Integrity Score 130
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Pakistan is beset by one crisis after another
In February, the rating agency said that about 50% of government revenues "in the next few years" will have to go toward paying interest on debt," exacerbating economic woes and fueling political discontent. "A significant share of revenues devoted to interest payments will increasingly constrain the government's ability to service its debt while meeting the population's basic social spending needs," Moody's wrote in its report.
Pakistan's problems did not begin with the fall of Imran Khan. The country has been in deep crisis since its inception. At a time when the idea of India is growing stronger by the day, Pakistan is still struggling with an identity crisis: the country was created as a dream home for South Asian Muslims. But instead of following Jinnahism and the teachings of its founder, it has chosen jihadism.
It has made terrorism and radical terror part of its state policy. Instead of building on the common pluralistic heritage of India, to which Muslims also contributed and distinguished themselves, successive Pakistani regimes and intelligentsia preferred to build the idea of Pakistan on the pillars of Islam and enmity against India. Hatred against India was made a national narrative. Time has proved that Pakistan's paranoia against India is unfounded.
The use of terrorist groups as part of its security and foreign policy demonstrates its obsession with India, which it perceives as an existential threat. Pakistan's ideology is based on the twin pillars of Islam and hostility toward India. Pakistan never understood that as a nation-state it should shape its history and move forward, but lived with historical appropriation and distortions of the past. "India-Pakistan relations have been shaped by partition in 1947, the Kashmir problem, and military conflicts between the two South Asian neighbours. Relations have always been marked by conflict, hostility and mistrust, although the two countries share common linguistic, cultural, geographic and economic ties.
Not only with India but also with the eastern part of Pakistan, today's Bangladesh, the western part could not make peace.
To be continued....https://www.pixstory.com/story/a-mass-genocide-of-the-bengali-population-was-instigated-by-the-pakistani-army1684826338/222968