IN HISTORY OF PAKISTAN , ALL DEATH BECOMES MYSTERIES, WHICH NO ONE IN THE WORLD CAN SOLVE
Gandhi of Pakistan - Mr. Mohammad Ali Zinnah, who created Pakistan also died on road side
he was suffering from heart pain and was to be quickly admitted in hospital; the ambulance carrying him broke on road and he could not be reached hospital in time - GANDHI OF PAKISTAN DIED A PITYLY ON THE ROAD
NOT A SINGLE POLITICIANS DEATH IS JUSTIFIED IN PAKISTAN, EVEN BOB WOOLMER'S DEATH BECAME MYSTERY
SO PAKIS ARE REALLY VERY VERY EXPERT IN THIS
IF THERE IS ANY INTERNATIONAL REWARD ON THIS MYSTERIES ; PAK WILL SURELY GET 1ST PRICE
RE:PAKISTAN
by mohd khan on Jan 02, 2008 02:30 PM Permalink
Nine American Presidents - Andrew Jackson in 1835, Abraham Lincoln in 1865, James Garfield in 1881, William McKinley in 1901 Harry S. Truman in 1950, John F. Kennedy in 1963, Richard Nixon in 1974, Gerald Ford twice in 1975, and Ronald Reagan in 1981 - have been the targets of assassination. Attempts have also been made on the lives of one President-elect (Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933) and three Presidential candidates (Theodore Roosevelt in 1912, Robert F. Kennedy in 1968, and George Wallace in 1972). In addition, eight governors, seven U.S. Senators, nine U.S. Congressmen, eleven mayors, 17 state legislators, and eleven judges have been violently attacked. No other country with a population of over 50 million has had as high a number of political assassinations or attempted assassinations. Political violence reached a new peak during the 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s. Attacks were made on four of six Presidents (one successfully, one nearly so). Among those murdered were three U.S. ambassadors, a Presidential aspirant (Robert Kennedy in l968), a neo-Nazi (George Lincoln Rockwell), a rock star (John Lennon), and three black leaders (Malcolm X, Medgar Evars, and Martin Luther King).