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EU-India landmark free trade agreement: What does it mean for Pakistan?

Ball Blazer

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The EU and India concluded negotiations today for a historic, ambitious and commercially significant free trade agreement (FTA), the largest such deal ever concluded by either side. It will strengthen economic and political ties between the world's second and fourth largest economies, at a time of rising geopolitical tensions and global economic challenges, highlighting their joint commitment to economic openness and rules-based trade.

European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, said: “The EU and India make history today, deepening the partnership between the world's biggest democracies. We have created a free trade zone of 2 billion people, with both sides set to gain economically. We have sent a signal to the world that rules-based cooperation still delivers great outcomes. And, best of all, this is only the start - we will build on this success, and grow our relationship to be even stronger.”

The EU and India already trade over €180 billion worth of goods and services per year, supporting close to 800,000 EU jobs. This deal is expected to double EU goods exports to India by 2032 by eliminating or reducing tariffs in value of 96.6% of EU goods exports to India. Overall, the tariff reductions will save around €4 billion per year in duties on European products.

This is the most ambitious trade opening that India has ever granted to a trade partner. It will give a significant competitive advantage for key EU industrial and agri-food sectors, granting companies privileged access to the world's most populous country of 1.45 billion people and fastest growing large economy, with an annual GDP of €3.4 trillion.

Opportunities for European businesses of all sizes

India will grant the EU tariff reductions that none of its other trading partners have received. For example, tariffs on cars are gradually going down from 110% to as low as 10%, while they will be fully abolished for car parts after five to ten years. Tariffs ranging up to 44% on machinery, 22% on chemicals and 11% on pharmaceuticals will also be mostly eliminated.

A dedicated chapter will also help small EU businesses take full advantage of the new export opportunities. For instance, both sides will put in place dedicated contact points to provide SMEs with relevant information on the FTA and help them with any specific issue they would face when trying to use the FTA's provisions. In addition to this, SMEs will particularly benefit from the tariff reductions, removal of regulatory barriers, transparency, stability and predictability provided by the Agreement.

Reducing agri-food tariffs

The agreement removes or reduces often prohibitive tariffs (over 36% on average) on EU exports of agri-food products, opening a massive market to European farmers. For example, Indian tariffs on wines will be cut from 150% to 75% at entry into force and eventually to levels as low as 20%, tariffs on olive oil will go down from 45% to 0% over five years, while processed agricultural products such as bread and confectionary will see tariffs of up to 50% eliminated.

Sensitive European agricultural sectors will be fully protected, as products such as beef, chicken meat, rice and sugar are excluded from liberalisation in the agreement. All Indian imports will continue to have to respect the EU's strict health and food safety rules.

In parallel, the EU and India are currently negotiating a separate agreement on Geographical Indications (GIs), which will help traditional iconic EU farming products sell more in India, by removing unfair competition in the form of imitations.

Privileged access to services markets and protected Intellectual Property

The agreement will grant EU companies privileged access to the Indian services market, including key sectors such as financial services and maritime transport. It has the most ambitious commitments on financial services by India in any trade agreement, going beyond what they have given to other partners.

The agreement provides a high level of protection and enforcement of Intellectual Property (IP) rights, including copyright, trademarks, designs, trade secrets and plant variety rights. It builds upon existing international IP treaties and brings Indian and EU intellectual property laws closer. This will make it easier for EU and Indian businesses that rely on IP to trade and invest in each other's markets.

Enhancing sustainability commitments

The agreement has a dedicated trade and sustainable development chapter, which enhances environmental protection and addresses climate change, protects workers' rights, supports women's empowerment, provides for a platform for dialogue and cooperation on trade related environmental and climate issues and ensures effective implementation.

The EU and India will also sign a Memorandum of Understanding that intends to establish an EU-India platform for cooperation and support on climate action. The platform will be launched in the first half of 2026. Furthermore, subject to the EU's budgetary and financial rules and procedures, €500 million in EU support over the next two years is envisaged to help India's efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and accelerate its long-term sustainable industrial transformation.

Next steps

On the EU side, the negotiated draft texts will be published shortly. The texts will go through legal revision and translation into all official EU languages. The Commission will then put forward its proposal to the Council for the signature and conclusion of the agreement. Once adopted by the Council, the EU and India can sign the agreements. Following the signature, the agreement requires the European Parliament's consent, and the Council's decision on conclusion for it to enter into force. Once India also ratifies the Agreement, it can enter into force.

Background

The EU and India had first launched negotiations for a free trade agreement in 2007. The talks were suspended in 2013 and then relaunched in 2022. The 14th and last formal negotiating round took place in October 2025, followed by intersessional discussions at technical and political level.

At the same time as FTA negotiations were relaunched, the EU and India also launched negotiations for a Geographical Indications Agreement and an Investment Protection Agreement. Negotiations for these agreements are still ongoing.
 
No wonder ,this is the least interesting topic for pak and bng posters.They never care for a thread to develop pak or think about it in positive ways.
 
Pak have GSP plus agreement with EU.its for revision in 27, which may attract few more tarrifs.By that time, pak have to correspond their exports in line with strict EU standards. As pak companies are already working on wafer thin margins, pak is set to loose a lot after this FTA.In textiles itself, prediction is for 450 to 900 million usd loss.Pharmaceutical, leather sectors will be effected significantly too.
 
Pak have GSP plus agreement with EU.its for revision in 27, which may attract few more tarrifs.By that time, pak have to correspond their exports in line with strict EU standards. As pak companies are already working on wafer thin margins, pak is set to loose a lot after this FTA.In textiles itself, prediction is for 450 to 900 million usd loss.Pharmaceutical, leather sectors will be effected significantly too.
You're right. Textiles is the main and possibly only real impact at this time. The rest hardly matter.

Pakistan should be fine in the short term. Raised US tariffs on India have meant a real boost to Bangladeshi and Pakistani textile industries which should more than make for the loss of market share in Europe with the 10% tariff differential going away.

If India and the US do finally manage to strike a trade deal, that would be a real blow to the Pakistani textile industry.
 
It won't have a direct impact.

Indirectly it shows the difference between both countries and their outputs.
 
No wonder ,this is the least interesting topic for pak and bng posters.They never care for a thread to develop pak or think about it in positive ways.

India is a far bigger market than Pakistan. If EU countries find it advantageous to do business with India then what difference does it make what Pak or BD posters think? You are taking a silly jingo bingo angle instead of using logic here.
 
If India and the US do finally manage to strike a trade deal, that would be a real blow to the Pakistani textile industry.
Bng has 30B usd textiles imports to Eu.so once the deal in in force, we are posted to capture 5b rt away as infrastructure is much better .political uncertainty is also making the European companies to leave bng.They have adopted bng plus 1 in textiles like China plus 1 in other areas. I read an article about Indian pharmaceutical sector performance in comparison with pak/Turkey in Afghanistan. Article noted mostly afg medical people started suggesting Indian brands as they are much cheaper and effective. Every pak sector is a ticking bomb with this deals as india offers similar stuff with much more reliability and quantity. Even Indian companies can play long term game to incur losses till their competitors are done.
 
Its not just Pakistan, Bangladesh and other South East Asian countries that export cheap labor stuff will be under pressure. India can now compete with all other nations in Textiles, Spices, Engineering goods, Leather, Pharma products....

The deal will not be in effect until Jan, 2027. But from 2027 onwards, India should see billions of dollars of exports to EU. India will also be importing Luxury goods, Beverages, Automobiles....
 
Bng has 30B usd textiles imports to Eu.so once the deal in in force, we are posted to capture 5b rt away as infrastructure is much better .political uncertainty is also making the European companies to leave bng.They have adopted bng plus 1 in textiles like China plus 1 in other areas. I read an article about Indian pharmaceutical sector performance in comparison with pak/Turkey in Afghanistan. Article noted mostly afg medical people started suggesting Indian brands as they are much cheaper and effective. Every pak sector is a ticking bomb with this deals as india offers similar stuff with much more reliability and quantity. Even Indian companies can play long term game to incur losses till their competitors are done.
A quick google search says that BD primary exports are Textiles, Apparel, Footwear, Agri products, Home Textiles, Leather Goods.

Basically India is going to eat most of Bangladesh's lunch soon. :cobra
 
The main aspect of this pact is Indian is continue to buy russian oil, processed in Indian refineries and sell it to EU.... India EU agreement will be benefitted to 2 billion peoples i.e. 1/4 of total world population.

Hats off to Modiji.... India strongly responded to US tarrifs and China's dominance
 
The main aspect of this pact is Indian is continue to buy russian oil, processed in Indian refineries and sell it to EU.... India EU agreement will be benefitted to 2 billion peoples i.e. 1/4 of total world population.

Hats off to Modiji.... India strongly responded to US tarrifs and China's dominance
EU needs energy. The tariffs by Trump is not helping them. India is a reliable supplier of refined Petro products. A win-win for all involved.
 
A quick google search says that BD primary exports are Textiles, Apparel, Footwear, Agri products, Home Textiles, Leather Goods.

Basically India is going to eat most of Bangladesh's lunch soon. :cobra

This has always been the hindutva goal from day one anyway.
 
I am sure both countries economies will collapse as a result and then they will rejoin India to succeed. What do you think? 😃
No ,no we don't want . east and west Pakistan can merge, we can help by sending Muslim from India to Pakistan . :klopp :kp
 
No ,no we don't want . east and west Pakistan can merge, we can help by sending Muslim from India to Pakistan . :klopp :kp

Then you can vacate Bengal and Kashmir occupied by India and that way will be plenty of space for those you want to send over. 😃
 
Then you can vacate Bengal and Kashmir occupied by India and that way will be plenty of space for those you want to send over. 😃
Land belongs to india , people's who want to joined Ummah mulkh they are Free to leave india. :kp
 
You're right. Textiles is the main and possibly only real impact at this time. The rest hardly matter.

Pakistan should be fine in the short term. Raised US tariffs on India have meant a real boost to Bangladeshi and Pakistani textile industries which should more than make for the loss of market share in Europe with the 10% tariff differential going away.

If India and the US do finally manage to strike a trade deal, that would be a real blow to the Pakistani textile industry.
This is inevitable, will probably happen rather sooner than later.
 
I am sure both countries economies will collapse as a result and then they will rejoin India to succeed. What do you think? 😃
Both Pak and BD should rejoin. They already became best buddies ever since Hasina was kicked out. Jamaat are in love with Pakistan. :mv
 
Both Pak and BD should rejoin. They already became best buddies ever since Hasina was kicked out. Jamaat are in love with Pakistan. :mv

They can't.... both of them wants to dominate each other.... take the recent decision on the backing of Pakistan, Banglades boycotted world cup, however Pakistan team booked tickets to play in srilanka
 
Then you can vacate Bengal and Kashmir occupied by India and that way will be plenty of space for those you want to send over. 😃

Us Brits should be fully supporting this initiative. Less Indians in Uk , more in Europe .

Europeans will of course welcome them with open arms
 
It Will directly impact


:klopp :kp
The direct impact of the deal itself isn't too much. The difference in infrastructure and conditions overtime that led to this deal is where the difference has been felt.

It is not as if Pakistan has been pipped to the post at the finishing line here by India, the way that media outlets are sort of showing it.

We are far behind, many years of bad policies and no investment.
 
I am sure both countries economies will collapse as a result and then they will rejoin India to succeed. What do you think? 😃
Won't ever happen.

It is a one way obsession.

Despite India signing a wonderful deal, their eyes are not on how the deal can benefit them, but the impact it will have on their neighbours. Isn't that a bit strange? You can understand the mentality on a defence deal or defence pact. But essentially celebrating selling enough underwear to put a Bangladeshi manufacturer out of business.
 
Wow I've only just looked at how rapidly Indian Rupee has devalued against Euro and Dollar in recent times too.
 
Indian economy is not generating enough jobs for it's working age population. That is the simple reason that exodus of Indians has increased compared to previous decades.

I was just teasing our part time hindutvas. The thought of half a billion extra Muslims in their midst absolutely terrifies them because they have no real faith in their ideology. Which is why 90% of the Modites are admiring him from overseas, because they flee from Shining India at the first opportunity! :runaway:
 
I was just teasing our part time hindutvas. The thought of half a billion extra Muslims in their midst absolutely terrifies them because they have no real faith in their ideology. Which is why 90% of the Modites are admiring him from overseas, because they flee from Shining India at the first opportunity! :runaway:
I have not studied the deal in detail only briefly. While it has advantages and disadvantages I think the overall summary is that EU can sell its good in India which will be advantageous for Indian consumers and EU manufacturers who can buy for example a European car for same price as a Tata now, in return India can offload it's population with less restrictions and in return boast about selling more knickers than Bangladeshis.

Perhaps an oversimplication but not far off. Share prices for many Indian manufacturers tanked after this news. Internally many consumers will prefer reasonably priced western goods to Indian equivalent.
 
Wow I've only just looked at how rapidly Indian Rupee has devalued against Euro and Dollar in recent times too.
It's painful in certain ways - imported good costs, petrol at the pump costs etc. but actually very good for India right now.

Between the 10% tariff reduction and the roughly 10% currency depreciation, if Indian textile and other similar competitive sector manufacturers don't drop prices by at least 15% to win marketshare and aren't already investing in capacity to deliver, they're idiots and don't deserve to benefit from the trade deal.
 
Us Brits should be fully supporting this initiative. Less Indians in Uk , more in Europe .

Europeans will of course welcome them with open arms
Indian migrants are a big asset in the UK. Far right and our petty squabbles have divided even us immigrants sons of immigrants. But overall Indians bring a lot to the UK and add tremendous values to our industries. I'm sure it will be the same across EU.
 
Pak have GSP plus agreement with EU.its for revision in 27, which may attract few more tarrifs.By that time, pak have to correspond their exports in line with strict EU standards. As pak companies are already working on wafer thin margins, pak is set to loose a lot after this FTA.In textiles itself, prediction is for 450 to 900 million usd loss.Pharmaceutical, leather sectors will be effected significantly too.
Again, not sure about the impact of the deal, and while Pakistani textiles perform relatively well against other industries in Pakistan, it still lags significantly behind other countries in terms of technological innovations. We do not have many really skilled technocrats in this area. These are the types of things that need to be covered to make industries more profitable.
 
Indian migrants are a big asset in the UK. Far right and our petty squabbles have divided even us immigrants sons of immigrants. But overall Indians bring a lot to the UK and add tremendous values to our industries. I'm sure it will be the same across EU.

Do you believe Pakistani migrants are an asset to the UK?
 
Indian migrants are a big asset in the UK. Far right and our petty squabbles have divided even us immigrants sons of immigrants. But overall Indians bring a lot to the UK and add tremendous values to our industries. I'm sure it will be the same across EU.

It was probably true 15-20 years ago. Not sure about now. :inti

Modern day Indians do not have the same quality and values as their previous generations.

Here in Canada, many Indians are involved in unethical and illegal activities. I am not sure how it is in UK.
 
Do you believe Pakistani migrants are an asset to the UK?
In most cases yes. We have contributed a lot to this country, in various capacity. Could we be doing better? Yes of course, if avenues existed for higher skilled migrants to travel here then it would lift us as a collective when it comes to measurement of outputs. Still, I think we have done well overall.

Unfortunately we are pulled down a bit recently by the fake asylum seekers.
 
In most cases yes. We have contributed a lot to this country, in various capacity. Could we be doing better? Yes of course, if avenues existed for higher skilled migrants to travel here then it would lift us as a collective when it comes to measurement of outputs. Still, I think we have done well overall.

Unfortunately we are pulled down a bit recently by the fake asylum seekers.

Here's the deal. When our esteemed Indian posters can share your generous assessment, perhaps I will look again at how the Brits view Indian migrants.
 
I have not studied the deal in detail only briefly. While it has advantages and disadvantages I think the overall summary is that EU can sell its good in India which will be advantageous for Indian consumers and EU manufacturers who can buy for example a European car for same price as a Tata now, in return India can offload it's population with less restrictions and in return boast about selling more knickers than Bangladeshis.

Perhaps an oversimplication but not far off. Share prices for many Indian manufacturers tanked after this news. Internally many consumers will prefer reasonably priced western goods to Indian equivalent.
Given the urgency to make a deal both to mitigate the impact of American craziness as well as make a point to Trump, both sides have compromised.

For India, it's mainly high-end cars (a very small segment of car purchases in the Indian market) that are impacted. Europeans don't even make the under $10K cars that comprise up to 70% of the Indian car market and anyway, the reduced tariffs have an annual cap. Also the kind of wine, beer and liquor that Europe hopes to sell in India is still a tiny upscale market. Agriculture remains protected

Europe doesn't give up much in the short term either. Yes the duties on textiles drop but they were importing at 0 duty from countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh anyway. Similarly with other stuff like leather, sports good etc.

Both countries are essentially taking a bet on the future.

Europe that the Indian market rapidly moves up the value chain like China has done since 2010 and becomes a big market for luxury cars, watches, wines etc.

India that it's manufacturers can scale up to take market share and start getting into sectors that China dominates by taking advantage of zero duties.
 
The deal is a nothingburger.

Just manufactured for one day's worth of PR for Narendra ahead of Republic Day.

Pakistan or anybody else don't have much to see in this. Move on.
 
Dear Friends in Pakistan,

Jokes aside, I would like to convey Modi government’s official philosophy and message to the entire neighbourhood - AS WE GROW, YOU WILL ALSO GROW WITH US.

There maybe short term hiccups but what India is doing right now will in the long run pull the entire neighbourhood to the path of progress.

Do not resent us.
Hold our hand and move along with us dear.
 
The deal is a nothingburger.

Just manufactured for one day's worth of PR for Narendra ahead of Republic Day.

Pakistan or anybody else don't have much to see in this. Move on.
Nah it's okay. About as good as we can get under the circumstances. We need jobs however low level and this deal if played right could create a few million.

Whether we move up in the value chain... that's a different matter and nothing to do with an FTA. We've got to figure that s..t out for ourselves. Bunch of countries who have a near FTA for ages i.e zero import duties like Pakistan and Bangladesh since we're in that thread never managed it. Others who had like Vietnam did.
 
Nah it's okay. About as good as we can get under the circumstances. We need jobs however low level and this deal if played right could create a few million.

These couple of sentences from you are a very balanced take. But tell me, is that what we saw on the news yesterday? They portrayed it like the PM was Brahma, Allah and Jesus rolled into one.
 
These couple of sentences from you are a very balanced take. But tell me, is that what we saw on the news yesterday? They portrayed it like the PM was Brahma, Allah and Jesus rolled into one.
Well if you're going to ask me about coverage... I've given up on that stuff ages ago. Except for a couple of niche independent outlets, India doesn't have much of a free press any more. Not many countries do to be honest especially in the developing world.

The thing I take solace in is that while we have a power hungry near fascist government and prime minister in charge, we don't have an utterly incompetent one. That combination is usually the curse of developing countries. Look at all of Africa and our own neighbours.

For the last 20 years, India's either had a bumbling but not fascist government during the Manmohan days or a reasonably competent but fascist one under Modi.

That's the curse of living in a democracy. Best of all the terrible choices as the cliche goes.
 
Won't ever happen.

It is a one way obsession.

Despite India signing a wonderful deal, their eyes are not on how the deal can benefit them, but the impact it will have on their neighbours. Isn't that a bit strange? You can understand the mentality on a defence deal or defence pact. But essentially celebrating selling enough underwear to put a Bangladeshi manufacturer out of business.
Take a look at the OP, pretty sure dude is a Pakistani. Also, why would discussing the potential economic impact on the surrounding neighborhood be an issue, especially given the overlap in our markets? Deals of this scale routinely involve multiple layers of feasibility and impact analysis, geopolitical, socioeconomic, environmental, and more. That’s precisely why negotiations of this magnitude often take years.

Tum nhi samjhoge, agar tumne yeh sari analysis kiye hote toh CPEC aaj bhi zinda hota.
 
Wow I've only just looked at how rapidly Indian Rupee has devalued against Euro and Dollar in recent times too.

The market looks very overvalued. Foreign investors are pulling back because the risk–reward ratio is unfavourable, which is weakening the INR. It feels like the market has already priced in 20 years of smooth growth. But strong retail participation is keeping it afloat. Ten years ago this wasnt the case, but now almost everyone with an income is investing in SIPs or buying shares without much understanding. Fund managers meanwhile have little choice but to keep buying as fresh money continues to flow in.

On topic, as for the Pakistan textile industry, it has survived tougher situations and will likely manage this one too, which I hope it does because it supports so many people struggling to survive.. Bangladesh may feel the impact more sharply, and I hope it serves as a reminder that if you bite the hand that feeds and protects you, you will eventually suffer the consequences.
 
The market looks very overvalued. Foreign investors are pulling back because the risk–reward ratio is unfavourable, which is weakening the INR. It feels like the market has already priced in 20 years of smooth growth. But strong retail participation is keeping it afloat. Ten years ago this wasnt the case, but now almost everyone with an income is investing in SIPs or buying shares without much understanding. Fund managers meanwhile have little choice but to keep buying as fresh money continues to flow in.

On topic, as for the Pakistan textile industry, it has survived tougher situations and will likely manage this one too, which I hope it does because it supports so many people struggling to survive.. Bangladesh may feel the impact more sharply, and I hope it serves as a reminder that if you bite the hand that feeds and protects you, you will eventually suffer the consequences.
Pakistan has donkeys running the show led by a narcissist who is under the orders of a white house orangutan...

The nation will perpetually be on its knees... Fed lies like it's gospel truth and masses who don't want to put the effort in and are happy with the status quo
 
The market looks very overvalued. Foreign investors are pulling back because the risk–reward ratio is unfavourable, which is weakening the INR.
I read even reserve bank is aggressively selling of the usd reserves to attain gold reserves amid global uncertainty and tariff stress.

 
Good thing for india is , we excluded the agricultural, dairy products or any such products that can hurt indian farmer , this was the main problem why this deal not finalized earlier.

Hats off to indian leadership to negotiate this deal without impacting our farmer.

:kp
 
Indian textile imports will go up substantially and it will eat up some one else’s share
 
The market looks very overvalued. Foreign investors are pulling back because the risk–reward ratio is unfavourable, which is weakening the INR. It feels like the market has already priced in 20 years of smooth growth. But strong retail participation is keeping it afloat. Ten years ago this wasnt the case, but now almost everyone with an income is investing in SIPs or buying shares without much understanding. Fund managers meanwhile have little choice but to keep buying as fresh money continues to flow in.

On topic, as for the Pakistan textile industry, it has survived tougher situations and will likely manage this one too, which I hope it does because it supports so many people struggling to survive.. Bangladesh may feel the impact more sharply, and I hope it serves as a reminder that if you bite the hand that feeds and protects you, you will eventually suffer the consequences.
Textile industry is in need of modernisation in Pakistan. I don't think Bangladesh relationship with India influenced signing of deal, nor was India a hand that fed them.
 
Pakistan has donkeys running the show led by a narcissist who is under the orders of a white house orangutan...

The nation will perpetually be on its knees... Fed lies like it's gospel truth and masses who don't want to put the effort in and are happy with the status quo

Sad state of affairs. That confirmed copper and gold mine alone is enough to support Pakistan’s economic recovery provided all of it reaches the government’s coffers, but thats unlikely.

Can’t blame the people too much, it’s not easy to start a rebellion against a systemic force that occupies literally every pillar of the state. It would probably take a movement on the scale of the Independence struggle (or a ‘chief’ who realises what’s being done is wrong).
 
I read even reserve bank is aggressively selling of the usd reserves to attain gold reserves amid global uncertainty and tariff stress.

Yep India is sending a message of sorts to them and is trying to support the rupee too. They received the message which might be why Sergio Gor met with the RBI Governor.
 
Textile industry is in need of modernisation in Pakistan. I don't think Bangladesh relationship with India influenced signing of deal, nor was India a hand that fed them.

Well we created them. And the bitterness of Bangladeshis towards India didn’t begin yesterday. It has been building for years, as Maududian Islamic fundamentalism gained influence there. India has always supported Bangladesh like an elder brother. We have offered diplomatic backing, financial assistance, trade concessions etc and played a huge role in managing their energy crisis. Even in cricket it was India that strongly argued for granting them test status. So yes we are a hand that has been feeding them.


But these are people who destroyed the statue of the father of their nation. That tells a lot about their state of mind. Absolutely no sympathy for them.
 
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Yep India is sending a message of sorts to them and is trying to support the rupee too. They received the message which might be why Sergio Gor met with the RBI Governor.
I see the meeting is specifically for the members participating in rare earth minerals supply chain.It seems China has already brought gold reserves as india did.Eu may do it now .
 
Look at the faces of the two white Brits in the bottom corners of the youtube screen and you can see just how welcome Indians are in Britain.
 
Look at the faces of the two white Brits in the bottom corners of the youtube screen and you can see just how welcome Indians are in Britain.

I doubt eastern Europe and countries like Italy would allow Indians to take over.

Only some western countries may allow it because they are too politically correct. Even then, I am seeing pushbacks from common people in recent times.
 
Sad state of affairs. That confirmed copper and gold mine alone is enough to support Pakistan’s economic recovery provided all of it reaches the government’s coffers, but thats unlikely.

Can’t blame the people too much, it’s not easy to start a rebellion against a systemic force that occupies literally every pillar of the state. It would probably take a movement on the scale of the Independence struggle (or a ‘chief’ who realises what’s being done is wrong).
It will take an impossible herculean effect… way way outside this nations remit, just not possible whatsoever.

The sad thing is the chain is so polluted and rotten at the top, their cronies and lackeys will never ever want change. If their ever was a poster child for pulling the ladder up, its current day Pakistan, started by that hypocrite abomination Zia…

The death of Jinnah happened at the worst possible moment and the rats took their opportunity..

To succeed in Pakistan, leave your morals, scruples, dignity and integrity behind. The nation has very bright people and are humble and hardworking, but the country’s spirit is on IMF ventilation and unfortunately i cant see it ever being weaned of it.. who will buy the next avenfeld flats and Mayfair townhouses..
 
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