
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Pak system neither presidential nor parliamentary: PM

Wednesday, July 8, 2009
SC verdict: govt in daze to fill Rs122bn gap
suspends carbon surcharge
Friday, June 19, 2009
Congress sends $106 billion war-spending bill to Obama
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The Senate voted 91-5 for compromise legislation that cleared the House of Representatives by a 226-202 margin on Tuesday.
The measure will fund US efforts in both conflicts until fiscal year 2010 begins on October 1, at a time when Obama has charted a course for withdrawal from Iraq and an escalation in Afghanistan.
The new president has vowed to end the practice of using emergency spending bills to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and instead fund US efforts there in the regular yearly appropriations process.
Among other budget items, the measure provides 79.9 billion dollars for Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as 7.7 billion dollars to combat the A(H1N1) flu virus.
The bill also includes eight billion dollars for the International Monetary Fund and a 100-billion-dollar US line of credit for the IMF to help developing countries combat the impact of the global recession.
And it comprises 400 million dollars to help build up the Pakistani security forces' ability to wage counterinsurgency warfare at a time when US lawmakers worry about the nuclear-armed ally's stability.
The measure includes one billion dollars to foster economic development and democratic governance in Afghanistan and 433 million for US diplomatic operations and facilities there.
For Pakistan, the bill includes 707 million dollars for boosting agriculture and food security, assist displaced residents, boost democratic governance, and improve education.
Another 900 million dollars would go to building a new secure US embassy and consulates in Pakistan, and 700 million more dollars for counterinsurgency funding starting September 30.
For Iraq, the bill includes 472 million dollars to continue stabilization programs, and strengthen governance and rule of law; and 486 million for diplomatic operations.
The legislation also calls on Obama to submit periodic reports detailing the progress achieved by his new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The bill does not include the 80 million dollars Obama had sought to close the Guantanamo Bay detention facility for suspected terrorists.
The measure includes 660 million dollars in economic, humanitarian and security assistance for the West Bank and Gaza; 300 million dollars for Jordan, 310 million for Egypt, and 69 million dollars for Lebanon.
It includes 555 million dollars of Obama's 2.775 billion dollar request for security aid to Israel.
The bill provides one billion dollars for the so-called "cash for clunkers" program to stimulate the struggling auto industry, paying car buyers cash if they trade in their old gas-guzzling cars for newer more fuel-efficient models.
Carbon tax on CNG withdrawn
The prime minister made this highly popular announcement while speaking in the ongoing budget session of the National Assembly. “I have directed the Finance Ministry to withdraw the carbon tax on CNG worth Rs 12 billion and also directed a review of the overall proposed carbon tax and come up with a transparent mechanism,” he said.
The proposed carbon tax has been castigated both by the opposition and the treasury back-benchers with the Leader of the Opposition, Chaudhry Nisar, terming it a “Jagga tax” the other day. Similar harsh reactions were also witnessed in the Senate.
Senator Mian Raza Rabbani, while taking part in the budget discussion in the Senate, had also proposed abolishing the carbon tax on CNG at least. In his policy statement in the National Assembly, Gilani said CNG was being produced locally, was environment-friendly and being heavily used by the lower middle-class, which could not bear more taxation and, therefore, the surcharge on it was being withdrawn. One wonders if this logic was too complicated for his finance adviser and his team to understand in the first place.
He said though withdrawing this surcharge would cause a loss of Rs 12 billion to the government, he had directed the Finance Ministry to review the overall carbon surcharge and come up with suggestions for atransparent mechanism for its imposition so that sufferings of the people could be reduced.
APP adds: Adviser to the Prime Minister on Finance Shaukat Tareen has said the government was ready to review all taxes, as it did not want to burden the people. Talking to Geo News, he said 20 paisa tax had been imposed on each short massaging service (SMS) with the consent of mobile operators. Twenty paisa is so meagre that it would not make any difference, he said, adding as many as 50 billion SMS are sent annually. The carbon tax was not a new tax but only a replacement of the Petroleum Development Levy (PDL).
Zardari avoids Sharm El Sheikh meeting with Singh
The plan was changed after the Yekaterinburg meeting between President Zardari and Prime Minister Singh on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit which, according to diplomatic sources, became ‘unpleasant’ at the outset because of Mr Singh’s ‘rude’ remarks.
Before the start of the ice-breaking meeting, the Indian premier bluntly told President Zardari in presence of reporters that his mandate was limited to telling Pakistan that it should not allow its soil to be used for terrorism against India.
The remark irked President Zardari who immediately asked the media to be escorted out of the conference room. In a press statement issued after the meeting, President Zardari’s office had announced that the two leaders would get together again in Sharm El Sheikh.
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi had also confirmed the Sharm El Sheikh meeting between the two leaders. Sources here claimed that the president had decided to skip the Sharm El Sheikh trip to avoid another encounter with Mr Singh.
The FO spokesman played down Mr Zardari’s decision not to attend the summit and said: ‘It was agreed that there will be another meeting of the political leadership of the two countries during NAM summit.’
The FO spokesman said Pakistan was satisfied with the outcome of the Yekaterinburg meeting between President Zardari and Prime Minister Singh and it had never expected the interaction to lead to immediate resumption of composite dialogue between the two countries.
‘From our perspective, the SCO summit in Russia provided a good opportunity for Pakistan and India to break the ice,’ he said at his briefing on Thursday, adding that Pakistan had gone to the meeting with all sincerity and seriousness.
Pakistan now appears to be pinning hopes on the secretaries’ level talks and wants them to be ‘result oriented’. ‘We are looking forward to a productive meeting between the foreign secretaries. Normal relations between our two countries, free of disputes and conflict and embedded in the principles of non-interference, equality and mutual respect, are indispensable for peace, security and prosperity in our region,’ said Mr Basit.
APP adds: The spokesman said Pakistan had suffered the most because of extremism and terrorism, adding that there had been 22 terrorist attacks in various parts of the country over the past one year, claiming 300 lives.
Answering a question about shifting of troops, the spokesman said: ‘It is incorrect that troops have been withdrawing from the eastern border for deployment on the western border.’
Clinton asks India to back Pakistan’s efforts to combat terror
The US, she told the US-India Business Council’s (USIBC) Synergies Summit here Wednesday, also welcomed a dialogue between India and Pakistan, but it was for the two countries to decide the pace, scope and character of the dialogue.
"Of course, we believe that India and Pakistan actually face a number of common challenges, and we welcome a dialogue between them," Clinton said. "As we have said before, the pace, scope and character of that dialogue is something that Indian and Pakistani leaders will decide on their own terms and in their own time."
"But as Pakistan now works to take on the challenge of terrorists in its own country, I am confident that India as well as the United States will support those efforts," she said.
Clinton said India and the US "have a common interest in creating a stable, peaceful Afghanistan, where India is already providing $1.2 billion in assistance to facilitate reconstruction efforts.
"United States is committed to the task ahead in Afghanistan, and I hope India will continue its efforts there as well," she said.
India already is a major player on the world stage, Clinton said "and we will look to cooperate with New Delhi as it shoulders the responsibilities that accompany its new position of global leadership."
Manmohan Singh and Zardari met Tuesday on the sidelines of a regional summit in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg during which the Indian leader bluntly said that Islamabad should demonstrate concrete steps to rein in anti-Indian terrorists before their conciliation talks can resume.
Govt to take over KESC if house is not settled, warns Ashraf
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Speaking to a point of order in the Upper House of the Parliament regarding power breakdown in Karachi on Wednesday, he said the breakdown caused due to a storm in Jamshoro area of Sindh which affected 500 KV transmission line resulting in power outage in whole Karachi and other cities of the province.
He said responding to the incident KESC immediately mobilized its teams to repair the transmission lines but due to system constraints the power supply could not be resumed the till Thursday morning.
He informed the House that electricity supply has resumed in certain parts of Karachi, however, the supply to rest of the city will be restored in next few hours.
The Minister said that the Prime Minister, Sindh Chief Minister and he himself remained in touch with KESC regarding the power supply to the residents of Karachi.
Ashraf informed the House that due to system constraints including outlived power supply lines and power shortfall the Sindh province is facing loadshedding.
He said the government has allocated considerable amount for replacement of outlived power supply lines, power generation and other power projects to counter the loadshedding problem.
The Deputy Chairman Senate Jan Jamali asked the Minister to hold separate meetings with Parliamentarians from all the provinces and take them into confidence regarding power problems and projects.
Earlier, Raza Rabbani on a point of order said that Karachi was without power supply from last night and KESC failed to restore the power supply. Senator Tahir Hussain Mashhadi also said that the House should be taken into confidence on the issue.
UN staff security increases across Pakistan
UN sources told Geo News that families of foreign staff have been directed to leave the country and staff should restrains their activities.
UN had raised the security level to phase three in Peshawar and Islamabad after suicide attacks on Rescue 15 and PC hotel. After reviewing the situation, UN security officials have decided to implement phase three across the country. The staff has directed to limited their activities and movements as families of foreign staff have urged to leave Pakistan.
Lahore police claims arresting accused of SL team attack
Two schools blown up in Bajaur
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According to the channel, miscreants planted the explosives in schools in Khar areas of Bajaur Agency, that exploded with a bang and destroyed the building completely.
However, there was no loss of life in the attacks, as schools are closed in the region channel reported.
Budget 2009-10 pro-people, poor-friendly
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During her budget speech in the Parliament on Thursday she said that the Government, with its people oriented dispositions and having firm resolve in the welfare of people is ensuring that each penny spent contributes towards our economic uplift and poverty alleviation, says a press release.
“We have attempted to reduce economic stresses while meeting our obligations. Our objective has been to rationalize expenses to the maximum possible extent without compromising the developmental aspects and aim at improved productivity and maximum utilization of our available resources”, she added.
Ms Ispahani said that through a targeted program of cash transfers the Government intends to help the poor and those who have been afflicted by extreme poverty.
“The Government believes that the cash transfers and other interventions aimed at helping the poor to get out of poverty trap is one part of our broad strategy. We need to focus on the real sectors of our economy that would contribute significantly in boosting and reviving our economy and stabilizing it. These are the agricultural and the manufacturing sectors which would afford us an opportunity to raise our productivity level and would enable us to survive in cut-throat competitive markets at international levels.”
While talking about the social sector allocations she said that “through enhanced funding in education, health and people welfare programs we can improve the quality of human resource which is direly needed in our country. We believe in involving the private sector to bring about qualitative change in our country. We are also focusing on reforms aimed at qualitative improvement of our public sector and turning this sector into the real choice of the people.”
Farahnaz Ispahani asserted that Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) would directly benefit 05 million households is no small achievement. No government in past has ever directly reached to such a large number of our population-the poorest of the poor-whether in urban or in rural areas- through any such direct plan. This reflects our commitment with the poor people of Pakistan.
She said that allocation of Rs.50 billion for the relief, settlement and rehabilitation and security of IDPs and provision of 1.2 billion and 1.5 billion rupees, respectively, for low cost housing and Prime Minister’s special initiative for Hunermand Pakistan Program are reflective of our efforts to focus on providing housing, health facilities and skill development programs for the people of this county.
Increasing allocations for health, education and population welfare by 52%, 66% and 76% respectively are our prime focus in the social sector development component of our budget, she added.
The PPP MNA also highlighted and appreciated the contributions made by President Asif Ali Zardari for the country and for the nation.
Ms. Ispahani said that “it is through his able guidance and results of his leadership that today our efforts against militancy have unwavering support from entire nation with unparallel political consensus and we are actively engaged with the international community in this cause.”
She said that the President has always believed in engaging the international community and the west, particularly. “He has effectively pleaded the nation’s case to every country he has visited and to every government he has interacted in his official capacity.”
She said that “our Government has put a full stop to the politics of vilification and political victimization.” “The vilification and demonization campaigns have hounded every PPP leader since Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto to the present.”
“Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was demonized for daring to give the people of Pakistan a voice, for bringing real democracy to Pakistan. Now everyone acknowledges that he transformed politics and brought it to the awam.”
“Today, we see a continuation of a similar campaign against the person of President Asif Ali Zardari. Often seen attempts to belittle his accomplishments and his efforts are in fact continuation of the same venom that PPP leadership has to face as a result of their efforts to empower the people of Pakistan.”
However, our leadership has never and would never ever be bowed by such attempts and is determined to sacrifice anything for the sake of the country, for the people of Pakistan and for the objectives that led to creation of our party, Ms Ispahani added.
Pakistan storm into World T20 final
Pakistan, runners-up to India in the inaugural World Twenty20 in South Africa two years ago, await the winners of Friday's semi-final between Sri Lanka and the West Indies in Sunday's final at Lord's.
Afridi plundered eight boundaries, including four in succession off Johan Botha, after Pakistan elected to bat on a wicket that slowed down as the evening progressed.
Veteran Jacques Kallis made a brave attempt to take the South Africans home, striking seven fours and a six in 64 from 54 balls, but the other batsmen faltered against the spot-on attack.
South Africa made a steady start in reply as openers Kallis and Graeme Smith reached 40 by the sixth over.
Smith failed to make use of an early chance when he was dropped by Umar Gul as he skied a return catch to Mohammad Aamir after making 10.
Afridi, coming on to bowl in the seventh over, struck twice in four deliveries when he bowled Herschelle Gibbs and AB de Villiers to make South Africa 50-3 in 8.3 overs.
Afridi and fellow-spinner Saeed Ajmal, made runs hard to come by, and when the dangerous Gul came on to bowl in the 14th over, South Africa needed a further 77 from 42 balls.
Kallis and JP Duminy raised South Africa's hopes by adding 61 from 53 balls for the fourth wicket, but Ajmal broke the threatening stand by having Kallis caught in the deep in the 18th over.
Duminy remained unbeaten on 44 from 39 balls but the task of needing 23 runs in the last over bowled by Aamir proved too much for him and Mark Boucher.
It did not matter at the end that Pakistan, who were 120-3 after 15 overs, failed to build on the early advantage and managed just 29 runs in the final five overs.
Pakistan had made a frenetic start, racing to 28 off the first 15 deliveries but at the cost of two wickets.
After Kamran Akmal had taken eight runs in Dale Steyn's first over, Shahzaib Hasan fell in the second over for zero when he miscued a big hit off left-arm seamer Wayne Parnell.
Akmal struck a six in Steyn's second over, but fell off the next delivery as he top-edged a pull to Morkel at mid-on. Akmal made 23 from 12 balls with four boundaries and a six.
Afridi, promoted to number three, swung Kallis for two fours in one over as Pakistan reached 47-2 by the time the field restrictions ended after the sixth.
Afridi brought up his half-century off 33 deliveries after slamming off-spinner Botha for four consecutive boundaries in the 11th over that realised 18 runs.
A desperate Smith turned to slow bowler Duminy in the 13th over and struck gold first ball as Afridi holed out to mid-wicket.—AFP
Asra Nomani's new documentary
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Asra Nomani's new documentary, The Mosque in Morgantown - airing tonight on PBS - exemplifies the great American and Islamic tradition of questioning authority. But although Nomani is certainly one such challenger, Nomani seems to undercut her own objective and isolate herself as an outlier in the community by imposing her approach on others who share her views.
A new PBS documentary, The Mosque in Morgantown, which airs nationwide tonight at 10 pm ET, goes beyond the standard headlines of a “sensational female rebel in a small town mosque” to present a nuanced, complex portrait of the conflicts within a community, a mosque and a woman. Since the tragedy of September 11, many mosques in the U.S. have felt under siege, adopting defensive postures towards anyone who criticized them. Typically the attacks came from non-Muslims, but in sleepy Morgantown, it was an insider, a member of the Morgantown mosque who began to rock the boat. Asra Nomani, a former Wall Street Journal correspondent, returns from Pakistan to her hometown with her infant son and the knowledge that her dear friend and colleague, Daniel Pearl, has been captured and beheaded by Pakistani men who perverted Islam to rationalize his murder. She seeks refuge in her local mosque, but finds herself uneasy with the rules governing the community’s place of worship.
Nomani begins to protest the cordoning off of the women’s prayer space, insisting that women be given adequate space to pray in the main hall. She considers her protests an indictment of the community’s inability to rectify a situation which she believes has no religious sanction within Islam. Nomani feels she can not afford to handle this problem with half-measures and diplomacy; in Normani’s mind, the stakes require nothing less than a revolution. She invites a storm of media attention in what she sees as a fight for a more egalitarian mosque, but others in the community, specifically the moderates, believe she should modify her approach, adopting a path of incremental change of a conciliatory nature. The documentary quickly sets the stage for a struggle between these competing paths to social change.
As the documentary continues, Nomani’s fight evolves; she had embarked on her journey of activism with the single goal of awarding women equal prayer space in the main hall, but Nomani then begins to campaign for women being allowed to stand beside men in the congregational prayer. Finally, she joins a prayer hall of both men and women who stand behind Muslim scholar, Amina Wadud, as she leads them in prayer. For the moderates who have been pitted against her, as well as the viewers following Nomani’s story, it seems as though she is confused as to what precisely she hopes to achieve and ambivalent about her identity as an American Muslim woman. Her struggle against conservative traditions in American mosques begins to overlap with her aversion for intolerance and extremism. The viewer feels compelled to echo the sentiment of a woman in the documentary who asks why Nomani automatically links inadequate prayer spaces for women in mosques to violence and extremism.
Once Nomani’s activism shifts from an insistence for women’s right to pray in the main halls of their mosques to the demand that women stand amidst men while praying and lead mixed gender prayers, she becomes even more estranged from the moderate majority. Cordoning the women to a small prayer space above or below the main hall of a mosque is typically the result of cultural norms imported by immigrants from patriarchal societies. Women’s visibility in the main prayer hall often reflects their status and participation in the mosque and therefore, Nomani’s initial call for equal, adequate prayer space for her sisters seems a reasonable and valid one to the moderates. Her demand is backed by the Prophet’s (pbuh) unequivocal ruling that Muslim women enjoy the right to pray in the mosque; when women find themselves relegated to the sidelines, neither seen nor heard (and unable to see or hear), they are being denied access to a place of worship which the Prophet (pbuh) has already opened to them. The mosque’s leadership then stands culpable of violating a clear Prophetic command.
However, most of the members of the mosque, who sit squarely in the middle of the religious spectrum, feel that if women such as Nomani are going to empower themselves by pointing to textual evidence of their rights within Islam, then they must not try to circumvent the limitations of those rights. They feel there is no textual evidence, neither in the Qur’an nor the hadith, to support the idea of women leading their male counterparts in prayer or women praying alongside men—and by this I am referring to women interspersed with men in the prayer congregation, not women standing adjacent to the men separated by a few feet. It is important to note that men and women do pray in an intermingled congregation in the Holy Shrine of Mecca but the vast majority of scholars attribute this anomaly to space and logistical concerns.
Edina Lekovic, the Communications Director at the Muslim Public Affairs Council, approaches Nomani at one point in the documentary and suggests that while she respects Normani’s passion and her struggle to garner equal and adequate prayer space for women, by zeroing in on the issue of women leading prayer Nomani is adopting an extremist stance of her own and thereby lending credence to misogynists within Islam who are all too eager to dismiss all women as potential radicals who must be kept in check. Lekovic goes on to say that by pushing this issue, Nomani risks distracting from more important indicators of women’s empowerment in their mosques—women serving on the mosque’s governing board or the community inviting female scholars and guest speakers to share their ideas at the mosque.
Lekovic invites Nomani to adopt issues and a methodology that resonate with the moderate majority. Her suggestion crystallizes the problem Muslim moderates within the Morgantown mosque, as well as across the country, have with Nomani. Nomani is convinced that the systemic inequality between the male and female members of the mosque can only be stomped out by a revolution of sorts. She dispenses with dialogue in her hope to level the playing field for Muslim women. The moderate contingency of her community find her tactics confrontational and lacking nuance; as a result these potential allies are left feeling alienated. They feel her mission for reform is better served by working with the men and women in the mosques who share the aspiration for reform in the Muslim community.
Questioning authority is a great American and Islamic tradition. The schools of thought and jurisprudence we find in classical Islamic law today are the product of those who dared to challenge the authority and the status quo of their time and place. Nomani is certainly one such challenger but by imposing her approach on others who share her views, Nomani seems to undercut her own objective and isolate herself as an outlier in the community.
Zehra Rizavi is Associate Editor of Altmuslimah.
No compromise on nuclear weapons: CJCSC
"No amount of coercion, direct or indirect, can force us to compromise on this core interest".
He made these remarks while addressing the convocation ceremony of National Defence Course, Armed Forces War Course and Allied Officers War Course at National Defence University, Islamabad.
While terming it a vicious campaign, unleashed to malign and discredit Pakistan by deliberately spreading disinformation about the security of our nuclear assets in the context of current domestic instability and creating doubts that some compromises on our strategic programme have been / are being made, General Tariq Majid reiterated that based on the pillars of restraint and responsibility, we have developed and operationalised a very effective nuclear weapons security regime which is multilayered, has stringent access controls and incorporates modern technical solutions and rigorous personnel reliability programmes.
As the system conforms to international best practices and has the capacity to meet all challenges, there should be absolutely no doubt about the viability of custodial controls and fail safe security arrangements put in place. As custodian of the development of strategic program and its security, he made it clear in unambiguous terms that our solutions are home-grown and do not allow intrusiveness by any state. No foreign individual, entity or state has been provided or shall ever be provided access to our sensitive information. Insinuations to the contrary are plain mischievous and need to be contemptuously dismissed. Commenting on the scenarios implying the international community to mobilise and secure our nuclear weapons, he said let it be known that Pakistan is confident but not complacent; our security apparatus prepares and practices contingencies to meet all such eventualities, and would not be deterred from taking any action whatsoever in ensuring that our strategic assets are jealously safeguarded. Any attempt to undermine our core capability will be strongly resisted and defeated?.
He commended the efforts of the faculty and management of National Defence University which besides grooming the senior civil and military leadership has also made tremendous contributions in refining and defining strategic and operational concepts of the armed forces as well as for civilian policy makers, laying down criteria of their successful implementation.
While addressing the graduates General Tariq said, in today’s world the standing of a country is measured by its political and economic strengths, the state of development of its human resource, and the management skills of the senior leadership of which you are a part. The need of the moment is to promote a culture of tolerance, establish a stable democratic and an effective governance system, and develop a vibrant economic order by making optimum utilization of all our national resources. For a country like Pakistan which is braving through complex challenges, the task of policy and decision makers is not easy. On one hand we have resource constraints, and on the other, we have pressing security and developmental needs to be addressed. The test of leadership is in judicious utilization of the available resources while evolving and implementing policies which aim at minimising the security risks as well as enlarging the resource base. This is where your role gets defined as the future policy makers?.
He further advised the graduates that as future leaders and policy makers they have an obligation to carry with them the lessons learnt at National Defence University and act in supreme national interest without fear or favour.
Congratulating the graduates comprising armed forces officers, civil bureaucrats of Pakistan and senior officers from friendly countries on successful completion of the course, General Tariq expressed hope that the enhanced knowledge, competence, capacity for analysis and decision making would make them an asset for a nation and the world at large. Earlier on arrival at NDU, Chairman JCSC was received by Lieutenant General Hamid Khan President NDU.
Pakistan wants revival of talks with India: Zardari

Talking to German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a meeting here, Asif Zardari urged Germany to play a role regarding the restoration of bilateral talks between Pakistan and India.
Apprising her of the ongoing crackdown on the terrorists in Pakistan, he said Pakistan wants peace and has continued its full-fledged action against the terrorists.
The German Chancellor said Pakistan will be given aid in upcoming Friends Conference in Istanbul, adding her country lauds the role of Pakistan and its army on the ongoing crackdown against terrorists.
Pakistan Tops Dollar Bond Performance in Asia
Taliban tribesmen pledge to wipe out al-Qaeda ally in Pakistan: Telegraph
The leader of Taliban tribesmen who has turned on al-Qaeda's most ruthless ally in Pakistan has vowed to help rescue his country from a reign of terror that has pushed it close to collapse
By Saeed Shah in Dera Ismail Khan
Telegraphy, June 14, 2009
In his first interview with a western newspaper, Qari Zainuddin said he had mobilised 3,000 armed followers to attempt to wipe out the feared warlord, Baitullah Mehsud, and drive his al-Qaeda supporters from Pakistan.
Baitallah, who has defeated the Pakistan army three times in the lawless South Waziristan tribal area, is considered a global terror threat by Western intelligence agencies. The US has placed a $5m bounty on his head, describing him as a “key al-Qaeda facilitator”.
His grip over the Mehsud tribe’s area of South Waziristan, which lies on the border with Afghanistan and where key al-Qaeda commanders have been given sanctuary and support, has been almost absolute for the last three years.
But the challenge from Mr Zainuddin - spurred by widespread revulsion at the death and violence wrought by al-Qaeda in Pakistan - threatens to undermine him for the first time.
Speaking to The Sunday Telegraph at a hideout just outside the dangerous tribal area, Mr Zainuddin declared that Baitullah had betrayed both his religion and his tribe.
“To fight our own country is wrong,” said Mr Zainuddin, guarded by Kalashnikov-carrying followers. “Islam doesn’t give permission to fight against a Muslim country. This is where we differ (with Baitullah). What we’re seeing these days, these bombings in mosques, in markets, in hospitals; these are not allowed in Islam. We don’t agree with them.”
The Fight for Pakistan’s Soul
For now, the Taliban are on the run, some with shaved beards and some in burqas, to avoid being recognized and thrashed. The reason is simple: increasingly, people across Pakistan support the army’s action. This support persists despite the terrible humanitarian cost: more than 1.5 million internal refugees.
This round of fighting was preceded by a negotiated calm, as the government sought to quell militants in Pakistan’s tribal areas by striking a deal with the Taliban leader, Sufi Mohammad. The deal, which instituted a version of Sharia law in the region in exchange for a commitment that militants would lay down their weapons, was blessed by the comparatively liberal Awami National Party (ANP), which governs the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), where Swat is located.
But the Taliban’s assurances of a lower profile were upended by two incidents that exposed its real face. First, private news channels broadcast across the country a video clip recorded on a cell phone of the public flogging of a 17-year-old Swat girl. This gave the public a stark sense of what Taliban justice really meant.
Then, Mohammad was interviewed on GEO TV, where he explained his political views. According to Mohammad, democracy is un-Islamic, as are Pakistan’s constitution and judiciary, and Islam bars women from getting an education or leaving their homes except to perform the Hajj in Mecca.
Religious conservatives were stunned. Leaders of the religious parties rushed to denounce Mohammad’s views. The Pakistani media revisited a famous comment by Mohammad Iqbal, the poet-philosopher who devised the idea of an independent Muslim state in Pakistan. “The religion of the mullah,” he said, “is anarchy in the name of Allah.”
Still, it’s not over until it’s over – and in the short term a lot depends on the state’s capacity to hold the Swat area and re-establish civilian institutions there. And, even if the state succeeds, re-asserting control over Swat will only be the first step. The Taliban is spread throughout the NWFP and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. “Punjabi Taliban” militants from the fighting in Kashmir against India continue to shuttle between the Punjab heartland and the Northwest Territories, posing another serious challenge to government authority.
In the long-term, however, what really matters is whether the Muslims of South Asia will be able to roll back the spread of Talibanization altogether. The answer to that question lies within the various Muslim communities of the region, not just in Pakistan.
Afghanistan faces an election later this year. A clear and transparent vote will make a real difference in establishing the credibility of the Afghan government. In Pakistan, the democratic transition, after years of military rule, is still not complete. There is much hope, though, in the vibrancy of the Pakistani media, as well as in the energy that the legal community generated last March in restoring deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry to his seat on the Supreme Court.
Then there is the Pakistani army, the country’s “super political party.” To a large degree, Pakistan’s relations with India, Afghanistan, and the United States depend on the military. Army commander Ashfaq Kiyani has shown no interest in taking over the state, as his predecessor, General Pervez Musharraf, did. But the army must accept its subservience to Pakistan’s political leadership. The army command must finally recognize that repeated military interventions have not served the country well.
Most significantly, in the face of martial law and political assassination, Pakistanis have not given up their dream of democracy. A living example of this is Afzal Lala, a Pashtun politician associated with the Awami National Party who, despite all the threats from the bloodthirsty Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, remained in Swat through the recent fighting.
Democracy will be decisive because it generates investments in education, health, and economic empowerment that reward ordinary voters. Talibanization gains ground when people lose faith in the capacity of the modern state to improve their lives.
While poor law enforcement needs urgent attention, counter-terrorism is never solely a military affair. Financial pledges from the US and the “Friends of Pakistan” consortium (the European Union, China, and Japan) are important, but when it comes to investing wisely in development projects, Pakistan’s track record is nothing to be proud of. Effective oversight from donors and Pakistan’s private sector will be critical. Only one condition should be imposed on aid for Pakistan: the first money should be spent on rebuilding all the bombed-out girls’ schools in Swat. If need be, the army should guard these schools around the clock.
Pakistani Muslim Forces 12-year-old Girl to Convert, Marry Him
Police ridicule Christian mother for kidnapping complaint; others demand money, labor.
LAHORE, Pakistan, June 4 (Compass Direct News) — The Christian mother of a 12-year-old girl in Punjab Province who was kidnapped, coerced into converting to Islam and forcibly married to a 37-year-old Muslim hopes to recover her daughter at a court hearing next week.
The reaction of Pakistani law enforcement authorities to Sajida Masih’s complaint so far – ridiculing her and asserting that there is nothing she can do because her daughter is now a Muslim – does not encourage her hopes of recovering her daughter Huma at next Thursday’s (June 11) hearing.
Masih said that Muhammad Imran abducted Huma at gunpoint on Feb. 23 from Hanif Kot village in Gujranwala district, forcibly converted her and then married her. Imran has since disappeared along with his first wife, three children and new child-bride.
Masih, who worked alongside Imran as a farmhand, said the kidnapping occurred on her son’s wedding day. Masih said that when she sent Huma and the child’s aunt out of their home to see if transportation had arrived for the wedding party, Imran – who had helped in preparing for the ceremony – was waiting and told her to sit on his motorbike.
Huma did not understand and, with her concerned aunt tightly holding her hand, she refused.
Masih’s attorney, who requested anonymity for security reasons, said Imran took out a pistol and told Huma that he would shoot her as well as her parents if she did not obey; he also pointed the weapon at her aunt and said that he would kill her. Huma got onto the bike with him; her family has not seen her since.
Masih immediately ran to the owner of the farm where she and Imran work, Khan Buhadur, who told her to first finish the wedding and then see him in the evening. Masih’s attorney said that when she and relatives went to Buhadur after the ceremony, however, he said only that Imran had fled with his family along with the girl, and that he did not know where they were.
Suspecting that Buhadur was complicit in the kidnapping, Masih went to Sadar police station in Gujranwala. Police officers first ridiculed her, the attorney said, and then told her to go back to Buhadur because “only he could do something.” For several days officers and Buhadur shuttled her back and forth between them.
Unable to get police to register the case, Masih submitted a report with the help of a lawyer and took it to the police station, where officers consigned it to the dustbin.
Three days after the kidnapping, police finally registered a First Information Report (FIR) on Feb. 26 – but changed the age of the kidnapped girl from 12, as her mother reported, to 16. Moreover, Investigating Officer Niaz Khan told Masih that the FIR was useless since she was too poor to hire a lawyer, and that she should try to reach an out-of-court agreement with Buhadur – implying that he knew of the child’s whereabouts.
The Masih family learned from a friend of Imran, identified only as Javed, that Huma had converted to Islam and had married the fugitive father of three. Javed further said that Imran had told him police would do nothing as he had paid them 50,000 rupees (US$620).
The family subsequently received a court notice, the attorney said, stating that Imran had requested nullification of the FIR on Huma’s abduction, claiming she was an “adult” and had “willfully” converted to Islam and married him.
According to Huma’s birth certificate, issued by St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Gujranwala, she was born on Oct. 22, 1996. The attorney said that Imran had submitted a fake birth certificate stating she was born on Dec. 23, 1990, which would make her 18 years old. The legal marriage age for girls in Pakistan is 16.
Only then did Masih obtain the pro bono services of the lawyer who is now handling the case.
A hearing on the case had been scheduled for May 6, but because of a change of judge a new date was set for June 11. Unwilling to wait, the family and their lawyer went with a court bailiff to a factory owned by Buhadur in Gujranwala on May 14, hoping to get help in recovering Huma, but Buhadur did not cooperate.
Buhadur had been demanding that Masih pay him 100,000 rupees (US$1,240) that she had supposedly borrowed from him, but this demand only surfaced after the kidnapping – an implied attempt to extort money from her in exchange for information on the whereabouts of her daughter, according to the lawyer. Buhadur withdrew this pressure on Masih after the visit from the court bailiff and efforts by the attorney.
At a meeting of villagers on May 16 at the Sadar police station, Buhadur said that Imran owed him money and that he would inform officers if he learned anything of his whereabouts.
Another land owner, Karamat Ali Saroyya, subsequently called Masih saying that Huma was in Muridke, near Lahore, but when Masih and her lawyer set out again and met with Muridke police, they were unable to find her.
Saroyya later demanded that Masih work on his fields for one year in order to get her daughter back.
Masih’s lawyer and other legal representatives said police and officials at the Municipal Corporation’s office, which keeps birth and death records, have been reluctant to help, saying that Huma had converted and that therefore there was no reason that she should be returned to non-Muslim parents.
Gilani asks US to Review Policy on Drone Attacks
“Drone attacks are counterproductive as these reunite tribesmen and militants,” he said.
He assured that there would be no drone attacks on the territory of Balochistan.Gilani said he sought assurance from US special envoy Richard Holbrooke that more deployment of their forces on the border of Afghanistan would not push militants into Balochistan.The armed forces and intelligence agencies of Pakistan and US should get their act together to avoid any spill over effect of additional troops deployment in Afghanistan, he further said.Gilani said nobody will be allowed to form state within state and challenge writ of the government.
Giving reasons for the military action in Swat and Malakand, he said the miscreants were killing troops and policemen and were blowing up schools, colleges and roads.
“Is this Islam? These elements have maligned the name of our religion. Islam is the religion of peace,” he said adding the miscreants are working to destabilize the country and damage its economy.He said no war can be won without the support of the people and the nation stood united against the oppression of the militants.He lauded the sacrifices of internally displaced persons and vowed to rehabilitate them with honour and security.
“The whole nation is thankful to these people as they sacrificed their today for the nation’s tomorrow.”
The military operation will be concluded in the shortest possible time, he added.He said more personnel will be inducted into the law enforcement agencies, pay of army and police will be raised and insurance facility will be given to them to protect their families.The Prime Minister said the government wants a stable Balochistan which is at par with other provinces in terms of development and infrastructure.He asked the party representatives to forward suggestions before he holds an All Parties Conference (APC) to evolve a united strategy on Balochistan.The National Security Committee led by Senator Raza Rabbani has been tasked to finalize recommendations on Balochistan which will be presented to the APC.The Prime Minister acknowledged the sacrifices and services rendered by the people of Balochistan.
He said his government is willing to talk to any Baloch leader to remove their grievances. He said his government apologized for the mistakes of the past.The Prime Minister again pledged the federal financial support of Rs. 50 billion for the province. This amount is besides the Rs. three billion each for provincial budget and Quetta development package.
The government has also acceded to the demand of the Balochistan government to let it spend the unutilized money of Rs. 21 billion from the last year, he added.Federal Ministers Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, Dr. Babar Awan, Syed Khurshid Shah, Naveed Qamar, Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani, Senator Raza Rabbani and President PPP Balochistan Haji Lashkari Raisani attended the meeting.
Student on UK deportation list returns Home
"Now he carries no 'terror' stigma any more and we assume that the Pakistani authorities too would have no cause to detain him on his arrival for interrogation," one of the solicitors defending the students said. Meanwhile, bail applications of other nine Pakistani students in appeal against their deportation orders are likely to get a positive boost when they come up for hearing on July 27 by a landmark ruling on Wednesday by the law lords.
The ruling is said to have dealt a major blow to the government's controversial use of 'control orders' on terror suspects. The ruling said that reliance on secret evidence denies the suspects a fair trial.
The nine-judge panel led by Lord Philips of Worth Matravers, the senior law lord, upheld a challenge on behalf of three men (not among the detained Pakistani students) on 'control orders'.
Control orders imposed on individual suspects by the home secretary can include home curfews of up to 16 hours a day, a ban on travelling abroad, the approval of all visitors by the Home Office, monitoring of all phone calls, and bans on using the internet and mobile phones.
The orders have not been quashed but the law lords have ordered that the cases be heard again.
The three had argued that the refusal to disclose even the "gist" of the evidence against them denied them a fair trial under the Human Rights Act.
In the ruling, Lord Philips said: "A trial procedure can never be considered fair if a party to it is kept in ignorance of the case against him."
Lord Hope said "the slow creep of complacency must be resisted" and that to protect the rule of law, courts must insist the person affected be told what was alleged against him.
These observations are likely to help the solicitors defending the Pakistani students facing deportation orders as in their cases as well the authorities are not willing to disclose what is alleged against them.
A report in The Guardian on Wednesday quoted Home Secretary Alan Johnson as saying that the judgment was extremely disappointing. "Protecting the public is my top priority and this judgment makes that task harder," he said. "Nevertheless, the government will continue to take all steps we can to manage the threat presented by terrorism." Dawn
Education Policy Draft Rejected Now
Draft education policy rejected by federal cabinet
Islamabad, June 11: The federal cabinet has rejected the new National Education Policy and directed the Ministry of Education to re-submit fresh proposals after seeking suggestions from educationists.
Official sources said on Wednesday that the cabinet in a special meeting chaired by Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani opined that the new education policy does not represent the concerned quarters, including educationists, intellectuals, the provincial government and teachers' unions, which was mandatory for it.
According to sources, the Ministry of Education tabled the same proposals prepared by former education minister Ahsan Iqbal.
While rejecting the draft of education policy, the cabinet has directed the education ministry to seek recommendations of the concerned quarters to make it more effective.
Sources said that the new policy draft would take another two to three months after which it would be tabled before the cabinet for approval.
There is a chance that the new education policy would be announced after four to five months, sources said.
Similarly, recommendation draft of the policy also did not contain comments of the chief ministers of all the four provinces, which was a mandatory obligation.
Commenting over the issue, Ministry of Education Spokesman Aamir Raza confirmed the report and the reasons behind rejection of the draft of the new education policy by the cabinet. He said as per directions of the cabinet, the ministry would approach the related educationists, union and associations representatives and all the four provincial heads of the respective education departments. "Till then the old system would be followed in all educational institutions including colleges and schools at federal and provincial levels," he added. The News
BSEK Notification
The Board of Secondary Education Karachi (BSEK) has asked those candidates who were provisionally allowed to appear in the SSC-II annual examinations-2009 (science and general groups) to submit the required documents latest by June 15 at the board's office in order to avoid withholding of their results.