling him the only leader who has consistently and courageously challenged Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on global platforms. "The PPP is the only party whose leadership, under Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, has diplomatically defended Pakistan's interests on the international forum," he said. He urged the PPP workers and senior leaders to resolve internal differences and stay united in their mission to serve the people. He expressed confidence in the party's future, stating, 'The day is not far when Bilawal Bhutto Zardari will become the Prime Minister of Pakistan with the mandate of the people.
He said that Pakistan People's Party is ally of Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), but PPP remains an ideological party with a legacy of unparalleled sacrifices for the country. He assured the party workers of his unwavering support, stating, 'No worker should feel alone. If anyone is wronged or targeted, I will personally stand by him.' he asserted.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

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Abigail Adams, mother of John Quincy Adams (a founding father and the sixth president of the USA) wrote to him at the height of the revolution, 'It is not in the still calm of life or the repose of a pacific station, that great characters are formed', further she wrote, '...the habits of a vigorous mind are formed in contending with difficulties. Great necessities call out great virtues'. Our leadership has arrived, finally. Pakistan has turned over a new leaf in its foreign policy construction. From several years of being isolated internationally, the phoenix has arisen from the ashes. Now, we must consolidate the gains. From the democratic turmoil that began in 1988, following the air crash of Gen Ziaul Haq and subsequent elections to the politically self-inflicted coup of 1999, Pakistan has been on the see- saw of trying to balance between accusations of being the hotbed of the rise of terrorism to being the front line state, during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and later the war on terror involving Afghanistan. Between the period 1999 and 2008, the semi- Democratic/military dispensation at Islamabad, held us in good stead, at least in terms of the economic growth. The suspicion of the West that we were playing on both sides of the field gained traction, which led to the dilution of support to the then government. Isolation had begun. Benazir Bhutto rallied for 'reconciliation' and almost achieved it. A sad and tragic moment it was for Pakistan that she was taken out by an assassin's bullet. Her martyrdom turned the tables upside down for the then government. 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The state of preparedness shocked the wits out of the Indians. We struck back to their belligerent attacks by downing their five aircrafts, including the much-touted, pride of Indian air force, the French-built 'Rafale'!! Since then Pakistan has been peaking on the international circuit. Prime minister Shehbaz Sharif, in the traditions of a kinetic Z. A. Bhutto, has been ferrying across to Capitals in the region, seeking political support, a fair understanding of our views on Kashmir/India, while simultaneously seeking out economic opportunities, inclusive of overseas investment into Pakistan. On the international landscape, the support from Turkiye and China has been exemplary. The intervention of the United States, in particular President Donald Trump's step to stop and cease the hostilities/ war, is a remarkable event in recent history of the subcontinent. This favoured us to see the USA in the forefront in accepting our narrative. 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