Articles of the Story of Arif Naqvi
LONDON - Finally, an account awaiting the long and divisive proverb of Arif Naqvi and the Abraaj Group. A new book has been written on this topic that sets out the current debate on presenting a non-public discourse to date, namely Icarus: The Life and Death of the Abraaj Group of Professor Brian Brivati, which I have had. opportunity for review. Something to put his successful life in the right direction without a self-serving agenda. Arif Naqvi is the son that Pakistan should be proud of and sing about, let alone defend. I remember the good that Agha Hassan Abedi did to the third world as it was then, and I remember how the western establishment met with disregard for the other 60 banks in litigation at the time, and just downplayed one bank as a subject: BCCI. In Pakistan, we watched the story, and we did not stand together as a nation to protect him; he died broken and mysterious. And yet, we should thank his vision for creating a generation of high-quality and professional banks, educational and technical institutions and a foundation that has done so much for decades to come. Our scholars and commentators have allowed the paranoid allusions of the critics of this process to be substantiated. When will we begin to celebrate and protect our sons who enter the world stage rather than simply accept the fate we have been given?
do we celebrate and protect our sons who enter the arena of the world rather than simply accept the fate given to them?
For 20 years, Pakistan was proud of Arif Naqvi and his achievements, as well as the praise of the world that also sought him out. Our politicians are treating him with respect because his plea could bring great investment to Pakistan. His Aman Foundation helped train people in much-needed skills whether students live in Pakistan or become economic migrants. His distinctive yellow ambulances became part of the Karachi environment and save hundreds of thousands of precious lives each year. It is the honor of the Sindh government that showing solidarity with the institution that did the best, he took ambulances instead of letting them collapse in the face of Arif Naqvi's financial problems; does that then link Arif Naqvi to the PPP? Does Nawaz Sharif's support for the sale of Karachi Electric to the Chinese and the brutal support of Shahid Khaqan Abbasi make him a PML-N hero? Riham Khan has already identified himself as one of Imran Khan's main supporters, and Pervez Musharraf took his advice many times and presented a number of his projects with him: does that make him a military acolyte? Americans and Chinese were both begging him; does that make him an outside agent?
My conclusion is that Arif Naqvi was a patriot, flying all over the world. Knowing the politics of Pakistan, any political party would accept his position in the top positions, yet his focus on the Aman Foundation and Karachi Electric as his calling cards for Pakistan, are two clear examples of his campaign to create lasting impact in this country. . Professor Brivati's book helped to put all of this into perspective.
What will we do? Read it, comment, ride the news cycle and move on? No, it 's time for Pakistan to be integrated into something other than our cricket team, when the author points out sadly, Arif Naqvi was figuratively good' to open the experimental Pakistani cricket team Bowling. ' in running his business or in misjudging how he contradicts his business practices, whether he is rich or not, whether he lives on savings or overtime or does things that America accuses him of even though the money is not there, and it was. there are no American debtors in his company, all of this has to be answered but carelessly. If he is to be judged, it is in Pakistan, not where one can set an example for others who are too powerful to be judged for their American life. I quote directly from the Professor's book:
we must consider four key questions raised by Abraaj's great fire and the process of extermination itself:
Why has the Karachi Electric agreement not been finalized five years after it was signed?
If Abraaj himself was the mastermind of organized crime what exactly was stolen?
Who finally benefited from the closure of The Abraaj Group?
Why were there so many obvious acts against Abraaj in the established era with internal and external actors and were they connected in any way?
There are two logical explanations and answers to these questions. "There is nothing more to support the DoJ's argument that the management team mentioned in the actual case was involved in criminal conspiracy and fraud."
No one will ever know what really happened until every document and every deed is examined microscopically and appropriately. The US already has more prisoners in its prisons, both in total and per capita than any other country in the world. It is politically dispersed, ideologically divided and traditionally violated by the example of its citizens who bring about racial, class and social injustice. Is it not enough for them to solve their problems rather than work as a global police force using others to set examples rather than justify themselves? Was there murder, rape, terrorism or drugs involved in this case? What crime is highlighted here, other than the compelling story of this book, namely that the US was attacked by any kind of challenge to its world power?
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