Sunday, 21 August 2011

Army ready to help govt on Karachi: Kayani

ISLAMABAD:-
                            Chief of the Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has said that the Army is ready to help the government for restoring peace to Karachi.
Talking to the media men here on Saturday, he said paramilitary forces and other law enforcement agencies were working efficiently and the Army would also play its maximum role in this regard. But it would be the government to take the decision of deployment of Army in Karachi, he added

7 more dead as death reigns in Karachi

KARACHI:-
                     Another seven people lost their lives on Saturday in the current wave of violence that began on Wednesday, bringing the death toll in just four days to 80.
The government is struggling for solutions to the worst kind of unrest to sweep the city in 16 years as extra deployments of police and paramilitary officers appear unable to end the trouble.
On Saturday, an Air Force employee, Zafar Ali Nazir, was shot dead near Mona Dental Clinic, Khokharapar. Police said the 36-year-old deceased came to Karachi from Nawabshah to visit his sister residing in Fasial Base. In another incident gunmen intercepted a bus near Malang Hotel, Bakrapiri, in the remits of SITE-A Police and disembarked Nadeem Harron, 28, and shot him dead. Police said Nadeem was a resident of Sector 1-C, Orangi Town. Unidentified gunmen also killed Sakhi Dad, a driver of a route Z bus, near Daba Chock, Islam Nagar, Orangi Town.
In the limits of Joharabad Police, armed men shot dead a man a near Hussainabad, Block 14. Deceased 30 years old Gull Aallam was a resident of Block 10, a slum area. Mochko Police found a bullet-riddled body near the route N-5 bus stop. One more unidentified body was found from Qalandriya Chock, Shahrah-e-Noorjahan. Ibrahim, an injured of Chakra Goth ethnic violence, succumbed to his injures. He was wounded late Friday. In Orangi Town an ambulance was attacked by unknown men, leaving three persons wounded.
Police high ups claimed of arresting two attackers involved in the attack on police van in Chakra Goth, Korangi. But sources said that the injured men, who are affiliated with Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), were detained during treatment at JPMC and they had been admitted to the hospital an hour before the incident of police van attack.
The current wave of violence started from Lyari on Wednesday after the arrival of mutilated bodies of five men who were abducted, and spread out across the metropolis like a wildfire. Medico legal officers in three major hospitals of Karachi while describing the brutality said that the victims were drilled multiple times, burnt and then their heads were chopped down.
The affected areas included Saeedabad, Balida, Korangi, Orangi, New Karachi and Landhi. Markets in the downtown remained closed on the fifth consecutive day because of the precarious law and order situation.
On

Deal will see US troops in Afghanistan until 2024

LONDON:-
                     The US and Afghanistan are close to signing a pact which would allow thousands of United States troops to remain in the country until at least 2024. The agreement would allow not only military trainers to stay to build up the Afghan army and police, but also for American special forces soldiers and air power to remain, reported Daily Telegraph.
The prospect of such a deal has already been met with anger among Afghanistan’s neighbours including, publicly, Iran and, privately, Pakistan. It also risks being rejected by the Taliban and derailing any attempt to coax them to the negotiating table, according to one senior member of Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai’s peace council.
A withdrawal of American troops has already begun following an agreement to hand over security for the country to Kabul by the end of 2014. But Afghans wary of being abandoned are keen to lock America into a longer partnership after the deadline. Many analysts also believe the American military would like to retain a presence close to Pakistan, Iran and China.
Both Afghan and American officials said that they hoped to sign the pact before the Bonn Conference on Afghanistan in December.
US President Barack Obama and Karzai agreed last week to escalate the negotiations and their national security advisers will meet in Washington in September. Rangin Dadfar Spanta, Karzai’s top security adviser, told Daily Telegraph that ‘remarkable progress’ had been made. US officials have said they would be disappointed if a deal could not be reached by December and that the majority of small print had been agreed.
Spanta said a longer-term presence was crucial not only to build Afghan forces, but also to fight terrorism. “If [the Americans] provide us weapons and equipment, they need facilities to bring that equipment,” he said. “If they train our police and soldiers, then those trainers will not be 10 or 20, they will be thousands.
“We know we will be confronted with international terrorists. 2014, is not the end of international terrorist networks and we have a common commitment to fight them. For this purpose also, the US needs facilities.”
Afghan forces would still need support from US fighter aircraft and helicopters, he predicted. In the past, Washington officials have estimated a total of 25,000 troops may be needed. Spanta added: “In the Afghan proposal we are talking about 10 years from 2014, but this is under discussion.” America would not be granted its own bases, and would be a guest on Afghan bases, he said. Pakistan and Iran were also deeply opposed to the deal.
Andrey Avetisyan, Russian ambassador to Kabul, said: “Afghanistan needs many other things apart from the permanent military presence of some countries. It needs economic help and it needs peace. Military bases are not a tool for peace.
“I don’t understand why such bases are needed. If the job is done, if terrorism is defeated and peace and stability is brought back, then why would you need bases? “If the job is not done, then several thousand troops, even special forces, will not be able to do the job that 150,000 troops couldn’t do. It is not possible.”
A complete withdrawal of foreign troops has been a precondition for any Taliban negotiations with Karzai’s government and the deal would wreck the distant prospect of a negotiated peace, Avetisyan said.
Abdul Hakim Mujahid, deputy leader of the peace council set up by Karzai to seek a settlement, said he suspected the Taliban had intensified their insurgency in response to the prospect of the pact. “They want to put pressure on the world community and Afghan government,” he said