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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by SamTr014 (talk | contribs) at 18:06, 20 June 2005 (→‎Summary and solution). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Welcome to the Pakistan talk page.

Because of their length, the previous discussions on this page have been archived. If further archiving is needed, see Wikipedia:How to archive a talk page.

Previous discussions:

Just a question

Somebody can put me right, but has the decision to avoid all mention of the Kashmir issue and relations with India (along with a statement of charges and counter-charges) been taken after a revert war or something? I was looking for it, and to my shock, its not even mentioned, except for a single line. Or if it is, not too prominently, I couldnt find it. Surely theres some NPOV way of mentioning the charges that are thrown around about Kashmir? It certainly belongs in an encyclopaedia article on Pakistan. Hornplease 04:35, 6 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Removed irrelevant text

I removed Mr. Khalid Mahmood Bhatti Helsingor's comments or rather rants from here as the topic is totally irrelevant to the purpose of this page, that is, to talk about the wikipedia article Pakistan. This is not a message board or newsgroup, so please do not put inconsistent discussion in this page. Thanks. --Ragib 01:53, 8 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Sikh Raj section

This section should be merged with the Pakistan in Middle Ages section. Keeping it in the current level breaks the continuity in the history section. Also, from the appearance of the content, it looks like copied and pasted from somewhere else. Anyway, I am merging it with Pakistan in middle ages section, while keeping most of the content intact. Thanks. --Ragib 15:31, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Also, some claims by the original author Thetruth (talk · contribs) seem to be unsubstantiable. For example, claims that the Sikh empire was the "first secular state in modern world" is definitely untrue, because the US and the French republic predated it by several years. Similarly, " At its peak from 1825 to 1839, the Sikh kingdom was worthy of European rivalry and was one of the most attractive destinations for many European; travellers, artists and writers who flocked to the Lahore Durbar for its style and its patronage of the arts", seems quite dubious and possibly a POV/exaggarated claim. I reworded the subsection to make it speculation/unsubstantiated claim-free, and I'd welcome the author to come up with reference to back his claims. Finally, the sections were simply cut and pasted from Khalistan which itself is disputed, so references are even more important in this case. Thanks. --Ragib 21:49, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

After SusanPowL0 (talk · contribs) reinserted the sentence on "first secular nation" issue, I looked up US constitution, and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution which is a part of the Bill of Rights. Textually, it prevents the U.S. Congress from infringing on six rights. These guarantees were that the Congress would not:
  • Establish a state religion or prefer certain religion (the "Establishment Clause of the First Amendment")
  • Prohibit the freedom of religion (the "free exercise of religion")
This supports the notion that at least the United States was a secular nation before the Sikh empire. Thanks. --Ragib 03:01, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)


I also refer to Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. The US was and IS a secular country, unless the first amendment or the bill of rights are thrown out. --Ragib 03:10, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)


  • Ok, now that the dispute seems to be over, can someone also take a look at this point, the Sikh State of early 18th century being the first secular state in the modern world? The First French Republic was secular according to this, and also the United States was a secular republic according to the US Constitution. Any comments on this? Thanks. --Ragib 05:54, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

As I said previously, the dispute is far from over. Please continue the discussion on whether to include support to Talibans and AQ Khan in the introduction. Your assertion of saying the dispute on that is over is completely misleading. That is not the agreement that is reached. Please refer to the last section and continue discussion there. SamTr014

I WILL reinsert the 2 lines on support to Taliban and AQ Khan if my arguments there go uncontested. SamTr014

Your arguments are indeed contested, please continue the argument in proper location not in the Sikh Raj section. Thanks.--Anonymous editor 06:09, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)
  • (In response to SamTr014 (talk · contribs)'s comment) Please add your comments to the appropriate section. My comment on the dispute being over refers to the comment on the last section left by admin Seth Ilys (talk · contribs). If you do not like that, add your comments there, rather than replying automatically and out of context to each and every comment from me. As for others, can you comment on the point I raised above about which is the first secular nation in modern world? Thanks. --Ragib 06:11, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

vandalism accusation

SamTr014 (talk · contribs) has accused my change as "Vandalism". I would suggest you talk here in the talk page before putting some possibly POV remarks on the article. I do suspect you do this due to your biased views, which are clear from your comments in the edit summary. Please refrain from any POV attitudes and rise above your religious or national affiliation while editing an article. Also come to this talk page before putting in your edits. Thanks. --Ragib 02:57, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

You reverted my addition without contradicting the content. Facts cannot be called POV.

  • Also Pakistan has come into international spotlight due to the Nuclear proliferation racket run by A Q Khan to Iran and North Korea.

Is this wrong? Also support to Talibans and Kashmiri militants is undisputed and pretty open. Do you say it didn't happen? SamTr014 03:12, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)


Well, since you continue to revert , I am quite suspicious of your actual agenda here. Would you suggest we put every sort of speculation and other information at the top level page of a country? Do I see similar wording in any other country, say India, Bangladesh, United States or otherwise? If you are hell-bent on expressing your views, please create an article like "Pakistan's link to terrorism" and link it here at the top level country page. The top level country page is not the place to vent your POV based on your national or religious origin.
And also, your wording of the disputed section is clearly POV, needs no other comments. --Ragib 03:15, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)


Since I have made 3 reverts so far, I am stopping any further reverts, but I would ask for someone neutral to mediate in this issue, and stop this meaningless revert-cycle. Also a discussion in the issue is very much welcome. Thanks --Ragib 03:22, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Its interesting that instead of attacking the facts I mention, you indulge in questioning my personal motives. Please answer the question and continue discussing the subject instead of attacking me personally. Also interesting is the fact that you do not remove pakistan playing important role in war on terror. Why not add facts in the beginning for which the country is known(famous) for? SusanPowL0 03:33, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)


This is CERTAINLY interesting. I commented to SamTr014 (talk · contribs)'s edits, and I got replies from SusanPowL0 (talk · contribs). No offence, but the edit pattern and other activities do suggest multiple identities (a.k.a. Sockpuppet). I also would like to question the actual intention here, isn't your view POV? How are you certain that "Pakistan is famous for Terrorism"? Please try to be neutral. I am not a pakistani, and yet have maintained parts of this article for some time. I also had to face persons acting the opposite way, adding biased and POV comments in Pakistan's favor. Please try to rise above national and religious affiliations while editing articles. As for "why I didn't remove the line on war on Terror", I think someone put that there long ago and that line was a consensus during editing a couple of months ago. Thanks. --Ragib 03:47, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I got my girlfriend interested in the article, and sometimes she forgets to sign off. Any way, continuing discussion in the next section you created. SamTr014 03:55, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

What should be in the top page of a country page?

I have discussed this here and elsewhere that a country's top level page should be free from POV comments, "facts" or other information as much as possible. Pakistan may or may not have relations with terrorists, taliban whatever, and its human rights record may be or may not be good. But that doesn't mean that that type of "information", claims or views should be vented on the top level page, even at the top paragraph. The Wikipedia:Wikiproject Countries show a particular format for country level articles, and that should be followed as much as possible. For example, even Afghanistan's page do not have claims and labels in its top paragraph. Accusations of terrorism or abetting in terrorism can be made against many countries, including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh even France. That doesn't mean someone should put that type of claim in the first paragraph. Personally I do not have any stake in defending any particular country, e.g. Pakistan, I'm not even from Pakistan. My country even had a bitter independence war with Pakistan, but that doesn't mean that I should put my personal beliefs in editing/contributing to Wikipedia articles. I regret that SamTr014 (talk · contribs) has continued to add disputable claims or "facts" at the top of the article. I am not against the issue of dissemination of facts. Pakistan's possible links can and should be put at articles titled "Terrorism support by Pakistan" or similar, but continuous insistence on putting the "Pakistan is a terrorit country" label at the very beginning of the article is not the way wikipedia should be written. Thanks. --Ragib 03:41, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

First paragraph SHOULD include what the country is best known for. The facts I mention are the the ones for which pakistan is best known for today. So they have to be included in the first paragraph and no reason to make them obscure. Also stop attacking me personally. Thanks SamTr014 03:50, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I think there are a lot more people who would disagree with your notion that Pakistan is known for "being a terrorist country" etc etc. By your notion, anyone can claim country X is known for atrocity Y, based on personal conviction. That doesn't make that view universal or a "fact". I am not attacking you personally. But it seems that you are quite stuck to that notion, and not willing to give in to discussion. Please see POV, and wikipedia's Neutral Point of View policy. Thanks. --Ragib 03:56, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

When did I ever say that "Pakistan is a terrorist country". I am only saying that Pakistan is as much known for the support to taliban as for playing the central role in the war on terror. Agree? There is no reason to include the later and exclude the former. SamTr014 04:02, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Well, here is a hypothetical situation, should the main level article for the United States start with "The US is known for the killing of native americans"? Or India should start with, "India is known for riots"? Both statements here can have "facts" associated with them, but the issue is, is that "fact" or claim the single most important factor about the country? Looking into common precendent in Wikipedia:Wikiproject Countries, and other country level articles, I do not see such statements, "facts", claims put in the first page of any article. That is my point. I am not disputing your "fact" or claims. You can write up articles on the topic to your heart's content, and put a reference in see also section. You are assuming that your view ("Pakistan is known across the world for supporting terrorists) is the only view held by all people of the world. That is what a POV is, and that is what Wikipedias Neutral Point of View policy tries to avoid. As for the line on support for war on terror, I didn't put it there, and it had been there for a couple of months or so. Removing that should be just fine in my opinion. I reiterate, the top level article for any country should be brief, consist of facts and not POV ... or claims about "best known for its support to terrorists". Thanks. --Ragib 04:12, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Then why did you remove just the mention of support to taliban and kept role played in war on terror?. Why didn't you remove both if you claim to be a neutral person and attack me for being biased? SamTr014 04:29, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)


I DID remove both comments in my first edit today, but hey, it was *you* who accused me of vandalism. Please refer to this diff. [1]. The article is protected now, but I will remove the "war on terrorism" sentence when it becomes unprotected. Anyway, you still have not been able to justify the POV that "Pakistan is known for X", x being this or that. Wikipedia's Neutral Point of View is a good thing and possibly the main factor in keeping an encyclopedia neutral and credible. Thanks. --Ragib 04:35, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I see. I accused you of vandalism because you removed the text without arguing about its validity. You say I haven't justified certain claims. So which of the two sentences you say are invalid and I need to justify? 1)Also Pakistan has come into international spotlight due to the Nuclear proliferation racket run by A Q Khan to Iran and North Korea. 2)Pakistan became known in the west after 9/11 for its support for the Islamic fundamentalist groups like Talibans and Kashmiri Militants. I included these two sentences because I saw the other things mentioned too, such as "war on terror". SamTr014 05:04, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Ok, lets see, am I too confusing in my words? I have no judgement on your 2 sentences, my point being these are only 2 among a thousand other factors for which Pakistan is "famous for". Lets see, Pakistan is famous for Mohenjo-daro, famous for Cricket, has become known in the west long time ago as a country with many many dictators etc etc etc. I could just go on and on and on. Don't you see my point? Also, I can easily show you that your point is not valid. For ecxample, Pakistan has been in the spotlight ever since its existence and its wars with India. And please show an opinion poll or other statistics that validate your claims that people didn't know of pakistan before and only know because of the 2 facts you mentioned. As I said, there are many many things a country is known for, and it is fallacious to be adamant that your claim is the only one, and one so important that it HAS to be mentioned whenever you write the introductory paragraph of a country's page. You had put the same argument last month about insistence on adding several sections on Pakistan's human rights record, and other issues. I am sorry to say that from your edit history, it seems that you may have a personal grudge against Pakistan, and hence the POV. I am not affliated with Pakistan and have even wrote sections of Pakistani history remarking on the Atrocities committed by Pakistani Army during the Bangladesh Liberation War. But still my personal grudge doesn't mean I should write "Pakistan is known for killing 3 million Bengalis in 1971". That is a fact, but that is not what is relevant in the top level page of a country. There are appropriate sections to mention that, which I did. And there are appropriate sections for mentioning Pakistan's relation to militants, and that is where you should put your comments/claims/facts, not on the top paragraph where the country is introduced. Now, does my point make sense to you or would you still stick to "my-claim-is-what-everyone-MUST-believe-so-put-it-in-the first-paragraph" attitude? Certainly that's not what I am disputing. Thanks. --Ragib 05:17, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

You seem to have habituated of calling people biased if they don't agree with you. Please do not indulge in personal flamewars and try to stick to the subject. You never contradict the facts and cannot argue logically which I find frustrating. Let me copy again what I wrote before: 'You say I haven't justified certain claims. So which of the two sentences you say are invalid and I need to justify? 1)Also Pakistan has come into international spotlight due to the Nuclear proliferation racket run by A Q Khan to Iran and North Korea. 2)Pakistan became known in the west after 9/11 for its support for the Islamic fundamentalist groups like Talibans and Kashmiri Militants. I included these two sentences because I saw the other things mentioned too, such as "war on terror".

So you are saying we need to produce statistics for every single sentence? Just ask people around you what Pakistan is known for today. SamTr014 05:50, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)


(Note, the above comment signature changed from SusanPowL0 to SamTr014).

Sorry, I was talking to SamTr014 (talk · contribs). I am quite confused, two users, both replying to the same dialog !! (sockpuppet alert!!!). Please use only one account to answer, and refrain from using the Fake sockpuppet accounts. Anyway, I made my point fair and clear. You do not get my point, see above for whatever that is. To remind you again, "Please do not put speculation and claims in the top level paragraph of country articles". By speculations I refer to your claim that people know Pakistan for your 2 "facts"/claims. The validity of the two points Isn't my point clear yet? Or do you want a "1000 things Pakistan is known for" list at the top paragraph? Certainly even a small sample population of 10 people would disagree on what Pakistan is known for, so you can't point out ONE single issue at the top of the page. Thanks. --Ragib 05:58, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

This increases my suspicion that you don't even read replies to your 'arguments'. quoting from the paragraph above. I got my girlfriend interested in the article, and sometimes she forgets to sign off. Any way, continuing discussion in the next section you created. SamTr014 03:55, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

SamTr014 06:07, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

The reason I copied and pasted the paragraph was not that I wanted you to dispute the claims or I thought so. I just wanted you to continue the argument you started (You wanted me to justify something). CLEAR YET?? SamTr014 06:11, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Well, unfortunately, it is impossible for others to see when the identities switch between you and the other user, and why the same thing happens again and again. But I would take your word for it on why the same thing happened again. Thanks. --Ragib 06:14, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

  • This discussion is turning into a dialogue, so I would invite neutral mediators, possibly Administrators and others (not sockpuppets, though)to look into the discussion. I rest my case based on arguments placed above, namely my objection against putting unprovable speculation about the "reason country famous for" in the top paragraph of country articles in Wikipedia. Until then, I stop my part of the "dialogue" .Thanks. --Ragib 06:14, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

'The unprovable speculations about the "reason country famous for" in the top paragraph of country articles' are 1)Also Pakistan has come into international spotlight due to the Nuclear proliferation racket run by A Q Khan to Iran and North Korea. 2)Pakistan became known in the west after 9/11 for its support for the Islamic fundamentalist groups like Talibans and Kashmiri Militants. I do think these are extremely important and need to be in the introduction. Ragib certainly don't. SamTr014 06:22, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I have been viewing this page recently and Sam I have to say that Ragib is absolutely right when he does not include this information in the article. For example, thats like writing in the first paragraph of the USA article that the US is a country that has started all the recent wars, supports dictatorships and enjoys bombing countries for their own economy. What you wrote is highly POV and the fact that you think that international spotlight came on Pakistan only because of these incedents means that you have nothing more than an anti-Pakistan POV. This is not needed in the intro of the article. --Anonymous editor 06:33, Jun 17, 2005 (UTC)

I agree with Sam. The sentences correctly point out what Pakistan is known for today. Ragib's attempt to make these two points obscure are regrettable. The sentences MUST be included. 24.126.17.155 06:49, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I might be wrong, but I would want to know if this was yet another identity being switched, because the history listing of the article on Pakistan show a clear transition between SamTr014 (talk · contribs),SusanPowL0 (talk · contribs), and 24.126.17.155 (talk · contribs), the similarity in comments left in edit summaries and that in the past (On May 21, 2005) , similar "coincidentally" consecutive edits have been done by SamTr014 (talk · contribs) and 24.126.17.155 (talk · contribs). I again say I may be wrong, but such "accidentally" consecutive edits and almost similar type of edit summary comments do indicate a single user. Sorry if I was wrong. Thanks. --Ragib 06:58, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I ofcourse agree with Sam. Why hide what Pakistan did? Especially an act that is so important and so relevant today? Add the two lines. SusanPowL0 06:53, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

In this case, how are we sure that this is a different user, after frequent the switching of identities between SamTr104 (talk · contribs) and SusanPowL0 (talk · contribs) that occurred in the previous sections of the talk?. --Ragib 07:02, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I cannot agree more with SamTr014 and the other two commentators. Ragib's attempt to hide things is condemnable. Add the statements. 128.125.20.94 06:55, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Sam did tell me to comment here. Anything wrong with that? See above. SusanPowL0 07:06, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

SAM, please stop talking to yourself. This is a serious issue. Thanks. --Anonymous editor 00:21, Jun 18, 2005 (UTC)

RFC:What should be in the top page of a country page?

I have listed the dispute at Wikipedia:Requests for comment. I hope that will bring some neutral and "actual" users to the discussion. Thanks. --Ragib

It should never go into the section, let alone the first sentence, what a country is best know for. This is only a comment, and the facts should go first. In addition, the question by whom? comes to mind. Also for reasons of consistency of country articles, these should start with a semi-standardized intro, giving the basic facts. --Pjacobi 09:03, 2005 Jun 17 (UTC)

I agree completely with Pjacobi. In addition, saying that Pakistan is known for terrorism shows US or, more generally, Western bias. Surely Indians, British people or the Pakistani themselves would also think of very different things. It's probably best to avoid mentioning such sensitive and subjective judgments in the lead paragraph. Imagine if we started the article Germany with 'Germany is best known for murdering six million Jews'! Even if it's true it doesn't belong in the intro. Of course you need a substantial section on terrorism, but as I understand it that's not the issue here. Junes 10:17, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Agreed - "Susan"/"Sam" appears to be a POV warrior. (Perhaps from India, Im guessing.) India by the way "is best known" for its curries, slums, and relgious extremism. :) -SV|t 21:46, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

We are not from India, but no points for guessing where you come from. SamTr014 23:41, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC) So you think its a POV? Strange that nobody including you disputed the validity of these lines, some only said its inappropriate for the sections. SamTr014 00:02, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I agree with Pjacobi, Junes, and Stevertigo; "is best known" sentences are inappropriate, and probably original research to boot - is there a poll that shows that a plurality of the 5 billion people in the world know Pakistan for this? Further, I'd argue that the slightly more neutral sentence "In recent years, Pakistan has been playing an important role as an ally of the United States in the "War on Terrorism"." that is currently at the end of the intro para in the protected version also does not belong. Aside from a long-running, stable relationship, describing a country in the intro section in terms of its relationship with another is both non-neutral and inappropriate. Here, it is evidence of strong US-centric bias, wherein countries are described in terms of their links to the US. CDC (talk) 22:35, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

There is no "best known for" sentence! in the first place. I too think "best known for" is inapproprate. What I propose to include in the intro section, along with "major role in war on terror" (which is included already!) is these two lines. Ragib's assertion that I want to have the article open with these lines is a lie. I just want to have these in the opening paragraph. Thats all. 1)Also Pakistan has come into international spotlight due to the Nuclear proliferation racket run by A Q Khan to Iran and North Korea. 2)Pakistan became known in the west after 9/11 for its support for the Islamic fundamentalist groups like Talibans and Kashmiri Militants. These two should follow the assertion that Pakistan is playing a major role in war on terror(which is included by the way). SamTr014 23:47, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC)

In response to Junes, part of what you may be saying is the very crucial point that we must not confuse a regime or government/administration with the country, or more importantly, the nation/people its geographically contiguous with or proports to represent; moreover, for instance, the validity of such representation may be a majority only by a small margin. ~ Dpr 07:04, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Hello, I just wanted to stop by and give my input. Someone earlier suggested that facts can't be POV. This isn't exactly true. While facts themselves may not be POV, the inclusion of certain facts and their prominence can be POV. I think that subjective statements shouldn't really be included in the first paragraph of an article such as this. Some people may know Pakistan for their nuclear program. Some may know it for its role in the US "war on terror". Some may know it for harboring/supporting the Taliban. Some may know it as the country involved in the dispute with India over Kashmir. Some may know it as the country with some really tall mountains. It's hard to say. So, don't say. Mention the relevant facts in the first paragraph, but leave the subjective stuff for presentation later in the article. Thanks. :) kmccoy (talk) 07:08, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Having been asked to come give my opinion, I just want to second what Kmccoy said. While I suspect the assertion that is being put into this article is quite true, and could probably go into the article somewhere, it is not neutral to put it in the first sentence. Something like Australia's (The Commonwealth of Australia is the sixth-largest country in the world by area) or Canada's (Canada is a country in North America, the northern-most in the world and the second largest in area), I suspect would be more appropriate. Ambi 08:26, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)
  • The notion that Pakistan is best known for supporting terrorism is very odd, and sounds like someone generalising rather wildly from her own (somewhat limited) knowledge. It's astonishing that there should even be a debate about this; such a sentence anywhere in the article would be unacceptable (being unverifiable personal research at best, but in fact almost certainly false (and PoV). The idea that the article should start with it... words fail me. Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 10:28, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)
    • To be fair, there seems to be some misunderstanding as to the nature of the proposed changes. As can be seen in SamTr014's comments, the sentences do not say 'best known'. Also, the article is not supposed to start with them, although they're supposed to be in the introduction. Still, it's not acceptable IMHO. Junes 11:23, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)
    • Ah, yes. To be honest, I had trouble following his comment, so skipped over it. Going back to read it with your comment in mind, I can see what he meant. I still think that the material shouldn't be included in the article, much less the first paragraph. Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 12:35, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Pakistan has a military dictatorship, possesses a stockpile of WMD openly, has proliferated them openly to renegade countries, has openly supported radical islamist groups. Its a unique country which has done it all. Is it not? It should come through clearly. Thats all I want. SamTr014 20:58, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

OK, so I suppose that the United States article should note that the U.S. has recently become widely known internationally as a country widely regarded as being renegade and possessing a stockpile of WMD openly, has openly supported vicious dictatorships and violent terrorist groups, which has illegally invaded Iraq, has flouted the Geneva convention, including torturing prisoners, has instituted draconian domestic laws that run roughshod over human rights, and that it executes minors (I believe that Saudi Arabia does the same, so the U.S. isn't completely unique, it's true — but at least it's unique among Western states). No? I assure that it is widely known for all those things, and more, and that they're all claims that can be and have been backed up by numerous citations. Should they appear in the introduction? Should they be emphasised in the article? Or should we forget all this xenophobia and naive politicking, and get back to writing an encyclopædia? Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 22:21, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

You level so many charges on the US that its hard to take seriously. The last one especially, putting US and Saudis on the same plane on human rights issue is ridiculous. SamTr014

Opinions

I don't think that the statment about Pakistan supporting the Taliban or being associated with terrorism should be put in the fist paragraph. For the same reason I don't think mentioning Pakistan's support the War on Terrorism should be in the first paragraph either. IMHO, the first paragraph should only include a basic overview of the country as you would with any other article otherwise I consider it a POV. Falphin 16:30, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I agree with you on that one. Perhaps the "War on terrorism" should be put in recent events. I am against writing large portions on support for the Taliban; that is not needed. The United states supported the Taliban too during Soviet invasions, perhaps that should be put into the first paragraph of the USA article? Ofcourse not, that belongs separated and briefed - perhaps in history-related section of this article. --Anonymous editor 17:02, Jun 18, 2005 (UTC)

Its a progress that you agree that the statements are true. (You said "US supported Taliban TOO"). Also the validity of AQ Khan racket should go undisputed. Do you think they are not significant or relevant today? Pakistan has a military dictatorship, possess stockpile of WMD openly, has proliferated them openly to renegade countries, has openly supported radical islamist groups. Its a unique country. Is it not? It should come through clearly. Thats all I want. SamTr014 20:58, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

SamTr014 please learn some history. What I said was during the SOVIET invasions meaning Afghanistan. Both the US and Pakistan helped the Afghans (including Taliban) fight against the soviets during the soviet invasions. My statement has nothing to do with the current situation now. What you don't understand is that there is no place for your anti-Pakistan point of view in the article and you fail to understand what does and does not belong in first paragraph of the article. This is similar to saying UK got international attention with the mad cow scare, maybe we should start the UK article off like that? USA, Russia, UK, Israel, India, etc. also possess stockpile of WMDs openly, also every country in the world has had many situations that put them "into the spotlight" and makes them "unique", does that mean we should start off all of these articles that way??? Failure to understand is the difference between you and other editors of this article. --Anonymous editor 21:17, Jun 18, 2005 (UTC)

The things I mention are a LOT more significant and relevant today than the mad cow disease, and hence pakistan cannot be compared to anybody else. SamTr014 21:25, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

We never recognised Talibans, let alone supporting them. We never had their embassy or ambassador. US may have TOLERATED pakistani support to the talibans during that period, thats all. Don't put US and pakistan in the same league on that. SamTr014 21:35, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Please go learn some history. The US was the larger supporter of the Afghans including the Talibans when they were fighting against the Soviets. Pakistan was involved in the war as it was its neighbor country being attacked. I thought one could look at the map and realize that. The fact that you think the things you mention are more relevant is your own personal POV and therefore gives other editors more ground not to incorporate that into the article. Every country has had its moment that put it into the "spotlight" somewhat; that does not mean that the opening paragraph has to say that. --Anonymous editor 23:00, Jun 18, 2005 (UTC)

Before advising me to learn my history, please produce sources which say US recognized/supported taliban regime. I would like to know which school teaches this kind of history. Pakistan on the other hand not just recognized and supported taliban regime, they infact trained and armed them! My earlier remarks are right on the mark. We tolerated it that time. SamTr014 23:40, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC) Thanks for admitting that Pakistan was involved and did support the taliban regime.SamTr014 23:42, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC)


I never denied anything, you assumed I did. I was arguing against your extreme POV against Pakistan and speculation about how it came into the "spotlight". Now about US support, this is from our own Afghanistan article on Wikipedia:
"In August 1978 the American government commenced funding anti-government mujahideen forces with the intention of drawing the Soviets into intervention; with the government in danger of collapse, the Soviet Union intervened on December 24, 1979. Faced with mounting international pressure and losses of approximately 15,000 Soviet soldiers as a result of mujahideen opposition trained by the United States, Pakistan, and other foreign governments, the Soviets withdrew ten years later in 1989. For more details, see Soviet invasion of Afghanistan."
The mujahideen (freedom-fighters) were many Afghans including the Taliban. There you go, my friend, I hope you are happy that my previous point has been proven. Now maybe you can move on and productively edit the article rather than make speculations and insert POV. Thanks. --Anonymous editor 23:57, Jun 18, 2005 (UTC)


Funny that even the best cition you could come up with does not say US recognized and directly supported TALIBANS. SamTr014 00:05, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Funny that you still deny it, when my quick citation clearly says that the US TRAINED the Afghan opposition which includes the TALIBAN. Read the Afghanistan article for yourself. Surely even training is supporting, everyone knows that. Please read correctly before trying to make personal attacks. Thanks. --Anonymous editor 00:12, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)

Why do you think I wrote talibans in capitals? SamTr014

There you go, look up to my last response. I didn't think you needed this much clarification to understand. Now maybe we can move on.--Anonymous editor 00:19, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)

Huh? I repeat, why do you think I wrote talibans in capitals? SamTr014

Getting off track

It seems to me that the discussion is getting slightly off track. While this may be an important discussion to have, it's one to have when the page isn't protected. The key issue right now is to try to find a way to stop the edit war that caused an admin to protect the page. It sounds to me like there are two controversial statements in the first paragraph of the article -- one listing Pakistan as an ally of the US in the war on terror, and one listing Pakistan as a country that proliferates nuclear weapons and a recent supporter of the Taliban. Could the solution be to just remove both statements? Maybe find a few benign facts to beef up the intro, but facts which aren't controversial? Or maybe just leave it without either statement, just end with "and the OIC"? Then the page could be unprotected and further discussion can be held here as to where that information may be best presented later in the article. Thanks. :) kmccoy (talk) 00:45, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I just took a look at Wikipedia:WikiProject Countries (which cites Netherlands as a good country article), and it suggests for the intro section this:

The article should start with a good introduction, giving name of the country, location in the world, bordering countries, seas and the like. Also give other names by which the country may still be known (for example Holland, Persia). Also, add a few facts about the country, the things that it is known for (for example the mentioning of windmills in the Netherlands article).

Looking at the Netherlands article itself, it says:

The Netherlands is one of the most densely populated and geographically low-lying countries in the world (its name literally means "Low-lands") and is famous for its dikes, windmills, wooden shoes, tulips, bicycles and perceived social tolerance. Its liberal policies are often mentioned abroad.

So, the things it cites are neither controversial nor "in the news" type of statements. I doubt that section is updated during a trial at The Hague to say that it is "well-known for the trial of Mr. Johnson, the alleged war criminal", or whatever. Maybe what I jokingly said earlier about mountains would be a good thing to mention. Or something similar. It just seems like if a statement is controversial to the point of creating an edit war, it should go later in the article in a section devoted to that topic -- if a topic is that controversial, a single sentence can't possibly sum it up. How can we find a consensus so that we can get this article unprotected? kmccoy (talk) 01:53, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I believe that is a good policy for all types of articles, thanks for researching into it. Falphin 03:24, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I completely agree to Kmccoy's point, that a top level page for a country should start with standard things, and not anything that may be considered a POV. The debate started on the sole point on adding the unnecessary "facts"/opinions on the first paragraph. While the Pakistani association with Taliban may or may not be true, (I do not have any judgement or opinion on that), raising that issue as "known for" in the first paragraph introducing the country is incorrect, and not a good thing. My opinion is that country-level articles in any encyclopedia should not sound as a partisan news coverage, any association with any sort of regime, or any alliance with other countries can be placed in the history section or appropriate places elsewhere in the article. The edit war is an unfortunate thing, and it is regrettable that resulted in the article being protected. I completely agree that the two sentences on the "ally in war of terror" and "supporter of Taliban" both do not count as "important" facts to present in the top page. I think the majority opinion so far has been so, and using the standard policy for country-level articles should be followed always. I would urge SamTr014 to continue his edits according to the established standards, if links to taliban need to be mentioned, ample opportunity to do that is to create an article titled "Terrorist links to Pakistan" or something like that, and place a link to the article with a small summary in the history section's-subsection of Pakistan. It seems the majority opinion is also in favor of this. Thanks everyone for their neutral opinion, and I just hope this article would be NPOV and unprotected pretty soon once we get over this. Thanks. --Ragib 03:56, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Interesting that Ragib wouldn't even agree that the two lines I mention are true after all this discussion! Lets discuss validity of the lines first in that case. SamTr014

Sam, the article is sitting protected due to an edit war. Articles being protected are generally harmful to the wiki process (see m:protected pages are considered harmful.) In order to unprotect the page, I'm proposing that we remove the references which seemed to be in dispute (the one about Pakistan being an ally in the war on terror and the ones about it supporting the taliban and such, and any other versions of those) from the intro paragraph and agree not to revert those until a consensus is reached on this page as to what statements should be included in the intro paragraph. Does this sound like an okay proposal? Please address this issue FIRST, before moving back to a discussion of the truth value of the controversial statements. Thanks. :) kmccoy (talk) 04:52, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Please read above where I wrote -
While the Pakistani association with Taliban may or may not be true, (I do not have any judgement or opinion on that)
Where part do you see where I say the lines are not true? I said may or may not, and also that I am not in denial or in favor of these sentences, and have no judgement on that. Also, the issue at stake here is whether these sort of "information" can be placed in the first paragraph of a country-level page, and in that matter, most of the people has opined negatively. Do not get off-track in the discussion. Almost all of the neutral commentators have commented in favor of keeping the top paragraph and lead section of the article free of such comments, and you have so far not shown anything to establish why we should move away from established convention and precedent in wikipedia in case of Pakistan. If you are so incensed about the information, is it too difficult to create an article on that and add a short summary in the history/current affairs section of the main article, rather than continuing the argument over and over here? I have mentioned earlier that my association with Pakistan has been only to keep it NPOV and conformant to Wikipedia:Wikiproject Countries, and I hope this country level article would be treated just as any other country level articles, without any bias to any particular ideology. In case my call for conformance is still "interesting", I would refer to the comments of the other users in this RFC. Since they all more or less opined the same, why pick on me only? Thanks. --Ragib 05:00, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Personal charges leveled on me by Ragib of having a bias or picking on him are regrettable. I have been patiently replying to all the users who disagree with me. SamTr014 05:11, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

kmaccoy's suggestion is fine by me, the line about the war on terror (which already got in, inspite of Ragib's continuous vigil) should be removed and the article unprotected. But the discussion on this issue should continue. SamTr014 04:59, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

---

Just for clearing the record, the line you mentioned (on "war on terror",that "got in, inspite of my vigil") was added, in a different wording, on June 4, by anon user 203.130.13.242 (talk · contribs). See Diff The line was reverted by ESkog (talk · contribs) in the next edit. The line was reinserted in its current form by Falphin (talk · contribs) in this edit. After the suspiciously similar edits by 3 users, I removed the top paragraph additions, including both the assertions in question ("war on terror" and "taliban, 9/11 links") in this edit, with an edit summary "POV, please discuss your view in talk page, not on the top level page of a country article". However These edits were marked as "vandalism" by User:SamTr014 and reverted in the next edit. Here is the story in brief. --Ragib 05:34, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

---

As some sort of resolution appears to have been reached by the disputants, Pakistan has been unprotected. - Seth Ilys 05:44, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I haven't added the lines as I promised until we finish the discussion here. I think the article on Pakistan could open differently than the article on Netherlands since the two nations are vastly different in almost every respect. Lets settle first what Pakistan is known for today and then see whether it is appropriate to have it in the opening paragraph or not. Name two things that come to your mind when I mention Pakistan. I urge everybody to drop a line or two. SamTr014 18:19, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

There are serious logical problem with your "Name two things" idea, and "vastly different". Why should we create separate standards for different countries? Please justify the "proposed" double standard. Then again, "Name two things", is arguably a bad idea and a potential seed-bed for POV. Can you go ask even 100 people and get a better picture? Then even if you can do that, it would reflect what people know at that particular day/month/year. An encyclopedia is not a news paper, showing current headlines at the top. And double standards in country level articles are not good either. Thanks. --Ragib 18:25, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Controversial section

Okay, here are the many problems with the section that SamTr014 wants to add. The section should not be included until DISPUTES ARE RESOLVED:

  • "Pakistan is the only country which supported Taliban fighters." - When exactly did Pakistan support Taliban fighters aside from soviet invasion of Afghanistan in which the US supported them too.
  • "Pakistan had taliban embassador till taliban were crushed by US led coalition." - Obviously this is not a professional statement ("crushed"?)
  • "Pakistan continued to support Kasmiri militants by training them and arming them." - Highly controversial and must be acknowledged as an allegation by India, one that Pakistan strongly denies.
  • "In 1994, Mulla Omar, the Taliban leader fled to the neighboring Balochistan province of Pakistan, from where he emerged in the fall of 1994, reportedly with a well-armed and well-funded militia of 1,500 followers, who would provide protection for a Pakistani trade convoy carrying goods overland to Turkmenistan. However, many reports suggest that the convoy was in fact full of Pakistani fighters posing as Taliban, and that the Taliban had gained considerable arms, military training, and economic aid from the Pakistanis.Talibans" - Completely unsourced, unverifiable, and most of all, the history/events concerning the Taliban clearly does NOT belong in the Pakistan article. Almost sounds like a highly twisted story about an event.

Hopefully these issues are resolved so this article is not locked again. Thanks.--Anonymous editor 06:24, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)

An important first step is to stop reverting. Editors on both sides absolutely need to stop reverting. The only way to find a compromise is to edit towards it. How can we solve this? Anonymous Editor, do you think that Pakistan should have absolutely no mention of the Taliban? Sam, could you maybe find some references for the Taliban involvement in Pakistan? kmccoy (talk) 06:27, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Ofcourse not. I just think that the proper issues with this section should be addressed, rather than inserting POV, and the history/events of a movement (the Taliban) needs to be in the Taliban article not in a country (Pakistan) one. Also recently disputed issues between countries should be avoided. The Taliban can be mentioned in a minor, accurate, and NPOV manner. Thanks. --Anonymous editor 06:30, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)
Then, let's address them. Try giving an example of a section about the Taliban's involvement in Pakistan which you would find acceptable, and where it would fit in the article. kmccoy (talk) 08:01, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Please don't blank the section without any reason. It is vandalism. Most of the text is from wikipedia Taliban article. It is extensively discussed, sourced there.SamTr014

Sam, Anonymous editor gave plenty of reason. To insist that he's blanking without reason is disingenuous. You may not agree with his reasons, but he left a clear edit summary and then explained his objections on the talk page. Calling it vandalism is not only inaccurate, it serves to drop the civility level in this discussion. kmccoy (talk) 08:01, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
  • The edit war is getting ridiculously out of hand, I think the article needs either protection or detailed involvement of administrators. Both of the above parties involved here are getting involved in violation of 3RR. I suggest a multi-way discussion on this, like one that at least partly resolved the previous issue of the starting paragraph. Thanks. --Ragib 06:58, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Also, with due respect, I would ask King1 (talk · contribs) to verify that s/he is not a sockpuppet of SamTr104 (talk · contribs), because several occasions in the past, both their edits, and also edits from a particular IP address occurred in a suspiciously consecutive manner, and resulting in similar/identical edits to texts of different articles. I am sorry if I am wrong, but clarification of the matter doesn't hurt, right? Thanks. --Ragib 07:01, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Yes, please note that I have not violated 3rr while user Sam has violated it and was attempting to use one of his sockpuppets to make further POV additons to the sections he added. These 2 sections are highly disputed, unverifiable and unneeded and should be removed from the protected article. I am hoping that admin can remove this from the article in its protected state. Thanks. --Anonymous editor 07:04, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)
Clearly the sections are wanted by some editors. Can we find a compromise, perhaps a rewording of the sections? See my comment above. kmccoy (talk) 08:01, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I'm looking some at the sections some more. It seems that some of the information might certainly be included in the recent history of Pakistan. Their relationship with the Taliban is certainly noteworthy. I'm not sure that it warrants an entire section. Also, the wording itself needs to be cleaned up, both for NPOV and for grammar. But there is no mention of the Taliban in the article other than those sections, which seems odd to me. What sort of wording could you guys agree on? kmccoy (talk) 08:12, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Ofcourse I agree Kmccoy, the point I was trying to make is that the support Pakistan gave to the Afghans (including the Taliban) was during the Soviet war. That is when the US, Pakistan and 90% of the Afghans fought against the Soviet invasion and both the US and Pakistan provided training and support for the Afghans, with the US also being the larger donor. Later, because of civil war, the Taliban came to power several years later. But since the people of Afghanistan were not distinctly divided into Northern Alliance, Taliban and other factions during the invasion, taliban does not need to be mentioned in extensive speculations and other unverifiable, disputed, unsourced info that Sam keeps wanting to add. The information about the soviet invasions of Northwest Pakistan and the support of the Afghan fighters is already given in the section here [2]. I am willing to add more information to that in a brief, accurate and NPOV manner, which respects the view of all parties involved. The rest of Sam's anti-Pakistan POV edit about Kashmir is allegation (as I said before) and is not verified. So that is pretty much where I stand on this article. For some reason, I seem like the "other" party in this disagreement, when all I want is NPOV and originally came here to mediate. Furthermore, I appreciate your mediation here Kmmccoy. Thanks. --Anonymous editor 17:06, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)
Pakistan does not support Taliban any more. So there should be no mention in the essay. OmerFa
Also Why doesn't the essay say pakistan is a democratic country now. OmerFa
Pakistan supported Talibans but now pakistan does not support Taliban. In the paragraph, it should be mentioned that pakistan does not support taliban after 9/11, then it will be neutral and acceptable to all. Also moral, deplomatic and military support to Kashmiri freedom fighters should be emphasized and given in detail. It is extremely important to Pakistani people. It is always in the news and people in pakistan talk about it all the time. OmerFa 11:03, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I wouldn't disagree with OmerFa's suggestion. The article Taliban has been stable and most of the material regarding Pakistan there, which is almost all of it, has gone uncontested for quiet a while now, which is why I thought it is appropriate to base that section on that material. Anon, if you have objection to the material, apart from a couple of lines I inserted, please post there on Taliban article too, not just here. I think it is absolutely necessary to have these things highlighted in Pakistan article instead of filling out the article with harmless but also useless and uninteresting collection of facts. As OmerFa pointed out, it is an important part of Pakistani nationhood and should be presented as such. Please keep in mind that I am only trying to help the project and trying to make it NPOV (from my standpoint ofcourse). SamTr014 18:09, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Sam, I appreciate that you're just trying to include information about Pakistan which you think is important and relevant. What everyone needs to understand is that a dispute like this is solvable if you don't revert. Instead of reverting, change the text. Reword it, move it around, etc. Complete, blind reversion simply leads to a revert war. So, now that we've stated our positions, we need to get to the details of how to insert this information without a revert war. The article is protected, which is harmful to both sides and especially to Wikipedia and its wiki process. How do we fix that? Enough rhetoric, let's get a solution figured out now. kmccoy (talk) 18:59, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Anonymous editor is trying to undermine our support to Kashmiri freedom fighters. He says he converted from Christianity to Islam which is lying fully. Unfortunately people who are writing about Pakistan have never come in pakistan. There should be big section about our support to Kashmiri freedom fighters and Afghani freedom fighters. If you come in Pakistan you will know how much we feel for Kashmiri freedom fighters. Also Sam, please note that now Pakistan is an allay of US which should be mentioned at the beginning only. OmerFa 01:28, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Okay, now it is becoming clear that OmerFa is a sockpuppet of SamTr014. He is attempting to establish a false Pakistani POV in order to support his claims of Pakistan supporting so-called "freedom fighters", which he identifies as militants, and also to support his move to add a "big section" about this. This is truly sad especially when the article is locked. Sam you are only undermining any attempts to get this article inlocked. Wow, how "ironic" is it that the exact same thing OmerFa is saying is that which Sam agrees with and vice versa. Please stop this nonsense, Sam, your numerous other sockpuppets have been caught and this only further complicating matters for yourself. Thanks. --Anonymous editor 01:43, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

You Bangladeshi people are puppets of Indians. Surely you never came in Pakistan. Did you? Please answer this question. If you never came here, how can you write about it? Any article on Pakistan is incomplete without mentioning plight of the Kashmiri people. Please use your energy to talk about India's human right record in Kashmir. India article is highly biased, but Ragib did not let me and called me a Vandal. Please include a big section on Kashmir in India and Pakistan articles. OmerFa 02:25, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I call everyone's attention to this diff of India and this diff of my user page, and this diff of Wikiportal Bangladesh. You vandalized 3 pages, and have been warned by admins for that. Let the diffs and edit histories speak for themselves. Thanks. --Ragib 02:31, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Wow! Yes, the edits do speak for themselves. Surely OmerFa (aka SamTr014 + others) has something against south asian people. He is definitely NOT from Pakistan, Bangladesh or India. --Anonymous editor 02:34, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

Democratic Pakistan

Pakistan should be called a democratic country now since we have prime minister. It should be clearly mentioned in the essay. OmerFa

Sikh Raj section

Can someone take a look at the correctness of a sentence this section,about the Sikh State of early 19th century being the first secular state in the modern world? The First French Republic was secular according to this, and also the United States was a secular republic according to the US Constitution. Any comments on this? Thanks. --Ragib 06:26, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I would say that there is little harm in using less declarative language, like "the Sikh State has been called by some the first secular state in the modern world", or "the Sikh State was among the first secular states of the modern world." That retains the intention of the information while letting the reader know that there is some disagreement about that. kmccoy (talk) 06:31, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Saying that 'one of the earliest' secular states might resolve the issue.. Legendijk

I agree, how about rewording it as "The Sikh state was among the first secular states in modern world", as kmccoy has suggested? Anyone has objections to that? Thanks. --Ragib 07:05, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Terrorist and militant outfits

Hi guys, I have started a section on terrorist/militant outfits in Pakistan. The section is highly incomplete. Please contribute. It could give brief review of the topic that is so important in today's Pakistan. Thanks. King1 07:00, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

This section of the talk page was deleted by OmerFa (talk · contribs), I have restored it because I believe all views, even POV need to be heard, and debated. Let truth take its own path rather than blanking. Thanks. --Ragib 10:13, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Lashkar is a outfit of freedom fighters. We Pakistanis give them full diplomatic moral and military support. But they are freedom fighters. OmerFa 10:53, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Kashmir!!!!!

Unbeleivably Pakistan article does not contain any reference to Kashmiri freedom struggle by FREEDOM FIGHTERS. The Martyars who gave their life for Pakistan and Kashmiri people deserver a honourable mention. Also the Kashmir issue should be written in detail. Not mentioning the Kashmir issue and calling the freedom fighters terrorists is exactly what indian want. Honest people should not fall pray to Indian propaganda. Indias state sponsored terrorism need to be written in India article. I have proposed to Pakistanis so that we can have a separate section in India article which gives details about atrocities by India in Kashmir. Please add content there. OmerFa 03:25, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Protected again.

Barely an hour after I unprotected the article, I've been asked to protect it again on account of continued edit warring.

This is sad, and reflects (I believe) immaturity on multiple sides of this dispute. I suggest everyone involved take three steps and 24 hours back from the issue to think about things with a level head before spinning into a frenzy again. This is an encyclopedia, not the end of the world. We have the luxury of taking time for congenial and civil discussion.

And for goodness sakes, listen to kmccoy when he says to stop edit warring. He knows what he's talking about. -- Seth Ilys 07:02, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)

RfC

There's no way I'm going to wade through all the above - I don't have the time. So in the interests of clarity could I ask the disputants to clearly and briefly outline what they want in the article? This way I can see exactly how the land lies. Thanks in advance! Dan100 (Talk) 22:31, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)

Haha. I know how you feel. But I think the best way for you to find out what currently the largest issue is, is to go to the section above labelled "Controversial Section". That should clarify the current state of affairs. In the first message under that section, I have outlined the disputed material and my/other editors concerns with the material that one of the users wishes to add. Hope that helps. --Anonymous editor 22:35, Jun 19, 2005 (UTC)

I'll take this spot to insert my RfC response. None of the material that's apparently being discussed belongs in the lead section. That means the alleged support for terror, the alleged support for the "war on terror", the relationship with the U.S., and the nuclear capacity. I also agree that referring to what a country is known for is problematic. If I'd been asked, I would've said that Pakistan was best known for its long-running dispute with India over Kashmir, and second-best known as an example of nuclear proliferation. Both these subjects, along with terrorism, should be covered in the article, but none in the lead, and with no attempt to second-guess the world or the West as to what people would think was prominent.

When terrorism is covered, as with any controversial subject, care must be taken to follow NPOV. Here's the current wording:

Pakistan is the only country which supported Taliban fighters. Pakistan had taliban embassador till taliban were crushed by US led coalition. Pakistan continued to support Kasmiri militants by training them and arming them.

The first two sentences seem to present valid information in a biased way. I gather the following is true: "Pakistan was the only country that had diplomatic relations with Afghanistan while that country was governed by the Taliban." The second sentence should probably be: "Pakistan has been accused by India of training and arming Kasmiri militants who are fighting to make Kashmir part of Pakistan." Unless the government of Pakistan says it's doing this, it should be presented as an attributed claim, whether by India, the UN, or whoever. JamesMLane 01:57, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I read that section AnonEd, thanks for pointing out which bit of this page was the most important - very hard to tell otherwise. As I see it, the ball is really in Sam's court - he needs to provide some solid evidence for his edits under Wikipedia:Cite sources and Wikipedia:Verifibility - just saying "the Taliban article says so" isn't enough.
Taking a broader view, I must agree that the lead section is not the appropiate place for such material - it is a relatively minor feature of Pakistan's history. Dan100 (Talk) 10:40, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

Summary and solution

Let's find a way to solve this. I think there's some confusion as to what everyone wants, so let's summarize. Could the interested parties sum up what they feel is at issue here, and how they can solve it? Let's put it in nice, pretty little boxes to make it easier to read, like this:

Please put your issues and solutions in a separate box for each user. Be sure to sign them. kmccoy (talk)


Here is my stand point:
  • There must be a uniform way of editing and creating country level articles. A standard followed in most of the articles should not be violated just because someone feels so.
  • Disputed statements that can be claimed as POV should not be put in the opening statements of country level articles.
  • Country level articles should list both positive and negative sides of a country.
  • Claims need to be supported with proofs. Proofs should not include news papers, or websites that may be alleged to be partial in any direction.
  • Country level articles should also be made smaller with sections beginning with links to detailed versions of those sections (e.g. History of Pakistan giving a summary and a link to the "History of Pakistan" article for interested readers).
  • Editing along religious or national lines should be avoided.

Neutrality is the main issue, which should supersede over bias. Thanks. --Ragib 02:15, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)


I agree with what Ragib said & I would also like to call attention to the disputed section ("Controversial section") in which I outlined the major concerns with the section. Thanks.--Anonymous editor 02:24, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

Let's try to keep the boxes reserved for position statements -- one box per user, you can edit it if you need to. If you want to respond, respond below the box. This way, it'll be easy to understand what each user wants.

Of course, this is just all my idea -- maybe I'm being too formal about this. I'd just really like to see this page unprotected. :) kmccoy (talk) 01:45, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

It's an excellent idea Kmccoy. I might have to steal it :-) Dan100 (Talk) 10:40, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

I agree this is an excellent idea. I already have written down what is an acceptable version to me.

Pakistan is the only country which supported Taliban fighters. Pakistan had taliban embassador till taliban were crushed by US led coalition. Pakistan continued to support Kasmiri militants by training them and arming them. In 1994, Mulla Omar, the Taliban leader fled to the neighboring Balochistan province of Pakistan, from where he emerged in the fall of 1994, reportedly with a well-armed and well-funded militia of 1,500 followers, who would provide protection for a Pakistani trade convoy carrying goods overland to Turkmenistan. However, many reports suggest that the convoy was in fact full of Pakistani fighters posing as Taliban, and that the Taliban had gained considerable arms, military training, and economic aid from the Pakistanis.

Though I am not entirely happy with it, I would accept it. User Ragib is only writing platitudes (also interprets his posts for us in a condescending way) and has not bothered to write down what would be an acceptable wording to him. Also use Anaonymous editor has only indulged in personal flamewars. Please write down what would be an acceptable wording to him for the section. If a separate section is not acceptable to him or to others, I have yet to hear where exactly he wants to put the material and what would be the wording/content about Talibans. What is it that would be acceptable to all. Lets negotiate and not fight. SamTr014 17:59, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Wow, I'm just amazed at the hatred towards Pakistan

These days there are talks all over Pakistan and Pakistani media about how cozy Pakistan's relationship is starting to get with India, or should I call it by its real name "Hindustan", which means 'Land of the Hindus'?

But having read this page, it's clear to me that many Indians (such as our dear friend Sam and his countless sockpuppets), still have a visceral hatred and deep-seated contempt for Pakistan, the land of the pure. Pakistanis cannot rest easy for a minute and think that India will ever accept it as a successful, independent, sovereign nation, with powerful friends like the US and China. Luckily for Pakistan, it's not Pakistan's problem, what India thinks or doesn't think. That's only India's problem. Pakistan is here to stay, and there's nothing Sam, his cockpuppets, and any people of Sam's ilk can do about it.

It's funny, just prior to 9/11, India and US were getting so warm and fuzzy towards each other, since with the demise of the USSR, US didn't need Pakistan anymore, but it saw in India an obvious partner to counter an emerging China, a country that Pakistan held and still holds as one of its best friends. But then 9/11 happened and found US on its knees. It was an atrocity in which close to 200 Pakistanis also died, many of whom were waiters in the Windows to the world restaruant. I personally knew two people who died on one of the plane's that hit the WTC.

As usual, when in trouble, the US again came knocking on little old Pakistan's door, for help in defeating the taliban and capturing Usama. And like a jilted lover, India was left standing like a bride at the altar, teary eyed, with the groom having eloped with Pakistan (to I'm sure, Sam's great dismay). Such is fate.

The global tremor that was 9/11, left the world shaken - it changed Pakistan and most Pakistanis are somewhat different poeple today. They know that if the lone super power in the world can be humbled by a ragtag team of only 19 unarmed buffoons with murderous brainwashed minds, then their nuclear arsenal of less thant 500 atom bombs, which although can launch strikes on every Indian city, will not really protect them, since India has the same capability[3]. Hence the desire to let bygones be bygones, and be friends. A point, apparently lost on Sam and the sockpuppets.

To Sam and sockpuppets, now that you know your country can never eat Pakistan, and live to tell about it, why not purge yourself of the hate and come to grips with the ground realites:

  • Pakistan will NEVER rejoin India. Please stop having wet dreams about this pal. Ain't gonna happen. Now now, not ever.
  • Neither taliban, nor Pakistan had any direct role in Global Terrorism, the kind that happened on 9/11. If Pakistan did, the US would've invaded Pakistan alongwith Afghanistan. The US ONLY went after taliban, because they would't hand over Usama. Had those idiots handed him over, they would STILL be ruling Afghanistan and US wouldn't give a rat's ass about it. Musharraf tried to tell them dumb fu**ers that, but they didn't listen to him and paid the price.
  • Pakistan is doing its best to fight Global Terrorism, for the betterment of the entire world, including India.
  • Absulutely NO, country has played a bigger role in combating terrorism since 9/11, than Pakistan. And EVERYONE knows that.
  • If Pakistani spies ever sold nuclear secrets, it was only PRIOR to 9/11 and was NOT for money - it was done to acquire technologies vital to Pakistani national security - technologies like ballistic missiles to shower India with, in case it ever let its greed and avarice make it forget that Pakistan may be a pill that it can swallow, but it'll be a poison pill.
  • If the US hadn't shunned Pakistan and had instead fulfilled its ligitimate defence needs, like its doing now (keep those F16's coming baby, yeah!), the alleged proliferation may NEVER have occurred. The US refused shipment of F16's to Pakistan and like a hudd-haram, also kept Pakistan's US $ 650 million, which Pakistan had already paid in advance. Guess what happend to Pakistan's F16's? They were stored out in the open desert for years, until they were resold (the US kept some for its own use).
  • The 9/11 commission report also advises the US to never desert Pakistan again.
  • Pakistan is vital to US national security now more than ever before.
  • Regarding Kashmir - Kashmir case is one of a regional struggle for independence. And one man's terrorist, is another man's freedom fighter. Why doesn't your country get a hint and get out of Kashmir? Don't you understand that the Kashmiris want you to get out of their land, that you have been shamelessly occupying like a hudd-haram? Take a hint pal. Nobody in Kashmir wants you. Get out, NOW.

So, there you have it - my two cents' worth.

Attitudes like Sam's sadden me, and make me feel quite pessimistic that Pakistan can ever count on India ever being its true friend.

If I've offended anyone with my remarks, I deeply and truly apologize. Please remember, it is just my own personal ever so humble opinion. And btw, I'm a 100% pure Pakistani and a thankful muslim (thankful that I was born a muslim).

To Ragib: I'm sorry for the way your people were treated by west Pakistanis. How could they? It's shameful and frankly unislamic. And mega congrats on the Aussie win. Way to go Bangladesh!!!

Adios, amigos! And may peace be upon all you wikipedians.

Note: Hudd-haram is Urdu slang for someone who is totally shameless and guttless.

Note: The previous unsigned comment was left by 193.251.135.123 (talk • contribs).

I agree with you 100%. I think Indians, Bangladeshi and american people have hijacked this discussion. Please contribute to my section on Kashmiri freedom struggle and let world hear pakistani standpoint. I agree with you, Pakistan will never rejoin India, but one day if they attack us, india will become part of Pakistan. OmerFa 04:00, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC) OmerFa 04:00, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I think genocide of Bangla people is an Indian propaganda to divide muslim people. They are trying to divide and rule. But Bangladeshi people and Pakistani people will fight India together. Please note how India is regularly invading in Bangladesh now. Divide and rule! Please don't believe Indian propaganda. OmerFa 04:37, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I am ignoring your comment as you are obviously trying to add troll-fodder here. Your comments speak for themselves. Nothing further. Thanks. --Ragib 04:47, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)
OmerFa, stop trying to create conflict between different ethnicities of people. The fact that you change sides from anti-Bangladesh to pro-Bangladesh and anti-Muslim to pro-Muslim is further indication that you are not an actual editor but rather a sockpuppet. Thanks for showing us this. Btw, I think that the user who started this section with the message of the top was simply trying to be sincere in the end of his message. --Anonymous editor 04:53, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

I urge all Pakistani/Kashmiri/muslim writers to contribute to the Kashmir section that I have created. Let us stop fighting among ourselves and show India in its true colours. OmerFa 05:05, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Where exactly did you create this section? --Anonymous editor 05:12, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

I created the section in India article but Indians revert it back. Please add it again if you care about thousands of muslim freedom fighters and martyars. OmerFa 05:14, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Just a little while back you didn't even think I converted to Islam. You didn't think I was Muslim. Also, why do you seem so keen on creating ethnic conflict between editors from South Asia? --Anonymous editor 05:16, Jun 20, 2005 (UTC)

There seems to be some confusion as to what the point of this article is. It is not to promote a point of view. It is not to correct historic wrongs. It is not to memorialize anyone. It is not to provide a place for only Pakistanis to edit. It is to inform a reader about Pakistan in a carefully neutral way, presenting controversial topics without bias, and keeping within a reasonable scope of topics that are directly relevant to Pakistan. It's very important to keep in mind that there are myriad articles that are dedicated to the very topics which are being discussed here, such as Kashmir, Taliban, or India. It's also important to understand that we all should be working to create a good encyclopedia -- if that's not what you're here for, you should go to another project. Editing this article isn't limited to Pakistanis or Bangladeshis or Americans. The only real requirement to edit this article is to speak English (this is the English Wikipedia, after all). This article needs to get unprotected, and ALL the discussion on this page should be focused on finding a way to resolve the dispute so that it can be unprotected, please. Thank you. kmccoy (talk) 06:15, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I feel the same way as kmccoy and after reading all of this I have noted uptill now most editors have been decently reminding each other of editorial mannerisms and agreeing to disagree with few (if any) serious solutions offered.I understand the kind of tension editors here are going thru but no one should put up with User:Sam (aka Whatever?) as it can be clearly seen that this editor does not regard anyones view point or even solutions to the problem presented by others which if finally placed in the article will be eventually be vandalized again by the user SAM or his sock puppets.--Sheikhu 07:50, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)