With Pakistan being in my blood, I would certainly look at opportunities to travel there.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I need a break. I've been working for about a year and a half. I think I'd like to go to Pakistan.
I don't want to be a propagandist or say that Pakistan is just great. There are problems, but it is a much more complex place than we are given to believe.
I want to be the first Pakistani, like some of our counterparts in India, to really go out and show that we Pakistanis can even be successful outside Pakistan.
Pakistan needs to have decentralisation and a good local government system.
Like many of my friends in the Pakistani diaspora - and many of my friends in Pakistan itself, for that matter - I have sometimes looked at the country of my birth and wondered whether its future will be one of steady and sad decline.
I seek to lead a democratic Pakistan which is free from the yoke of military dictatorship and that will cease to be a haven, the very petri dish of international terrorism.
You must keep in mind that Pakistan has suffered the aftermaths of the Cold War, and that Cold War had left deep imprints on our society. We were the worst sufferers from the ills of the Afghan war.
I hope that one day when I'll go back to Pakistan, I will build a university like Harvard.
On the international political landscape, there is better understanding of Pakistan's political economic and strategic issues. We aspire to promote peace and harmony with the region.
If I was in a refugee camp somewhere on the Pakistani border, of course I'd want to come to Australia.