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PAT- Dr. Tahir-Ul-Qadri's Political Desk

Yesterday we had a gathering of friends and were discussing who is financially supporting TUQ. we came to the conslusison that none of us and no one we know remotely know anyone who gives money to TUQ, and by the way he lives in our town in Canada and has been seen in different mosques at time and note that no one lifts him (in pakistani sense of the phrase).
All the Minhaj charity works are at stall due to the dharna, so maybe a large chunk of the money was indeed the charity money.
 
Yesterday we had a gathering of friends and were discussing who is financially supporting TUQ. we came to the conslusison that none of us and no one we know remotely know anyone who gives money to TUQ, and by the way he lives in our town in Canada and has been seen in different mosques at time and note that no one lifts him (in pakistani sense of the phrase).
Sure you & your friends are the only ones living in canada!
great , logic ?:astagh::omghaha:
 
triple one ki tarah
ab to aaja ke tujhey yaad kia hay Chacha ney
:wave:
Pappu triple 1 ney tu aynaa hai, akhir mien laykin jiss tarhaan nooray ney ankhoon par patiyan bandh kar, ISI ka chief qabool kiya hai, iss trahaan tu ajj kall koi larki bhi dolhaa qabool nahi karti?:omghaha::astagh:
 
There is no big mystery about where the funds for Dr. Qadri's dharna from. For a long time, he had (and maybe still has) a link on his site clearly marked "Inqilab Fund". He also asked for donations in his public speeches.
People would regularly bring food for those at the dharna as well.
 
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A Qadri class feat now in India as well
Guru in Indian ashram stand-off accused of treason
Indian authorities have accused a Hindu religious leader of treason after a deadly stand-off at an ashram where the guru surrounded himself with thousands of followers in an attempt to resist arrest on murder charges.

Police in the north Indian state of Haryana said they found four bodies after they stormed the ashram of the self-styled Sant Rampalji Maharaj on Wednesday, a day after fighting pitched battles with the 63-year-old religious leader’s armed militiamen. Two more people, including a baby, later died in hospital.
Authorities on Wednesday said they had evacuated as many as 15,000 people, many of whom claimed they’d been kept inside the fortified compound against their will, as food and supplies dwindled.

“The godman was using his devotees as a human shield,” S.N. Vaisht, a senior police officer, told reporters.

Police finally arrested the sect leader on Wednesday night and he was expected to appear in court on Thursday. Police said he would be charged with treason. Postmortem examinations are being carried out on the bodies found inside the compound, which authorities said bore no visible wounds or injury marks.

Rampal Singh Jatin was a junior engineer with the Haryana Irrigation Department until he resigned in 1995 and set up shop as a charismatic, sharp-tongued preacher.

Rampal proclaims his devotion to Kabir, a 15th century mystic, peace-loving poet and saint, who rejected the rigid Hindu caste system and idol worship. But in contrast to the poetry of his guru, Baba Rampal adopted caustic and aggressive language that antagonised more orthodox Hindus.

The murder charges against the cult leader stem from a 2006 pitched battle in Haryana, where one person was killed and 59 injured, when Rampal’s supporters clashed with disciples of a well-established, reformist Hindu sect, the Arya Samaj, after he allegedly denigrated its 19th century founder.

After the 2006 violence, authorities in Haryana seized Rampal’s ashram, and he spent nearly two years in jail. After his release, he set up in a different ashram, and refused to attend court hearings in the continuing murder case, prompting the court to issue a warrant for his arrest.

Rampal is not the only Hindu sect leader – or “godman” as they are popularly known in the Indian media – to run into legal trouble with the authorities.

Last year, Indian police launched a manhunt for Asaram Bapu, a hugely popular septuagenarian preacher, after a teenage girl accused him of sexually molesting her. He was finally arrested in a midnight raid in one of his ashrams in Rajasthan.

But with their huge numbers of followers, charismatic Hindu preachers also wield tremendous political clout. This week, India’s new government decided to provide the highest-level government security – at taxpayer expense – to Baba Ramdev, a yoga guru who campaigned heavily for Prime Minister Narendra Modi during this year’s elections.

Baba Ramdev, who believes yoga can cure HIV/Aids and cancer, will now have a round-the-clock squad of 70 paramilitary personnel dedicated to his personal protection.
 
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