
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.