Pakistan's Rukhsana and India's Dardana now need Rehman Baloch (Dakit). Women who are deeply in love with Rehman Baloch and have put their fingers in their mouths, if they see our Faheem Farooqi,
they will faint.
Now that Rehman is being talked about so much, I thought why not tell you the story of Faheem.
A handsome and innocent-looking young man from a well-educated family, a resident of Malir area of Karachi. He was the uncrowned king of the world of terror.
It is said that Mrs. Benazir Sahiba canceled her visit to Karachi four times due to fear of Faheem, even though she was the Prime Minister at that time.
It is also said that the police once released this educated and intelligent young man from custody only because he looked very handsome and innocent.
Fahim was still a small child when, at the behest of some specific people, he pelted stones at a 'bus'. This was the
beginning that pushed Fahim into darkness.
Later, he joined a wing and his first shooting was on the occasion of the birthday of the founder of MQM, for which he later had to face a lot of scolding, but Fahim had come a long way. He met some people whose names were known in the world of crime.
The police were looking for Fahim while the Muttahida had divided into two factions. Then one day
Muzammil, Fahim Farooqi's elder brother, calls Fahim and says. "Enough is enough, now come back and live a normal life." And Fahim agrees to this. He wanted to say goodbye to the world of crime, but the story takes a turn. At the hotel where Muzammil Farooqi was present, a person from MQM Haqiqi informs the police and the police arrive there. The police ask for Fahim's address while abusing Muzammil. Muzammil Farooqi advises the policeman to speak with discretion, but the matter goes too far until the police shoot Muzammil and martyr him.
And from here begins the history of Fahim Farooqi becoming Fahim Commando.
It is said that after this incident, Fahim could not sleep until he had beheaded a policeman. That innocent-looking man was the murderer of more than a hundred people. He was so terrified that in the 1990s, the price of his head was one crore rupees.
During this time, Fahim fell in love, but unfortunately for Fahim, the girl he fell in love with was a police facilitator. And for this girl, Fahim separated from the Muttahida but did not shoot his beloved.
There is an immense pain in my heart. I am singing lullabies but I am not sleeping. Think how painful this is. We are dying and no one is crying.
However, after losing his two brothers, Fahim was taken into police custody and was extrajudicially murdered. When he was shot, he was in handcuffs.
In his last moments, Fahim Farooqi tells Police Officer Rao Anwar, "I know my last time has come. Do not shoot from behind, shoot from the front."
It is said that when Fahim was given a bath, Edhi Sahib sobbed and cried because even during the bath, he had handcuffs on his hands and Edhi Sahib kept pleading that the handcuffs be removed so that some of the duties of the bath would remain, but Fahim's opponents were at their wit's end at that time, and their joy had no place to be.
Fahim Farooqi's death was a death over which MQM-e-Haqiqi's chief Afaq Ahmed also cried.
I find a strange attraction in this person who left this mortal world before my birth. Seeing Fahim Farooqi, I think, he was a very useful person, he should not have died like this. How could this petty politics have eaten our young diamond? When I first saw Fahim, I felt a strange pain in my heart, how could this innocent and educated-looking person be so dangerous? But then I saw that every oppressor has a story of his own in which he was the oppressed. Perhaps if Muzamil had not been killed, Fahim Farooqi would not have become Fahim Commando. However, it is sad that our young men were used mercilessly and no one even laid a hand on them.
May Allah grant Fahim's parents, if they are alive, great patience. Those who sacrificed their three children for this soil. May Allah make it easy for us.
May Allah Almighty forgive all those who were killed unjustly, whether civilians or those in uniform.
Rabia Irfan

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