White House shuts down petition to declare Pakistan as terror sponsor

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White House shuts down petition to declare Pakistan as terror sponsor
A general view of the North Lawn of the White House in Washington (Reuters)

Washington - The White House's 'We the People' web page declared the petition as "closed".

By PTI/Web Report

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Published: Tue 4 Oct 2016, 11:57 AM

Last updated: Tue 4 Oct 2016, 8:00 PM

The White House has shut down an online petition seeking to designate Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism.
Declaring the petition as "closed", the White House's 'We the People' web page stated on Monday, "This petition has been archived because it did not meet the signature requirements. It can no longer be signed."


 
The petition was created on September 21 by a person who identified himself by initials RG and the petition needed 1,00,000 signatures in 30 days to get a response from the White House.
Supporters of the "We the People ask the Administration to declare Pakistan, State Sponsor of Terrorism" petition had set a goal of one million signatures. "We will not stop until we get 1000,000 signatures," wrote Anju Preet, a scientist at Georgetown University who is associated with the petition on her Facebook Page.
"Its time to act now...let us all join hands in signing the petition with White House. Tag at least 10 of your friends and family if you feel your money should be used for welfare and not terrorism," she said.
The petition comes after Congressman Ted Poe, Chairman of the House Subcommittee on Terrorism, along with Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, introduced H R 6069, the Pakistan State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation Act in the House of Representatives.
"This petition is important to the people of United State of America, India and many other countries which are continuously affected by Pakistan sponsored terrorism," says the petition, created by RG.
An initiative of the US President Barack Obama, "We the People" online petition at the White House website provides a window to American citizens to campaign before the administration on a particular issue.


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