Home TRENDING PM KAKAR SAYS THAT GIVING UP TO TERRORISTS IS NOT A CHOICE.

PM KAKAR SAYS THAT GIVING UP TO TERRORISTS IS NOT A CHOICE.

PM KAKAR SAYS THAT GIVING UP TO TERRORISTS IS NOT A CHOICE.

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Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaarul Haq Kakar said on Wednesday that Pakistan would never give up and give in to radicalization, extremism, or hatred. He said that Pakistan would rather fight and not give in to war fatigue.

Prime Minister Anwaarul Haq Kakar speaks at an event in Karachi on August 23, 2023. PHOTO: Screengrab

“Those who think we’ll get tired of war should clear up what they don’t understand. This war isn’t fought by just a few people… This war is being fought by… There is no way to give up. “No matter what, we will fight,” he said at a news conference during his stay.

The prime minister was with the caretaker minister for information and broadcasting, Murtaza Solangi, and the governor of Sindh, Kamran Tessori.

He was talking about the deaths of troops in South Waziristan on Tuesday when he said that Pakistan was not a power that would come back from 5,000 km away.

“This is where we live. Here we are. “We’ll run our house the way we want to,” he said.

The prime minister said that those who were trying to bring down the morale of the Pakistani people should clear up their confusion because Pakistan would never forget what its heroes had done.

He said that Pakistan wasn’t fighting this war for free, but rather with money from its own people.

He said that the Pakistani troops weren’t making sacrifices for their pay.

“They don’t get paid for their work. Instead, honor and dignity are their pay. The salary is only supposed to meet their wants. “The country shows them respect in return,” he said.

Kakar said that people who tried to make trouble in the name of religion were miscalculating and misreading the situation. “The message is clear. They can fight, but only for a short time. They are wrong about who they are up against and how to deal with them. “We don’t worry about people who try to kill themselves,” he said.

The prime minister said that the country’s infrastructure was becoming a danger to people’s lives. He was talking about the escape of eight people who were stuck in a cable car in Battagram.

“When we heard that the last child had been saved, we were so happy we could hardly stand it… We will celebrate it because it brought us together,” he said, thanking the people who helped save the kids and kids for the way they kept their feelings in check while saving them.

He said that the defense institutions not only faced problems from the outside, but also took the lead in handling crises. He also asked the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and other related departments to do a better job.

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