Peshawar | Lady heath workers on strike against government

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PTI did not filed the details of expenditures to ECP.

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U turn | Flirt with PPP

Ch Sarwar joined PTI for this ??

Nepotism , Hypocracy and Dynastic politics | Naya Pakistan has all in one


Nepotism | CM KPK brother elected ditrict nazim

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Aleem Khan mocking Imran Khan and #PTI


Leaked Video of Aleem Khan - Party Election Fraud Exposed
تحریک انصاف لاہور کے صدر عبد العلیم خان نے عمران خان اور تحریک انصاف کا اصل چہرہ دکھا کر تحریک انصاف کی دھجیاں اڑا دیں تو یہ تھی عمران خان کی بہترین ٹیم ؟ LOKI
Posted by I Hate Imran Khan (The Master of U Turn) on Wednesday, April 10, 2013

When Imran Niazi escaped by the fear of POLICE...


انڈر گراؤنڈ عمران خان
وقت انے پر سیسہ پلائی کی دیوار بنے بن جاے گا عمران خان پر جب وقت آیا تو چپ کر اپنے اپ کو بچا لیا خود ایسا ہے اور نواز شریف کو بولتا ہے کے تم جدا بھاگ گے تھے
Posted by I Hate Imran Khan (The Master of U Turn) on Saturday, March 30, 2013

عمران خان پولیس سے ڈر کر بھاگ گیا
دھماکہ - نواز شریف کو پھانسی سے بچ کے جدہ جانے کے طعنہ دینے والا عمران خان خود اپنی بہن کو پولیس کے رحم و کرم پر چھوڑ کے دیواریں پھلانگ کے بھاگ گیا تھا لعنت ہے عمران تیری بہادری پر اور تیری غیرت پرLOKI
Posted by I Hate Imran Khan (The Master of U Turn) on Tuesday, November 13, 2012

When Imran Niazi decided not to contest against nawaz Sharif | Jo bhag gia woh Niazi

Theif caught from PTI MNA house

PML-N cracks K-P govt’s multi-million scandal

PML-N cracks K-P govt’s multi-million scandal

By APP
Published: August 26, 2015

Daniyal Aziz asks PTI to identify culprit within two weeks PHOTO: FILE
Daniyal Aziz asks PTI to identify culprit within two weeks PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) on Tuesday showed proof regarding a mega scandal of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) government, asking the Imran Khan-led Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) to reply in this regard within the next two weeks.
“This is a historical mega scandal which has now been proved by the PTI’s own white paper in which it was confessed that the K-P government had invested Rs378.71 million in shares of listed companies,” PML-N leader Daniyal Aziz said in a news conference.
He said that the PTI-led K-P government gambled in stock market and lost huge money, so in order to cover that money, it fudged the figures of several hydel power projects in the province which were to be completed by 2015-16.
Aziz alleged that Rs25 billion was allocated for completion of numerous hydel power projects in the province but millions of rupees from it were squandered by investing in the stock market to benefit rich business people, including some PTI leaders interfering in the affairs of the provincial government.
“We will not leave them free in this mega scandal and will give them two weeks to take action against the culprits,” he said, adding that if they failed to do so the federal government would take action and send the case to the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).
The PML-N leader said that the PTI was committing contempt of Supreme Court by once again raising talks about planned rigging in the 2013 general elections.
The PTI had committed with the PML-N that the judicial commission’s verdict would be acceptable but now they were again creating fuss and had started threatening to resume their sit-ins on the basis of their demands of resigning of the Election Commission members, he added.
Daniyal Aziz advised the PTI to take legal route for action against the members of the poll body instead of giving threats of blocking Islamabad.
On the occasion, MNA Tariq Fazal Chaudhry said that the PTI was putting pressure upon the judiciary in order to get the decision of their own will.
He was of the view that the PTI had failed to fulfill their pledges made during their election campaign, therefore, they are creating unnecessary hue and cry.
He said that Nadra chairman was appointed by mutual advisory and the PTI consent was also involved in the appointment of the chairman but now Imran Khan is demanding resignation from him.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 26th, 2015.

Shafqat Mehmood chawal

Punjab was wealthy under sab say bara dako..| U turn on PMLQ


MCB report contains evidence of Chaudries' loans write-off : Imran

* I'd be already in power if Jews were supporting me, says PTI chief
ISLAMABAD: Imran Khan, chairman of the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI), told newsmen on Tuesday that the 'Chaudhries of Gujrat' had got loans amounting to Rs 241.39 million written off by different financial institutions of the country but still the returning officer accepted their nomination papers for contesting the October elections.
Mr Khan said under elections law, a loan defaulter and a person who had his debts written off was not allowed to contest the polls. He said the documents released by the Muslim Commercial Bank (MCB) in its annual report for the year 2000, says that Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain and Ch Pervez Elahi, as the directors of the Punjab Sugar Mills Vehari, had got loans of Rs 22.792 million written off, and in November 1996 loans of Rs 218.598 million were also written off by the Bankers Equity Limited. The loans were given to the Punjab Sugar Mills.
"Under these circumstances the credibility of the Election Commission (EC) has become more doubtful. The PTI has asked the chief election commissioner to disqualify the Chaudries of Gujrat from contesting the polls as the documentary evidence proves beyond any doubt that they violated the 'Declaration of Oath'. The Oath clearly states that any candidate or his immediate family member is disqualified to contest the polls if he/she is a defaulter or has loans written off amounting to Rs 2 million or more," Mr Khan said.
He said the EC should work according to its own law to gain more credibility. He warned of writing a letter to the president and the commission on pre-poll rigging.
Mr Khan said if the Pakistan Muslim League (Quaid-e-Azam) would win the general elections, then the credit would go to Tariq Aziz, the principle secretary to the chief executive, who made the "King's party". He said the PTI was discussing the 'double standard of the government' with Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the Pakistan People's Party and the PML (Nawaz).
The former cricketer said if the Jewish lobby were supporting him, he'd already be in power as the United States plays a role in establishing the government through the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. He said his party would not boycott the polls but if the government continued to rig the polls, then a dangerous situation could arise.

Rawalpindi | Clashes among PTI workers 7 injured









http://e.jang.com.pk/08-24-2015/pindi/page16.asp

Check the level of Kazim Malik

PS-93 | Stay order of PTI candidate

PTI threaten Justice Wajih . New MQM in town

Stay orders of PTI against ET decisions

Stay order for Rai Hassan Nawaz Khan | NA -162

The wrath of Mrs Khan's ex

The wrath of Mrs Khan's ex: She's the ambitious ex-BBC presenter who - as Imran Khan's wife - may become Pakistan's First Lady. But can she recover from the damning claims of the husband she left behind? 

  • Ms Khan filed for divorce in 2005 after 15 years together with Dr Rehman
  • He claims he was forced to leave the house with just one suitcase
  • Dr Rehman denies Ms Khan's claims he didn't finance her children
  • Reham Khan has developed a reputation as a broadcast journalist and champion of women's rights 
Whatever is said about BBC presenter Reham Khan – and people have said plenty in recent months – there is no doubting her fierce ambition. 
In just three years she has gone from covering local fetes on the regional news programme South Today, to becoming one of the foremost television presenters and political activists in Pakistan.
A canny marriage to the former international cricketer-turned-politician, Imran Khan, 62, has helped, of course, and so has depicting herself as an abused wife and an abandoned mother-of-three who was left to bring up her children on her own. 'I have earned my freedom,' she told one interviewer.
These shocking claims won widespread public sympathy for the glamorous 43-year-old and made her a champion of women's rights. 
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Reham Khan (pictured) filed for divorce in 2005 and Dr Rehman left the house with just one suitcase. 'She brought me down to nothing,' he says
Reham Khan (pictured) filed for divorce in 2005 and Dr Rehman left the house with just one suitcase. 'She brought me down to nothing,' he says
Dr Rehman, 54, a consultant psychiatrist in Lincolnshire, accuses his former wife of slandering his good name 
Dr Rehman, 54, a consultant psychiatrist in Lincolnshire, accuses his former wife of slandering his good name 
It's a status she has used to promote herself in her husband's political party in what her critics say is a naked bid to create a political dynasty. One of her sons is already involved.
But there is one man who has a very different take on Reham's emotion-fuelled back story. He is Dr Ijaz Rehman, her first cousin and also the ex-husband she left behind in Britain.
Dr Rehman, 54, a consultant psychiatrist in Lincolnshire, accuses his former wife of slandering his good name and, despite the turmoil already affecting their inter-related families, is threatening legal action against her.
He says, bluntly, that she used him 'like toilet paper to clean up her image' after she found herself harshly criticised by traditionalists in Pakistan who saw Imran's bride as far too Westernised.
This is the first time that Dr Rehman has agreed to be interviewed: for personal and professional reasons, he is wary of entering the public arena. But Reham's consistent refusal to apologise – and what he sees as continuing damage to his reputation – now means, he says, he has no choice.
He and Reham were together for 15 years before their divorce in 2006. He had put their time together well behind him when, in January of this year, he was astonished to see his former wife's face all over national television. 
He had no clue that Reham had met and married cricketing legend Imran, one of the most prominent and – for his sporting achievements at least – revered figures in Pakistan.
Imran, one-time husband of socialite and activist Jemima Goldsmith (they have two sons) is now the charismatic political leader of that country's major opposition party.
But the idea of a second Westernised bride has not been welcomed by all.
Pictures of Reham handling pork sausages, dancing with other men and wearing revealing clothes while at the BBC, caused national outrage among some of her new husband's ardent supporters. 
Dr Rehman said he had no clue that Reham (right) had met and married cricketing legend Imran (left), one of the most prominent and – for his sporting achievements at least – revered figures in Pakistan
Dr Rehman said he had no clue that Reham (right) had met and married cricketing legend Imran (left), one of the most prominent and – for his sporting achievements at least – revered figures in Pakistan
Many consider her to be an unsuitable wife for a man who is now something of a Right-wing conservative, who has made much of his Islamic faith and who is seeking his country's presidency.
It has been reported that even some members of Imran's family agree.
Her detractors were even less impressed when she was forced to admit last month that she had embellished her CV, by wrongly claiming to have a postgraduate diploma in journalism from North Lindsey College in Lincolnshire.
That misrepresentation came as no surprise to Dr Rehman. Bending the truth to fit her needs, he says, is something she often did when they were together – but never more devastatingly than when she effectively told the world that her ex-husband had abused her. 
'I have never spoken about my personal experience of domestic violence because I... felt it would be unfair to expose the other party,' she said on Pakistani television.
Dr Rehman is still reeling and has demanded a public retraction.
'Reham is completely unprincipled to have made this allegation,' he says. 'I never raised a hand against her, even when provoked by her hysterical attacks on me during our marriage. She's damaged my reputation just because she wanted people to feel sorry for her.
'For a woman with three children to leave her husband is not a done thing in our culture – unless she had very good reasons. That's why she concocted the fictional stories about me being a bad husband and terrible father. 
As for me not financially supporting my kids, how on earth could someone in my position working for the NHS get away with such a thing? After the divorce I paid 25 per cent of my £6,000 monthly salary to the Child Support Agency (CSA).
'She continued to claim child benefit and my CSA contribution, even after leaving the country to resettle in Pakistan. I have proof that this went on for more than a year. I certainly paid maintenance for all my children right up to 2014. I would like to see the matter investigated properly by the departments concerned.'
Tall and impressive, Dr Rehman bears a passing resemblance to Imran – they even share the same accented and richly mellifluous voice. In the elegant sitting room of his compact home on the edge of Warrington, he speaks calmly, insisting that he can prove every statement. 
His attractive second wife, Sam, 34, also a doctor, hovers supportively, occasionally censoring his more contentious comments.
Caught out: Reham Khan's detractors were even less impressed when she was forced to admit last month that she had embellished her CV, by wrongly claiming to have a postgraduate diploma in journalism from North Lindsey College in Lincolnshire
Caught out: Reham Khan's detractors were even less impressed when she was forced to admit last month that she had embellished her CV, by wrongly claiming to have a postgraduate diploma in journalism from North Lindsey College in Lincolnshire
Reham Kahn is a successful broadcast journalist in Pakistan
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Despite his controlled demeanour he is fuming about the way his quiet life has been turned upside down. He explains that bosses at the hospital where he works told him to take two weeks off after the story broke in January.
 'If you put my name into the internet, the stories do not make me look good,' he says. 'I've stopped going out socially because whenever people hear my name they recognise me. I've even had emails asking if I had ever beaten her.
'Colleagues give me looks, as if wondering if there is any truth in it, and I worry that my patients might react badly. I've been forced to go public because of the way the scandal has affected my life. It has caused me sleepless nights and deeply upset Sam.'
The final straw came when his eldest son, Sahir, 22, claimed that 'our father has never supported us', and in a tweet called his father 'a scumbag'. Dr Rehman says the children went to private school until they moved into an area with a good grammar school.
After the divorce, his two older children refused to see him – and he blames his ex-wife for having 'poisoned' their minds against him. 
The fallout has been especially toxic because their union had been bonded by blood – Dr Rehman's mother and Reham's father, a retired doctor, were siblings. 
The attraction was, at least on Dr Rehman's side, instant from their very first meeting in December 1991, at a family wedding in Pakistan.
Reham was a vivacious and confident 19-year-old just out of high school and, he recalls, unusually flirtatious for a woman in that society. A former child television presenter in Pakistan, Reham boldly made a play for the eligible bachelor who was already living and working as a doctor in Britain. Dr Rehman recalls: 'We were sitting at the dining table one evening when she asked why I wasn't married and I said I hadn't met the right woman.
'She looked straight at me and said, 'The right woman could be sitting in front of you now.'
'It was not a love match, but she was very attractive and quite bright. I felt she was someone I could live with. I did not even ask for a dowry. 
But my family gave her so much jewellery that by the time she left me it was valued at about £100,000.'
They were married the following summer and started their new life together in hospital quarters at Guy's in London. This was followed by a stint in Hull and two overseas posts – to Canada and Australia.
But he says Reham hated the constant sunshine and complained that it was making her go a shade darker. 'She was always saying that she hated living in Pakistan because of the heat and made fun about the people there.' 
Over time he grew disillusioned about his wife, who he considered to be attention-seeking and controlling. But it was only after they returned to UK in 1996 and settled in Hull that Dr Rehman realised just how much she enjoyed being the centre of attention.
'At Asian parties male and females are usually separate but she always found an excuse to be with the men. She also wore very low-cut tops and dresses which were too short.
'I'm not a narrow-minded person and didn't expect her to wear traditional clothes, but she often went too far. Many times I had to point out this out and she would go ballistic if she didn't get her way. I just gave in for a quiet life.' 
Happier times: Dr Ijaz Rehman (left) pictured on his wedding day with his now ex-wife Reham in 1992
Happier times: Dr Ijaz Rehman (left) pictured on his wedding day with his now ex-wife Reham in 1992
Reham says she met Imran when she went to interview him a couple of years ago. It is thought this interview took place in Pakistan but some detractors claim they developed an intimate friendship during one of his visits to the UK
Reham says she met Imran when she went to interview him a couple of years ago. It is thought this interview took place in Pakistan but some detractors claim they developed an intimate friendship during one of his visits to the UK
He says she loved to brag, pretending they spent more money on things than they actually did. 'She once bought a dress for $40 while we were on holidaying in America, but told friends it cost $400. She told people we paid £100,000 more for our house and said that our £37,000 car cost £50,000.'
By the time their third child was born in 2003, the marriage was falling apart. In 2004, Reham took the children to Pakistan for an extended stay and only returned after Dr Rehman promised to buy her a bigger house. He bought a £450,000 mansion with five bedrooms, five bathrooms, two drawing rooms and a sauna.
But Reham filed for divorce in 2005 and Dr Rehman left the house with just one suitcase. 'She brought me down to nothing,' he says.
'She got everything – all the antique furniture that now graces the home she shares with Imran, £50,000 in cash, half my pension and my children. I was left with nothing but a mountain of debts after the divorce, and a £100,000 legal bill.'
So acrimonious was the split that the couple lost touch completely. But it seems this was the time that Reham's journalism ambitions surfaced. She became a freelance, working on local radio and television and for a little-known cable programme, Legal TV, in Birmingham.
In 2008 she turned up on BBC South as a weather girl and occasional junior reporter, appearing in short skirts and high heels.
In 2012 she moved to Islamabad with the children and began her transformation in earnest. Dr Rehman says: 'I didn't know she had left the UK until family and friends called to tell me they had seen her there on television.'
She says she met Imran when she went to interview him a couple of years ago. It is thought this interview took place in Pakistan but some detractors claim they developed an intimate friendship during one of his visits to the UK. Either way, they kept the relationship clandestine for some time before secretly marrying.
Today, Reham has re-modelled herself as a modest Muslim wife as she ingratiates herself with the political elite. And despite criticism that led Imran last week to announce that she would not hold any positions in the party, contest elections or be given 'official protocol', given her meteoric rise to the top of the social and political ladder, it is surely just a matter of time before she bounces back.
A spokesman for Imran Khan said he was disappointed that Dr Rehman had chosen to speak about his family in public. He said Dr Rehman had not considered the impact on his children.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3207283/The-wrath-Mrs-Khan-s-ex-ambitious-ex-BBC-presenter-Imran-Khan-s-wife-Pakistan-s-Lady-recover-damning-claims-husband-left-behind.html#ixzz3jcMyg1kQ 
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