#GreaterKarachi: An Autonomous Home for Urban Sindh
"#GreaterKarachi: An Autonomous Home for Urban Sindh" is a Washington Times advertising supplement.
Recent Stories
By Nadeem Nusrat
When Benjamin Franklin wrote in a 1789 letter that "in this world, nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes," he had no idea how unashamedly modern-day Pakistan would defy his prophecy.
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By Wasay Jalil
Pakistanis observe a national holiday on Dec. 25 every year. It's not because Pakistan, a Muslim-majority country, celebrates Christmas. Nor is it because Jesus' birthday is celebrated on that day. The reason for Pakistanis to take a day off work on Christmas is to celebrate the birth of their country's founder, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, who happens to share his date of birth with Jesus.
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By Puneet Ahluwalia
"Azadi 1" is the new license plate of my friend Tom Garrett, a former congressman from Virginia who has steadily become the voice of the voiceless.
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By Former Rep. Thomas A. Garrett Jr.
Azadi means freedom. Freedom is something that some take for granted. This isn't a luxury that most people in the world share.
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By Nadeem Nusrat
This August 14th marks the 71st year of the Indian subcontinent's division and the creation of India and Pakistan.
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By Nadeem Nusrat
As unrest among Pakistan's ethnic minorities over the dominance of the majority province, Punjab, grows every day, the question of Pakistan's constitutional makeup and power-sharing is once again coming under intense debate.
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By Puneet Ahluwalia
President Trump has laid out a clear South Asia policy and his first 2018 "new day" tweet sent a strong message to Pakistan's ruling elitist Army and intelligence agency that "no more" of the same old bag of tricks will work with his administration.
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By Nadeem Nusrat
Since its inception in 1947, Pakistan has seized every opportunity to project itself as a trusted U.S. ally, and successive American Administrations have continued to buy it.
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By #FreeKarachi
In today's world, Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city with a population of nearly 30 million, is facing the same injustices that the American colonists faced in the late 16th century.
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