- Ensuring equitable access to healthcare services.
- Building political consensus.
- Managing foreign relations.
- Amending the constitution.
Author: ETEA MCQS.COM
No category found.
- A consistently high voter turnout.
- The weakness of political institutions and frequent interruptions by non-democratic forces.
- A lack of political parties.
- The absence of a written constitution.
- United Nations level.
- Federal level only.
- Provincial level.
- OIC level.
- Lahore Resolution.
- Mountbatten Plan.
- Nehru Report.
- First World War.
- Was the first time any Indian ruler fought the British.
- Represented a large-scale, multi-regional uprising against the authority of the British East India Company.
- Was a completely successful endeavor.
- Was led by the Indian National Congress.
- To make laws.
- To implement and enforce laws.
- To interpret laws.
- To amend the constitution.
- Article 5
- Article 2A
- Article 140
- Article 245
- The personal interests of the diplomats.
- The goals and ambitions of a country in its relations with other nations, focusing on security and prosperity.
- The demands of international organizations like the UN.
- The desire for cultural isolation.
- Head of State.
- Head of Government.
- Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.
- Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
- Was a direct, multi-party democratic system.
- Lacked genuine universal suffrage and was seen as an indirect system to control political outcomes.
- Gave too much power to the provinces.
- Was based on the British parliamentary model.
- Call law enforcement to force vaccination.
- Engage with community elders and religious leaders to build trust, reflecting an understanding of Pakistan's social structures.
- Give up and declare the community unreachable.
- Debate loudly with the most vocal opponents to prove them wrong.
- The Kashmir dispute.
- The challenge of environmental degradation and climate change.
- The structure of the federal government.
- Pakistan's foreign policy with Afghanistan.
- National uniformity, insisting on using only Urdu.
- Cultural competency, respecting the linguistic and social diversity that characterizes Pakistan.
- Ignoring family beliefs as they are unscientific.
- Referring the patient to a clinic in another part of the city.
- Foreign policy with Iran.
- Constitutional law.
- The failure to implement SDGs related to health and well-being (SDG 3).
- Civil-military relations.
- The process for amending the constitution.
- The dynamics of civil-military cooperation in national emergencies.
- Pakistan's role in SAARC.
- The history of the Lahore Resolution.
- Isolate Pakistan from its neighbors.
- Enhance regional connectivity, improve infrastructure, and boost Pakistan's economy.
- Focus solely on military cooperation between the two countries.
- Promote cultural exchange programs.
- Personal financial success.
- National cohesion, belief in the country's foundations, and an orderly approach to progress.
- Military expansionism.
- Political rivalry and opposition.
- The success of the federal system.
- Geographical separation between the two wings and issues of political and economic disparity.
- The absence of a strong military.
- The weakness of the 1973 constitution.
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