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The King- Malik Riaz lounged

(23 posts)
  1. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    Yesterday Geo and Jang started something,
    News were publish in Jang , Interview on Geo, Interview on CNN with advertisement at Jang.
    See what he said.
    Malik Riaz Hussain, a billionaire Pakistani developer, has responded to the misery of millions of his flood-stricken compatriots by pledging to spend 75 per cent of his fortune on rebuilding their lives.

    The extraordinary offer was made in a television interview in which he told how he had sent a letter before the floods to 100 of Pakistan’s most wealthy and powerful people asking them to pool money into a fund to repair homes, provide vocational training and extend microfinance loans to impoverished Pakistanis.

    Mr Hussain is the chairman of Bahria Town, a US$6 billion (Dh22bn) urban development enterprise that has built gated communities for a million people in the central cities of Lahore and Rawalpindi.

    Bahria Town has already responded to the current floods by vastly expanding a corporate social responsibility programme called dastarkhwan, or dining spread, to provide two meals a day to more than 150,000 flood refugees in inundated areas and free medical care at mobile hospitals.

    Its housing projects, unrivalled in Pakistan as models of highly desirable but affordable suburban living, have revolutionised Pakistan’s real-estate sector over the last decade by targeting the previously untapped middle class, rather than the rich.

    The huge popularity of the Bahria Town brand has made Mr Hussain, at the age of 62, one of a handful of Pakistanis believed to be billionaires in US dollar terms, although this cannot be verified as he has never released his tax records.

    A man of unremarkable origins, Mr Hussain espouses traditional family values, and has expressed them in the modern family-friendly suburbs he has built.

    Reproductions of famous landmarks, such as London’s Trafalgar Square, the Eiffel Tower and the Statue of Liberty, point to his aspirations for Pakistan, while beautiful mosques and Quranic calligraphy suggest that modernity is in harmony with Muslim beliefs.

    Drawing on that experience, and with a fleet of 2,500 earth-moving machines, Mr Hussain sees the reconstruction of the almost one million homes destroyed or damaged in the floods as a matter of numbers.

    Nearly all the destroyed homes have been simple two-room mud-brick constructs belonging to the poor that, by his reckoning, would cost 300,000 rupees each to rebuild, with enough left over to buy a few head of livestock.

    “That’s all it will take to give them back their lives,” he said.

    Mr Hussain quickly calculates aloud the maths and remarks that the requisite $3.5bn could easily be raised if Pakistan’s wealthy elite, named in his list of letter recipients, were to match his pledge of donating 75 per cent of his wealth with half of their personal fortunes.

    However, his letter was not written as a desperate appeal to their better nature.

    Rather, it issues a stern warning that the floods could exacerbate social tensions between Pakistan’s moneyed elite, a tiny percentage of the country’s 170 million people, and the impoverished half of the population that the United Nations said did not know where their next meal was coming from.

    In the letter, Mr Hussain said the ostentatious lifestyles of Pakistan’s wealthy and their indifference to the plight of the poor were disturbingly reminiscent of social conditions before the French and Iranian revolutions, which occurred nearly 200 years apart.

    “It is time that we realise our duty towards Pakistan. If we are unable to see the imminent consequences of our continued ignorance, I am scared that not only our families, but also our businesses, will fuel a bloody revolution,” Mr Hussain wrote.

    “This is a clear warning to land barons, politicians, bureaucrats and industrialists to shed their sloth and wake up before all is lost, and there is no place to hide.”

    Mr Hussain is not a conspiracy theorist; his prediction is based on his experience of housing orphan students from the Jamia Hafsa seminary in Islamabad, the setting in July 2007 for a bloody stand-off between security forces and militant clerics that ended in the deaths of more than 100 people.

    The deaths of the students, many of them children from the Swat valley, caused nationwide outrage, decisively turned public opinion against Gen Pervez Musharraf, then the president, and ignited a Taliban insurgency that, until the success of military counteroffensives last year, threatened to overwhelm the government.

    Mr Hussain says he has been deeply disappointed that his letter has failed to evince a single response to date, and is unhappy that his offer to place the Bahria Town fleet of earth-moving machinery at the government’s disposal has been ignored. “I have stepped in to help my people, but I cannot do this alone,” he said

    But he is not a man accustomed to taking no for an answer, and has vowed to lobby those who have been sent the letter.

    “At this time, what I need is support from fellow Pakistanis who, like me, have earned a fortune from the motherland and are indebted to it,” he said.

    “Trust me, it’s time to pay back to our country.”

    Sources

    http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs....708219908/1135

    http://lalqila.wordpress.com/2010/08...y-pledging-to/

    Posted 1 year ago on 28 Aug 2010 8:16 #
  2. I find this story extremely repulsive. If it wasn't for über-crooks like Malik Riaz, our country would be a dreamland.

    Posted 1 year ago on 29 Aug 2010 10:25 #
  3. Incidentally, Malik Riaz is an interesting character himself. He arrived in Pindi from Sialkot in 1970s as an uneducated poor person and was known only as Riaz Hussain at the time. He became rich and Malik simultaneously. He initially tried his luck as small time contractor. His luck changed when he became a military stores supplier (no surprise). There he got cozy with the corrupt military men. This led to the start of Bahria Town for which the very "honest" Admiral Mansoor ul Haq allowed the use of Bahria name.

    His initial land grab was mostly on shamilat and Punjab govt land. Later on as Bahria town expanded, he recruited a force of "ghundas" from Punjab (most of who are proclaimed offenders having committed many murders) and started grabbing land of those people who refused to sell to his agents at low prices. His ghundas are known too have committed several murders in the area.

    Malik Riaz was very close to Musharraf and also financed Shoukat Asia’s bye-election campaign from Attock. Now he is buddy-buddy with zardari and he was the one in Nawaz-Zardari meeting in august who suggested that zardari would take oath on Quran. These days many people go through him if they need any favor from zardari.

    Malik Riaz was also dead against restoration of judiciary. The reason is that during mush regime, he wanted to develop a sector of Bahria town in Haripur across Margalla hills and suggested construction of tunnel in Margalla hills to connect that sector with Islamabad. Mush had approved that project but Supreme Court stopped it on the grounds that Margalla Hills area is a protected national park. Since then he is always speaking against the Supreme Court judges and it is said that he was one of those advising zardari against restoring independent judges.

    http://pkpolitics.com/discuss/topic/malik-bari-arrested#post-89935

    Posted 1 year ago on 29 Aug 2010 11:02 #
  4. d0ct0r
    Member

    He is thinking just like all opportunist builders/land developers think,he sees an opportunity to make billions in post flooding redevelopment,all those flood victims are basically walking chicken nuggets for him whom he can savor.

    Posted 1 year ago on 29 Aug 2010 12:35 #
  5. khanseena1
    Member

    Who cares how he made his money as long as he gives it back to the people (All of it).

    Posted 1 year ago on 29 Aug 2010 23:45 #
  6. @khanseena1
    Thank you for providing us with a shining example of moral corruptness -- yourself! ;-)

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Aug 2010 0:01 #
  7. khanseena1
    Member

    @Nota

    Try explaining your position to the starving masses at this moment. At this junction all aid/money is welcome.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Aug 2010 0:20 #
  8. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    75% will be like N$'s Rs 5000 per year income tax. Real all will be never known.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Aug 2010 0:51 #
  9. Anwer Kamal has nothing to discuss on a political site. That is why he keeps on posting issues about non political criminals like Malik Bari or Malik Riaz.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Aug 2010 11:18 #
  10. Dusky
    Member

    So who died and make him the king?

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Aug 2010 21:12 #
  11. @Dusky
    "So who died and make him the king? "
    Many, literally!!! (see semirza's comment above)

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Aug 2010 21:34 #
  12. aftab arif
    Member

    What if he has turned a leaf and genuinely wants to do something good for the affectees....

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Aug 2010 22:06 #
  13. Dusky
    Member

    @aftab
    Once a crook always a crook... these guys does not turn a leaf unless personal benefit is guarantee.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Aug 2010 2:35 #
  14. d0ct0r
    Member

    Zardari vows to convert disaster to opportunity

    * President says determined to re-build entire damaged infrastructure

    http://tinyurl.com/2wh8qna

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Aug 2010 23:17 #
  15. shirazi
    Member

    Malik Sb. must have read somewhere that Bill Gates and Warren Buffet contacted fellow billionaire club and contribute to charity. He must have thought this is the shortcut to beef up his public profile. I will be very surprised if he contributes 5%. Well his biggest charity 'd be to stop land grabbing activities.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Aug 2010 23:59 #
  16. @dOctOr
    "Zardari vows to convert disaster to opportunity"
    Stating the obvious...and the very thing the wanna-be-aid-givers are afraid of.

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Sep 2010 0:34 #
  17. Anwer Kamal
    Member

  18. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    Malik Riaz - if he do it, he may be forgiven for all his SINS

    Posted 1 year ago on 04 Sep 2010 22:58 #
  19. Nou so choohey kha key billi hajj ko chali. Haram mal(land grabbing)and khairat are like water and oil, they do not mix!Zameer frosh qabza mafia Allah ko bhi dhoka daingey...ridiculous!

    I wonder why Malik Riaz is being glorified when so much negative has been posted about him on this thread.

    Posted 1 year ago on 05 Sep 2010 0:00 #
  20. Anwer Kamal
    Member

  21. naseemkhanan
    Member

    Anwar Kamal Sahab. Kiya aap Malik Riaz key mulazim hain jo us ki itni publicity kr rehay hain.
    Pindi key station supply depot ka aik mamooli thekey dar hai aaj ka Malik Riaz. Zarur dal main sub hi kuch kala hai.

    Posted 1 year ago on 05 Sep 2010 1:36 #
  22. I have noticed that Mr Anwer kamal brings these unknown corrupt people on this platform to glorify them.
    I have a suggestion.... I have a group of friends, family and colleagues working in northern areas. We are short of supplies. Mr Anwe can keep all his money to himself but can he arrange to built one hospital for charity. We will provide land and men power .. Cmon.. tell your boss to be a man and stick up for his CLAIM .... lol

    I have seen a lot of people pledging money/support and then later.... You can't see them (they mark your phone as "DNA" Do not attend" in their mobile phone contacts directory ;-)

    Posted 1 year ago on 05 Sep 2010 1:54 #

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