Friday, 19 August 2011

Zardari speaks with Altaf Hussain on telephone, discuss Karachi

ISLAMABAD:-
                              President Asif Ali Zardari has spoken with MQM Chief Altaf Hussain on the telephone about the prevailing situation in Karachi in which he took him into confidence about efforts being made to improve law and order in the city.
Sources have told DawnNews that President Asif Zardari reassured Altaf Hussain that security will be provided for the people of Karachi and that legal action will be taken against miscreants involved in violence.
President Zardari said that Karachi is the economic hub of the country and that peace in the city is vital for economic progress. Whereas Altaf Hussain said that peace must be restored in Karachi at all cost.
Both leaders also discussed other political issues in the country including talks between the PPP and the MQM.

Zardari summons meeting

ISLAMABAD:-
                          The fresh of wave of killing in Karachi has forced President Asif Ali Zardari to convene an important meeting of the Sindh coalition government to discuss the deteriorating law and order today (Friday).
According to official sources, Sindh chief minister along with five cabinet colleagues will attend the meeting in which Prime Minister Gilani and Interior Minister Rehman Malik are also likely to participate. The meeting will be held at Aiwan-e-Sadr to review the situation and accordingly take necessary security measures to tackle the fresh wave of violence in the port city.
In a related development, MQM Convener Dr Farooq Sattar met with the US Ambassador Cameron Munter here Thursday and discussed the law and order situation in Karachi. “I do not know what they discussed, but Farooq Sattar met with Ambassador Munter on request”, US Embassy spokesperson confirmed to TheNation.
Sources further said that these developments might delay plans of the MQM to rejoin the PPP-led ruling coalition. According to the plans, MQM was to rejoin the ruling coalition after PPP high command accepted its demand to restore LG system in Karachi and Hyderabad.
Both the political players have agreed to make necessary amendments in the local government laws to implement the agreement, which envisages scrapping of the revived commissioner system in the province and delimitation of constituencies in Karachi and Hydereabad.
With the proposed amendments, Sindh government would implement the new law throughout the province. This move has also created reaction within the provincial government as one of the important coalition partners ANP rejected the PPP-MQM deal. The nationalist political forces of Sindh also rejected

27 US invaders killed, 34 injured in Paktia martyrdom operation: Taliban

By Zabihullah Mujahid:-
                                            As many as 27 American invading troops got killed more than 34 were hurt in martyr attack on US invaders army base in Gardez city, the capital of Paktia province on Thursday morning at about 6:00 am local time. The martyr operation was carried out by a brave Mujahid, who rammed his van full of 7000 kilograms explosives into one of the largest US military base in the country, killing and wounding several dozen of the American cowards in addition to damaging the facility, a number of military vehicles and a helicopter inside the base.
A local interpreter, on the condition of anonymity, said the attack came as the US invaders were going for breakfast and the explosion was so powerful and devastating that it not only killed and wounded scores of the US invaders but also damaged the base along with one helicopter and several vehicles which caught fire in the base. It is worth saying the heroic operation was carried out by an elderly man of 70 years old, Abdul Aziz, resident of Nooristan province. (Taliban Website)

Thursday, 18 August 2011

FIA DG resigns over NICL probe

ISLAMABAD:-
                            FIA Director General Tehsin Anwar Shah submitted his resignation to establishment secretary on Wednesday, after he presented the same in the Supreme Court and was told by the court to tender it to the authorities concerned.
Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) director general told a three-member bench hearing the National Insurance Company Limited (NICL) scam case on Wednesday that he could not work under a junior. Tehseen said: “I am head of FIA, therefore, cannot work under Zafar Qureshi and tender my resignation as this is also against the FIA Act 1975.” The chief justice said to the DG, “Don’t give this kind of threats and submit your resignation before the competent authority.”
The chief justice also directed Zafar Qureshi’s team members Deputy Director Javed Hussain Shah, Assistant Director Mohammad Ahmed, Assistant Director Khalid Anees and Inspector Muhammad Sarwar to work under Qureshi with same vigour and honesty and if they feel pressure from any quarter, inform him (CJP) in his chamber. The chief justice directed the team members, who expressed willingness to continue the investigation, to complete the investigation soon, adding the investigation in the NICL case would continue even after the retirement of Zafar Qureshi.
During the course of proceedings, Justice Amir Hani Muslim put a question to FIA Lahore Director Waqar Haider, “Who had ordered to lock up the gate on August 13?” He replied that on that day he was in Islamabad for an official meeting but when he came to know about the incident he directed the officials at the FIA camp office Lahore to immediately call the bomb disposal squad and inform the police. The honourable judges further inquired from Waqar Haider, “Why did you not hand over the NICL case files to Zafar Qureshi earlier.” The director stated that the files were with FIA Lahore Deputy Director Basharat Shahzad, who had gone to Umrah. However, the DG FIA handed over the NICL case files to Zafar Qureshi before the bench.
Justice Amir Hani asked the director, “By telling a lie you are aggravating the contempt charges against you.” He inquired from the FIA director where the prisoners locked up at the FIA camp office were shifted on August 13. Justice Hani further questioned, “Was the record of prisoners on that specific day maintained and where they were shifted?”
FIA Assistant Director Khawaja Hammad appearing before the bench informed that on Friday (August 12) Director Waqar Haider came to his office and said that he was under pressure, therefore, adopted such a plan that Zafar Qureshi could not enter the building. Hammad said as he had a close relationship with Zafar Qureshi, therefore, he had informed him on telephone on August 12 at night that there would be some drama at the Camp Office to prevent him from entering the building. He also said a similar incident had happened when Moonis Elahi was brought at the trial court.
The chief justice directed Hammad to prepare his statement during the course of the day and submit a copy of it at the SC Registrar office and give one copy to Waqar Haider so that he could file his reply in the next date of hearing.
Attorney General for Pakistan Maulvi Anwarul Haq placed on record the copy of FIR registered at the Civil Lines Police Station, Lahore, regarding a hoax call on August 12. The court directed the PPO Punjab to ensure independent investigation of it and submit its report at the SC Registrar office.
The court has deferred the contempt of court proceedings against those FIA officers who had defied August 8, 2011 SC order. The DG FIA and others relevant authorities were directed in the judgment not to create hindrance in the investigation being conducted by Zafar Qureshi and his team. The case was adjourned for an indefinite period of time.

Nawaz demands immediate elections

LAHORE:-

                   PML-N Chief Nawaz Sharif has demanded that fresh elections should be held in the country immediately.
Talking to a private TV channel on Wednesday, the PML-N chief said problems faced by the country could only be solved if elections were held immediately. He added it was the responsibility of the nation to stand up against the government and ensure that no one played with their mandate. On supporting the PPP, Nawaz said his party tried working with the PPP initially but there was no substance to the relationship.
Nawaz Sharif said all the political parties should go to the people and the people should decide about the future of Pakistan.
The two-time premier said he had advised President Asif Ali Zardari four months ago to hold fresh elections. “It was a sincere advice but President Zardari turned down the proposal,” he said. He said Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani could dissolve the National Assembly or lower house of the parliament and announce fresh elections just as he (Sharif) had done in 1993 when he was the premier.
The PPP-led government has rejected similar demands from other opposition parties and said fresh elections will be held in early 2013 after it completes its five-year term.
Sharif has been critical of the government’s policies since he pulled the PML-N out of the ruling coalition in 2008 but never sought fresh polls. The PML-N had joined the government after the 2008 general election in the national interest but could not go along with the PPP because of its policies, he said.
This is the first time that Sharif has called for fresh polls, though other leaders of his party have often said the country’s problems, including corruption and the perceived inefficiency of the Pakistan People’s Party-led government, can only be resolved through mid-term elections.
Meanwhile, PPP’s Information Secretary Qamar Zaman Kaira said that Nawaz Sharif should focus on the next general elections instead of long march as it would be useless. Talking to the media at Allama Iqbal international Airport here before leaving for India, he said staging a long march was right of everyone but the PML-N president should justify it and tell the masses if it aimed at toppling the government.
He said the PPP wanted stability in the country and it was effort of the government and the party to resolve issues by taking all parties on board.
He advised Nawaz Sharif “to resolve problems within the PML-N and to prepare for the next elections which were only one-and-half year away

Indian Congress hints at US hand in Anna Hazare protest

Indian Congress hinted at an American hand behind Anna Hazare-led protests, asking why had the US spoken in favour of an agitation in the country for the first time since Independence. It urged the government to probe the angle of the hidden hand trying to destabilize the country. The party stuck to its charge that Anna was indulging in blackmail by imposing its draft of the Lokpal bill on Parliament and said House's dignity was being sullied which cannot be tolerated.
But it was the talk of the US hand that surprised observers. The conspiracy theory, floated by AICC spokesman Rashid Alvi, drew from Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's statement in Parliament where he said India should not fall prey to the forces envious of country's rise as an economic power.
Briefing both the Houses about Anna's arrest, the PM said, "We are emerging as one of the important players on the world stage. There are many forces that would not like to see India realize its true place in the comity of nations. We must not play into their hands."
But while Singh only hinted at the possibility, Alvi went a step further. The Congress spokesperson said the sophisticated nature of the orchestrated campaign called for urgent attention to the hidden hand while recalling in the same breath the surprise statement from the US State Department urging the Indian government to respect democratic protests.
"Anna is alone. He has no organization. Then how did this movement start and grow? Who are these people spreading the word on internet and telephones; the way video message was recorded prior to arrest," he said, while adding, "The US had never spoken about any movement in India. This is the first time that it did. We show the path of democracy to others, what was the need for the US to say it. This has created suspicion," Alvi said

Pakistan amends tribal laws said to fuel militancy: report

The weak, U.S.-backed government of Pakistan’s unpopular president, Asif Ali Zardari, is receiving rare domestic praise this week for a move that even opponents say could help accomplish something that has long been the domain of the Pakistani army: pacifying the militant-riddled tribal belt.
Last week, Zardari authorized long-discussed reforms allowing political parties to campaign in the northwestern tribal region and relaxing dated laws that hold entire tribes accountable for one person’s crime. The changes chip away at measures that are widely viewed as violating the fundamental rights enjoyed by the rest of Pakistan’s 180 million people — and that have inspired little loyalty to the state among residents of the borderlands.
The changes have yet to be implemented, and some observers and tribal representatives complain that they barely scratch the surface of the problems. But in Pakistan, where governance is characterized more often by side-switching and potshots than by policymaking, the development is being greeted as a stride toward civilian control in an area where the power players have long been the Taliban, al-Qaeda and the army.
“These steps are very, very important,” said Khadim Hussain, a university professor who directs a research institute focusing on the tribal areas. “So many times, people there tell me, ‘You have given us a national identity card, but you have not given us a feeling that we belong to Pakistan.’ ”
The mountainous, conservative tribal belt has long been as isolated politically as it is geographically. For decades, British colonialists and the Punjabi-dominated Pakistani state attributed that to the “warrior-like” culture of the area’s Pashtun population. Now there is general agreement that oppressive and unique laws, long encouraged by the powerful military, marginalized the region — and, in recent years, made it a sanctuary for terrorists.
The belt is known as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, or FATA, and it is divided into seven sections overseen by an appointed “political agent.” The agent often serves as little more than a conduit for patronage, analysts say. There are no state police, and courts consist of politically influenced tribal councils or Taliban tribunals. Political parties are barred, so the region’s 12 elected representatives in Pakistan’s national assembly have had little incentive to sit in the opposition.
“Any government would be able to purchase their votes,” said Babar Sattar, a legal expert and newspaper columnist in Islamabad, the capital. “People weren’t really represented — individuals were represented.”
The most notorious problem is a British-era criminal code enacted to suppress Pashtun opposition and long assailed by human rights activists and FATA residents. Among other things, the regulations allow whole tribes to be jailed or their businesses blocked if one member is suspected of a crime; political agents can deny bail, imprison people to “prevent” killings and expel those they deem “dangerous fanatics.”
One elder of the Ahmadzai Wazir tribe in South Waziristan agency said the political agent there recently suspended state stipends to his tribe and the salaries of those who work for the tribal police. The reason, he said, was that militants had fired mortar rounds at an army camp near the tribe’s settlements.
“We are at war, and there could be firing of gunshots from any quarter,” said the elder, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. “How could we be punished for a crime we neither committed nor saw?”
Amid the vacuum of governance, Afghan Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters have set up shop, and domestic Taliban insurgents have cemented their sway through systematic killings of tribal leaders. Today, the tribal belt is a virtual no man’s land, even for political agents. That has suited the military, which prefers minimal civilian oversight in a strategic area where it carries out regular operations and is accused of nurturing militants to act as proxies in Afghanistan, Hussain said.
Under the amended laws, political parties can attempt to win and represent voters, and residents will be able to appeal political agents’ decisions before a new tribunal. Women, children and people older than 65 are exempt from collective punishment, and the national auditor is authorized to scrutinize political agents’ use of state funds.
Until now, the political agent “was answerable to none,” said Abdul Latif Afridi, a politician and lawyer from Khyber agency, in the tribal areas.
Analysts have raised plenty of caveats, starting with the question of whether and how quickly the changes will take root. Militant threats will also make political campaigning difficult, if not impossible, Afridi said.
Many observers add that the changes are too piecemeal. To fully “mainstream” the FATA, they say, it must be declared a province or incorporated into another province, a police force should be formed, and the British-era criminal code must be abolished. Hussain, the FATA researcher, said numerous surveys have found that the region’s residents agree.
Zardari promised reforms two years ago, but enactment was slowed by the endless wrangling of Pakistan’s unstable coalition government and by resistance from the military, one person involved in negotiations said. Some worry that the army allowed the changes in exchange for another ordinance recently signed by Zardari, which legalized some of the military’s unchecked powers to detain and try terrorism suspects in the restive northwest.
“The basic status of the region remains the same,” said Imtiaz Gul, an analyst and author of “The Most Dangerous Place,” a recent book on the tribal areas. “This represents fears within the bureaucracy, who have been opposed to any overnight change, saying it would disturb the social-political structures in the tribal areas.” (The Washington Post