The New Islamabad international airport’s ultimate capacity is about _________ passengers per annum.
A. 21 million
B. 22 million
C. 25 million
D. 30 million
A. 21 million
B. 22 million
C. 25 million
D. 30 million
Nawab Akbar Bugti was Assassinated on?
A. 26 Aug 2006
B. 27 Dec 2007
C. 28 Oct 2008
D. 1st aug 2009
National fruit of Pakistan in winter is ___________.
A. Orange
B. Banana
C. Guava
D. Strawberry
Who was the first democratic President to complete his 5 years tenure?
A. Nawaz Sharif
B. Asif Ali Zardari
C. Pervaiz Musharraf
D. Liaquat Ali Khan
A. Peshawar with chitral
B. Upper swat with lower swat
C. Bannu with Afghanistan
D. Gilgit with Kashgar
A. Sindh
B. KPK
C. Punjab
D. Balochistan
A. 22
B. 24
C. 16
D. 26
Muhi-ud-Din Muhammad (3 November 1618 – 3 March 1707), commonly known by the sobriquet Aurangzeb (Persian: “Ornament of the Throne”) or by his regnal title Alamgir (Persian: “Conqueror of the World”), was the sixth Mughal emperor, who ruled over almost the entire Indian subcontinent for a period of 49 years. Widely considered to be the last effective ruler of the Mughal Empire, Aurangzeb compiled the Fatawa-e-Alamgiri, and was among the few monarchs to have fully established Sharia law and Islamic economics throughout the Indian subcontinent. He was an accomplished military leader whose rule has been the subject of praise, though he has also been described as the most controversial ruler in Indian history.
The Indologist Stanley Wolpert, emeritus professor at UCLA, says that:
the conquest of the Deccan, to which Aurangzeb devoted the last 26 years of his life, was in many ways a Pyrrhic victory, costing an estimated hundred thousand lives a year during its last decade of futile chess game warfare. The expense in gold and rupees can hardly be accurately estimated. Aurangzeb’s encampment was like a moving capital – a city of tents 30 miles in circumference, with some 250 bazaars, with a 1⁄2 million camp followers, 50,000 camels and 30,000 elephants, all of whom had to be fed, stripped the Deccan of any and all of its surplus grain and wealth … Not only famine but bubonic plague arose … Even Aurangzeb, had ceased to understand the purpose of it all by the time he was nearing 90 … “I came alone and I go as a stranger. I do not know who I am, nor what I have been doing,” the dying old man confessed to his son, Azam, in February 1707.