Saturday, December 19, 2009

PAF gets force-multiplier capability


The first Air-to-Air Refueler aircraft of Pakistan Air Force out of total four has arrived on an operational Air Base of the country, a spokesman of PAF here Saturday said. In a press statement the spokesman said, the delivery of remaining three Refueler aircraft is planned to complete by mid-2010.

By virtue of its capability to refuel Air Defence aircraft in air, PAF’s overall potential in terms of its effectiveness to defend the airspace of Pakistan would be significantly enhanced, he added.
After attaining the facility, Pakistan Air Force has formally joined the rank of those developed air forces which have already the air refilling system.
An expert of the aviation industry welcomed this induction in PAF saying this is a force-multiplier ability as the strength of the existing number of fighter jets would atleast be doubled, straightaway.

SOURCE: Associated Press Of Pakistan

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Pakistan team named for Australia tour, Younis left out


ISLAMABAD: Pakistan cricket selectors on Monday left out Younis Khan from a 16-man squad and retained middle-order batsman Mohammad Yousuf as captain for three Test matches and five One-day Internationals against Australia.

Former captain Younis opted to rest after scoring only 22 runs as Pakistan lost the one-day series against New Zealand 2-1 in the United Arab Emirates last month.

Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board Ijaz Butt had urged Younis to end his hiatus from the national team and play against Australia, but the former captain did not compete in the first class tournament to regain his batting form.

“Younis wanted to rest but he didn't play in the domestic cricket since the one-day series against New Zealand,'' chief selector Iqbal Qasim told reporters. “He didn't give his
availability to us and therefore we did not select him.''

Pakistan team will fly to Australia directly from New Zealand after playing three Test matches against the Kiwis with the first Test beginning at Melbourne on December 26.

Shahid Afridi, who will lead Pakistan in the only T20 international against Australia, will be Yousuf's deputy in the five-match one-day series. However, wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal was named vice-captain for the three-Test series.

Iqbal Qasim said the team for ODI series against Australia will be named after the second Test ends at Sydney on Jan. 7.

Test squad: Salman Butt, Khurram Manzoor, Imran Farhat, Mohammad Yousuf (captain), Misbah-ul-Haq, Shoaib Malik, Fawad Alam, Faisal Iqbal, Kamran Akmal (vice-captain/wk), Danish Kaneria, Saeed Ajmal, Umar Gul, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Aamir, Abdul Rauf, Umar Akmal.

Source Geo.tv

Oil higher in Asian trade

SINGAPORE: Oil prices lingered near $74 a barrel Tuesday in Asia after a strengthening US dollar extended a four-day sell-off in crude to two-month lows.

Benchmark crude for January delivery was up 23 cents to $74.16 at midday Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell $1.54 to settle at $73.93 on Monday.

The dollar, boosted by a better than expected US jobs report last week, helped push oil prices out of a two-month range of between $75 and $82.

Investors have been buying crude as a hedge against inflation as the dollar has slid this year amid massive government stimulus spending and low interest rates. When the dollar rises, traders tend to sell their positions in oil.

"The movement of the dollar has continued to be a leading driver of oil pricing," said Victor Shum, an energy analyst with consultancy Purvin & Gertz in Singapore. "But when the price falls to the mid-$70s, many market participants see that as a buying opportunity."

In Asian trade, the dollar pared some of its recent gains. The euro rose to $1.4834 from $1.4820 in New York late Monday while the dollar fell to 88.90 yen from 89.49.

In other Nymex trading in January contracts, heating oil was steady at $1.96 while gasoline rose 0.54 cent to $1.96. Natural gas jumped 4.6 cents to $5.02 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, Brent crude for January delivery rose 37 cents to $76.80 on the ICE Futures exchange.

Three arrested with suspected Uranium in Mumbai


MUMBAI: Navi Mumbai crime branch has arrested three people from Panvel for being in possession of a chemical looking substance that is suspected to be uranium.The material has been seized and sent to Bhabha Atomic Research Centre for further analysis. The trio was arrested on Monday evening and as much as 5 kilograms of the material was seized from them.
Source : http://geo.tv

Monday, December 7, 2009

Several injured in twin Lahore blasts


LAHORE: Twin blasts in Lahore have injured several people, some of them seriously, at Moon market in Iqbal Town Lahore, Geo News reported Monday.

Nothing is known so far about the nature of the blasts.

According to Geo News sources, the two blasts occurred within 30 seconds of each other. Fire erupted in the shops after the blasts.

According to Geo News sources, the two blasts occurred within 30 seconds of each other. Fire erupted in the market immediately after the blasts, engulfing a number of shops.

Moon market is a commercial center of Iqbal Town, Lahore, where shoppers are normally present in large numbers. A suicide attack had also been launched at a police station in this area on 13 August last year in which 8 people lost their lives.

Evidence of Indian involvement at dialogue table: Malik


KARACHI: Interior Minister Rehman Malik said on Monday that evidence of Indian involvement in Pakistan has been handed over to the foreign ministry in Islamabad.

Speaking to the media after meeting with clerics at the CM House here, Malik said the evidence of Indian involvement in Pakistan will be shared with New Delhi during composite dialogue between the two countries.

The minister said arms and ammunitions smuggled into the country from Afghanistan were being used in terrorist activities in Pakistan. He said he was in talks with US and Afghan authorities in this connection and a mechanism is being put in place to stop the arms smuggling.

He stressed the need of ending cross border infiltration between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Malik said the army defends the country’s borders while the Ulema are the guardians of country’s ideology.

“On the instruction of President and Prime Minister, I have come to Karachi to seek guidance of Ulema against the militancy,” Rehman said.

To a question, he said that David Headley was born in Pakistan but was raised and studied in the United States. He should be tried according to the American law, said Rehman, adding if there was any evidence suggesting his links in Pakistan then it should be shared with us.

SOURCE: http://geo.tv

Osama escaped Pakistan: British newspaper

LONDON: A British newspaper citied Taliban warlords has claimed that Osama Bin Laden has fled Pakistan into Afghanistan.

The al-Qaeda chief escaped as Pakistan stepped up its military campaign on its lawless border area.

Qari Hussain - wanted for training suicide bombers - said he had met Bin Laden in Quetta near the Afghan border.

He said: "He recently left for Afghanistan. The military operation left him with no choice."

The claim was supported by Taliban warlord Shamim Mehsud, holed up in Pakistan.

The news came as US Defence Secretary Robert Gates confessed they had received no decent intelligence on Bin Laden's location for "years".

He added: "If we did, we'd go and get him."

SOUCE: http://geo.tv

Friday, December 4, 2009

Blast rocks cafe in Perm, Russia. 100 dead 90 injured


An explosion has occurred in a cafe in the Urals city of Perm, a local police source told RIA Novosti by phone on Saturday.
The blast occurred late on Friday. Casualties were reported.
"The blast occurred at 23:15 Moscow time [20:15 GMT]... According to preliminary reports, some were killed or injured, their number is being established," the source said.
He added that no fire followed the blast.
Firefighters, rescuers and doctors are working at the scene.

Corruption is our Right: Pakistan People Party Minister

Monday, October 26, 2009

US raids free child prostitutes

FBI officials in the US say they have rescued more than 50 children from prostitution rings.

Nearly 700 hundred people were arrested in 36 cities over three days, officials said, in an operation targeting a number of prostitution hotspots.

Most of those rescued were girls under 18 with the youngest just 10 years old. Dozens of pimps were also arrested.

The raid was part of a larger FBI operation which has so far recovered nearly 900 children from prostitution.

More than 1,500 FBI agents and police officers took part in the raids, which were based on intelligence provided by local police forces.

Nationwide effort

The FBI said that information provided by those arrested in such raids often uncovered organised prostitution rings and could lead to further rescues.


Kevin Perkins, the Assistant Director of the FBI's Criminal Division, said that despite recent success, child prostitution remained "a significant problem" in the US.

Ernie Allen, president of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, welcomed the arrests of hundreds of people, including 60 pimps who had been forcing the children into prostitution to make money.

"Child trafficking for the purposes of prostitution is organised criminal activity using kids as commodities for sale or trade.

"These kids are victims. They lack the ability to walk away. This is 21st Century slavery," Mr Allen said

source: bbc.co.uk

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Foreigners advised to restrict movement

ISLAMABAD: A number of foreign missions in Islamabad have advised their citizens to restrict their movement after a fresh threat of terrorist attacks in the capital, sources in the interior ministry and diplomatic circles told Dawn on Wednesday.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik has warned of new threats of terrorist attacks in Islamabad and other parts of the country in the near future.

“The federal government issued a security advisory to the provinces and all authorities concerned two weeks ago on the basis of an intelligence report,” he said during a recent visit to the office of World Food Programme where a suicide attack claimed the lives of five UN officials.

“A security alert has been issued about possible attacks by terrorists in Punjab, Sindh, Islamabad and Balochistan,” he said, adding that steps had been taken to foil their nefarious designs.

According to the sources, the foreign missions have alerted their citizens in view of a possible military operation in Waziristan and reaction from the Taliban.

Malaysia has advised its nationals to be more vigilant. “According to the Pakistani authorities, another large-scale suicide bombing may take place and, therefore, Malaysians are advised to be more vigilant and avoid going to potential target areas,” said an advisory issued by the Malaysian Foreign Ministry.

It said the Malaysian Foreign Ministry and Malaysian High Commissioner in Islamabad would continue to monitor the situation and issue reports accordingly.

Meanwhile, President Asif Ali Zardari has said terrorist attacks will not shake Pakistan’s determination to take the fight against extremists and militants to the end.

During a meeting with Executive Director of the World Food Programme Ms Josette Sheeran at the President House, he said: “The people of Pakistan are shedding the blood to make the country, the region and the world safe and free from extremist elements.”

The president offered condolences over the loss of innocent lives in the suicide bombing at the WFP office and said that heinous attacks, especially on people who were working for eliminating poverty and hunger, were condemnable.

PCB issues show cause notice to Dr Shah


KARACHI: International Cricket Council (ICC) has sent a written complaint to Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) against the statement of Dr Shah in which he had said that umpire Simon Toffel fixed the match with Indian lobby.

PCB has issued a show cause notice to Dr Shah, the member of the governing body of the Board.

According to PCB spokesman, since this statement may cause negative impact on PCB-ICC relations that’s why show cause notice has been issued to Dr Shah.

Obama delays signing K-L bill due to criticism

Updated at: 1635 PST, Wednesday, October 07, 2009
WASHINGTON: President Obama has delayed signing Kerry-Lugar bill due to reports of criticism on the bill in Pakistan, Geo news reported Wednesday.

According to sources, the decision came following reports in regard to reservations and questions raised by different sectors in Pakistan over the bill.

It is pertinent to mention that Kerry-Lugar bill will be debated in the national assembly today as PML-N Tuesday tabled the adjournment motion to debate on K-L bill in the Lower House which speaker Fehmida Mirza accepted for debate.

Mansha says can bring more investment than K-L bill

KARACHI: The Chairman of an independent Nishat Group Mian Muhammad Mansha who owns the MCB Bank, becoming critic of Kerry-Lugar bill, has said Wednesday, I can bring more annual investment in Pakistan than what will be gained through Kerry-Lugar aid bill.


But he conditioned the influx of heavy investment in country with the support of government if extended for the development of private sector in Pakistan.

This Mansha stated at the inauguration ceremony of induction of Nishat Power Company (NPC) in Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) here early on Wednesday morning.

On the occasion, he said the delay in the merger of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and Muslim Commercial Bank (MCB) is caused by regulators which has cost account holders a lot.

He expected the merger of two banks by the end of coming week, saying Nishat Group is pioneer among Pakistani private giants, which will own foreign banks for the first time.

Moreover he said, our economy has started witnessing growth and can be further improved if we consider prices of our commodities.

SPORTS: Groups confirmed for ICC Cricket World Cup 2011

The ICC Board meeting in Johannesburg today confirmed the groups for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011.

In Group A there will be Australia, Pakistan, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Canada and Kenya.

In Group B there will be India, South Africa, England, West Indies, Bangladesh, Ireland and Netherlands.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Rain sees Pakistan through to semi-finals

CENTURION: Pakistan qualified for the Champions Trophy semi-finals after the India-Australia match was abandoned due to rain here on Monday.

Pakistan have already secured four points after winning both of their matches in the four-team Group A, while Australia have three points and India one after two games. The West Indies have lost both of their games.

The top two sides advance to the semi-finals.

Defending champions Australia were on course for a big total before the play was called off due to heavy rain in the day-night match.

They posted 234-4 in 42.3 overs after winning the toss on a good batting track, with Michael Hussey (67), skipper Ricky Ponting (65) and Tim Paine (56) all making the most of a mediocre Indian attack.

Cameron White was unbeaten on 35 and Callum Ferguson on two.

India, needing a win to boost their hopes of making it to the last-four, bowled inconsistently, failing to keep pressure on Paine, Ponting and Hussey.

Australia lost an early wicket when Shane Watson pulled left-arm seamer Ashish Nehra to Harbhajan Singh at mid-wicket.

Ponting and Paine then steadied the innings with an 84-run stand for the second wicket, gathering runs comfortably against both pace and spin.

Paine was more aggressive than his captain, once pulling seamer Ishant Sharma for a six and also hitting seven fours in his 58-ball knock. His flourish ended when he was caught by Harbhajan off leg-spinner Amit Mishra.

But there was no respite for India as Hussey and Ponting consolidated their team’s position with an 88-run partnership for the third wicket.

Ponting was caught short of the crease while going for a second run, with Gautam Gambhir hitting the stumps from the deep at the non-striker’s end. He hit one six and four boundaries in his 88-ball knock.

Hussey fell in a bid to step up the run-rate, caught by Sachin Tendulkar at long-off off Sharma in the 41st over after hitting five fours in his 65-ball knock.

India made two changes from the side that lost to Pakistan on Saturday, bringing in Mishra and seamer Praveen Kumar in place of Yusuf Pathan and Rudra Pratap Singh.

Australia retained the team that defeated the West Indies in the previous match.

India clash with the West Indies, while Australia meet Pakistan in the last league matches on Wednesday.


SOURCE: dawn.com

Gilani, Singh likely to meet in Nov

NEW YORK: There’s a strong possibility that Indian and Pakistani prime ministers could meet on the sidelines of the Commonwealth heads of government meeting, which is scheduled in late November inTrinidad, diplomatic sources told Dawn.

This would be a follow-up of the two-day talks between their foreign ministers and foreign secretaries in New York during the weekend.

The meetings on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly were the first high-level contacts between the two countries since their prime ministers met at the Egyptian resort of Sharm El-Sheikh in July.

When asked about the next round of talks at a briefing on Sunday, Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna said: ‘We have just come out of one (meeting). So, give us some time.’

While talking to the Pakistani media, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi also indicated that the next logical opportunity for another meeting would be the Commonwealth summit.

Mr Qureshi said he was willing to travel to India himself if this might improve public sentiment there towards engagement.

After his 100-minute meeting with his Indian counterpart, Mr Qureshi indicated that despite an apparently lukewarm response from the Indians, the fresh attempt to improve ties soured by last November’s militant attacks in Mumbai was gathering momentum.’ I have suggested to my counterpart a way forward and a roadmap for the future.’


SOURCE: dawn.com

Friday, September 25, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: Huge blast heard in Peshawar, casualties feared

ISLAMABAD: A huge explosion rocked Pakistan's main northwestern city of Peshawar on Saturday, police and residents said.

'It was a very big explosion. I could see smoke rising from the scene,' Asad Ali, a resident, said by telephone from Peshawar. Police said they were investigating.

According to local television channels, at least 25 people have been injured and are being taken to Lady Reading Hospital.

A Taliban suicide bomber earlier crashed his explosives-laden truck into a police station in Bannu, also in northwestern Pakistan, killing six people and wounding 30, police said.

India to deploy two fighter squadrons near border


SOURCE: dawn.com


NEW DELHI: The Indian Air Force is planning to deploy by 2011 two squadrons of Sukhoi Su-30 MKI multi-role strike fighters in the state of Punjab which borders Pakistan.

Talking to newsmen here on Friday, Western Air Command chief Air Marshal N.A.K. Browne said two units of medium-lift Mi-171V helicopters would be inducted in Rajasthan and occupied Kashmir.

He said the air force would continue to operate locally-built Dhruv advanced light helicopters and Cheetal helicopters in high-altitude areas, including Siachen, adding that IAF also planned to buy light utility helicopters for such operations.

The air marshal said the IAF was also planning to improve its air defence units all over Punjab and occupied Kashmir.

‘These (steps) are in tune with our focus to improve all-round offensive and air defence capability, operational infrastructure, and modernisation plans,’ Air Marshal Browne said.

The IAF, he said, was planning to install special mountain and light-weight radars along the 667-km border with China in Ladakh.

‘The air force is examining a special type of radars, which we call the ‘mountain radars.’ We are also looking at low-level light-weight radars. There is a definite plan,’ he said, adding that the radars would be put in place over the next four to five years.

The IAF had already awarded contracts for 19 low-level radars and its Western Air Command was already using some of them.

‘More are in the pipeline. They will start coming online from next year,’ he said, adding that two locally-developed Rohini radars had already been placed on the Line of Actual Control,India’s border with China along Ladakh.

‘We do need to talk to everybody ... every one of our neighbours and at the same time keep our gun powders dry. We should maintain our preparedness at highest levels,’ media reports quoted Air Marshal Browne as saying.

When asked to comment on IAF chief Air Chief Marshal P.V. Naik’s remarks that India’s air force fleet was just one-third of China’s, he said the IAF was ‘extremely well-balanced on all fronts,’ like numbers, technology, modern platforms and equipment.


SOURCE: dawn.com

Get Paid for Receiving Calls: Ufone


COURTESY:http://propakistani.pk


Ufone has launched this new promotion where the subscribers will get bonus balance for incoming calls.

The incoming calls have to be from operators other than Ufone or international calls. This service is available for prepaid users only.

Ufone Incoming Call Bonus 300x220 Get Paid for Receiving Calls: Ufone

A subscriber who gets a call from other network, will get 0.25 Rs in his balance if the duration of that call is more than 120 seconds (2 minutes). Meaning that 25 Paisas for each received call that is over 2 minutes duration …!

This balance will be credited to his account immediately.

One can find out about this balance through IVR by calling on 127 or by sending an SMS (USSD) to *127#. Charges may apply for balance inquiry as per standard balance inquiry charges.

We are told that this promotion is initially valid for 1 month (end of Oct).

  • Free balance is valid for 15 days
  • Free balance will end at the expiry of the scratch card/ULoad validity
  • This is a limited time offer

COURTESY: http://propakistani.pk

Fawad fined for missing ceremony

JOHANNESBURG: Pakistan's all-rounder Fawad Alam got away with a mere Rs10,000 fine for failing to report for the flag-hoisting ceremony prior to the start of the opening match against West Indies at the Wanderers on Wednesday.

A well-placed source in the Pakistan cricket team confirmed to 'The News' that Fawad Alam did not turn up for the flag hoisting ceremony at the ground and even had failed to justify his absence.

After conducting a hearing on the player, the team management fined him and warned him against any future misconduct.

One of members of the team when requested to narrate the whole story said that the organisers had invited sixteen kids who were supposed to accompany the 15-member team along with the coach to the Wanderers for the flag hoisting ceremony. However, Fawad did not turn up despite several reminders and was sleeping in the dressing room. By the time he woke up, the short ceremony was already over. The kid who was supposed to accompany Fawad also left perplexed and confused. He even started weeping finding no player to walk with.


The kid was consoled and was later offered the opportunity to take pictures with each member of the team.

This is not the first time the player fell short of required discipline standard. A couple of weeks back he had been involved in a serious breach of conduct during the national training camp for the Champions Trophy forcing the management to impose a heavy fine of Rs100,000 on him.

When Pakistan team management was contacted, they tried to play down the episode. "It was not a big issue and we settled it according to laid down rules."

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Trouble breaks out at G20 summit

Trouble has flared as world leaders gather in the US city of Pittsburgh for the G20 summit.

Reports said riot police used pepper gas and fired rubber bullets at protesters on a march near the venue.

Demonstrations were widely expected and thousands of extra police are on duty. The previous G20 meeting, in London in April, was marred by clashes.

Economic stability, financial regulation, climate change and bankers' bonuses are set to top the G20 agenda.

The clashes are thought to have begun after hundreds of protesters tried to march, without permission, towards the convention centre where the summit is being held.

'Party over'

With many major economies beginning to climb out of recession - attention will turn to when and how to withdraw government stimulus packages.

Cracking down on bankers' bonuses has popular appeal with the public, it is expected that an agreement will be reached on how that might be achieved.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said G20 countries had reached a consensus on the "basic outline" of a proposal to limit pay and bonuses by the end of 2009.

Each country would set their own standards, he said, but that these would be overseen by the G20's Financial Stability Board - made up of central bankers and regulators.

Earlier, Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling warned bankers that the "party was over" and they must realise that the world has changed.

Balance growth

A spokesman for the White House said that financial regulatory reform was the most important agenda item for summit, but that addressing global economic imbalances was also a priority.

President Barack Obama has led a campaign to smooth out imbalances in the flow of global capital to try to secure greater long-term economic stability.

The US proposal calls on economies such as China, Brazil and India to boost domestic consumption in order to lower their trade surpluses.

Meanwhile the US and Europe would encourage more saving to reduce long-term budget deficits.

Director of the US president's National Economic Council, Larry Summers, said that a "balancing global growth approach" of said that there would have to be changes in

"The US can't, should not and won't continue to experience the consumption-led growth driving very high volumes of imports and lending impulse to the rest of the world economy," he told the BBC.

"That's not a sustainable financial situation for the US and that's why we're in the process of adjusting."

Other discussions will involve the continuation of talks over whether countries such as China, India and Brazil should have greater say on the board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).


bbc.co.uk

Balochistan CM Raisani sacks minister

SOURCE: DAWN.COM

QUETTA: Balochistan Chief Minster Nawab Aslam Raisani has sacked provincial Food Minister Mir Ali Madad Jatak of the Pakistan People’s Party, with immediate effect.

A spokesman for the Chief Minister’s Secretariat announced the decision on Thursday night without giving any reason. ‘The chief minister has removed Mr Jatak from his office,’ he told Dawn, adding that he had not been authorised to provide details.

After the removal of the food minister the strength of the PPP-lead coalition cabinet has fallen to 47.

Zakat Minister Agha Irfan Karim of the PPP announced late in the night that he would quit the provincial cabinet in protest against the removal of Mr Jatak.

‘I will resign as a protest against the decision of the chief minister,’ he told reporters on telephone.

According to sources, Mr Jatak was sacked because of his ‘continuous violation of the party and cabinet discipline’.

They said the chief minister and several members of his cabinet had taken notice of Mr Jatak’s statements in the media against the coalition government and provincial leadership of the PPP.

In a statement published in Thursday’s newspapers, Mr Jatak criticised the chief minister and said his government was ‘without any power and is being run by bureaucracy’.

He also said that he had formed a group for political change in the coalition government and the new chief minister would be from the PPP.

The sources said the chief minister had taken the decision of Mr Jatak’s removal after consultations with coalition partners.

It has been learnt that a PPP minister without portfolio will take over the charge of the food ministry on Friday.

Mir Madad Jatak was elected MPA on a PPP ticket. Chief Minister Raisani included him in his cabinet as food minister, but his differences with the provincial PPP leadership after Senate elections led to his removal from the cabinet.

Mr Jatak accused the chief minister of working against the PPP in the province. ‘I am thankful to the chief minister for my removal from the cabinet as I was a powerless minister,’ he remarked.

'It is better to sit outside the cabinet than work as a powerless minister,' he told Dawn, adding he had already indicated that Mr Raisani, who had been elected on a PPP ticket, was working against the interest of the PPP, giving importance to the bureaucracy and ignoring ministers.

He said he would consult his group before taking any decision.


SOURCE: DAWN.COM

Senate triples US aid to $1.5 billion


SOURCE: DAWN.COM


The US Senate on Thursday approved a compromise legislation to triple non-military aid toPakistan,

President Barack Obama told an international summit inNew York.

‘How nice that the US president could announce it personally,’ US special envoy Richard Holbrooke later told a briefing while emphasising the importance of the announcement made at the Friends of Democratic Pakistan summit.

President Asif Ali Zardari also stressed the significance of Mr Obama’s gesture, telling the reporters that it reflected the confidence the international community had in the new democratic set-up in Pakistan.

‘We have come a long way. The democracy has completed a full circle,’ he said. We have a message for the extremists:

‘There’s no place for them in the civilized world.’

The president said that at the FODP summit, the entire world recognised that ‘our struggle against terrorism must be fought not just on the battlefield, but in education, in health, in jobs, in trade, and above all for the hearts and minds of our people.’

He added: ‘A stable, prosperous Pakistan is the world’s greatest hope against the spread of extremism and terrorism.’

He said that the elected government provided ‘political ownership to the war against extremism and terrorism’ and involved the entire nation in this fight.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who addressed a joint news conference with Mr Zardari after the summit, endorsed the Pakistani leader, reminding journalists that ‘leaders from more than 20 countries’ expressed their confidence in the new set-up in Islamabad.

Mr Holbrooke later explained how the Kerry-Lugar bill passed through the US Senate. ‘We worked all night to ensure that the bill is approved unanimously,’ he said, adding that some Republican lawmakers had reservations which were removed.

‘The entire room burst into spontaneous applause as President Obama announced the approval of the bill,’ said Mr Holbrooke.

‘I am not suggesting that one bill changes history but it is an important step,’ he said, noting that ‘it’s for the first time in the modern era that the US Congress made a multi-year commitment’ to another country.

The legislation, known as the Kerry-Lugar bill, will bring about $1.5 billion a year to Pakistanfor each of the next five years, as part of a plan to fight extremism with economic development.

The bill, approved on a voice vote, had been agreed between the Senate and House sponsors of legislation passed separately in each chamber earlier this year. It also had the ‘full support’ of key members of the Obama administration.

Mr Holbrooke said that chairman of the House Committee on International Relations had informed him that the House would take up the bill next week and it would soon be sent to President Obama who would then sign it into a law.

Supporters of the legislation — an updated version of a bill backed by President Obama, Vice-President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, when they were seNators — say the measure aims to banish any doubts that Washington has made a long-term commitment to helping Pakistan.

The measure, which seeks to use economic development to battle the despair that can fuel extremism, comes at a time when President Obama has vowed to overhaul US strategy for Afghanistan and neighbouring Pakistan.

More pledges were met at the summit where, according to the British prime minister, almost all participants agreed to increase the pledges they had made earlier.

At an earlier FODP meeting in Tokyo in April this years, a host of donor nations pledged almost $6 billion to Pakistan but the IMG confirmed on Tuesday that only ‘a fraction of those pledges have so far realised.’

Although almost 26 countries participated in the summit and some — the US, Britain, France, Japan, Canada and others — sent their presidents or prime ministers, Pakistan’s two key allies chose not to do so.

Both China and Saudi Arabia only sent their UN ambassadors, although their foreign ministers were in town.

Canada has a longstanding and important friendship with Pakistan,’ Prime Minister Stephen Harper told the summit. ‘This meeting was a valuable opportunity for leaders to show our commitment to working with the government and the people of Pakistan as they seek to build a more secure future.’

President Zardari, President Obama and Prime Minister Brown co-chaired this first leaders’ meeting of the Friends of Democratic Pakistan. It was convened to demonstrate the international community’s continued support at the highest level for Pakistan’s civilian and democratically-elected government as it faces complex security, economic development and humanitarian crises.

The discussions centred on combating violent extremism, addressing energy shortages and fostering socio-economic development in Malakand and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. These have been the areas of focus of ministerial-level meetings of the Friends of Democratic Pakistan.

Prime Minister Brown, besides increasing Britain’s pledge to Pakistan, also announced a separate aid of 50 million pounds for the areas bordering Afghanistan.

The Friends of Democratic Pakistan first met in New York on the margins of the United Nations General Assembly in September 2008. The founding members include Pakistan,Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, theUnited Kingdom and the United States, as well as the United Nations and the European Union.

At the New York summit, the Asian Development Bank, which also participated in the meeting, agreed to set up a fund to help Pakistan overcome the energy crisis while the World Bank agreed to set up a separate fund for dealing with the economic crisis. The Pakistani government will make an integrated plan for dealing with the energy crisis, with the help of the ADB.

The participants vowed to support Islamabad’s political and strategic strategy for dealing with militancy.

They promised to enhance their support to Pakistan’s efforts to fight extremism.

They acknowledged Pakistan’s sacrifices in the war against extremists and ‘praised the brave armed forces of Pakistan,’ as Prime Minister Brown said.

They also recognised the recent operation in Swat and Malakand as a successful operation. They endorsed a plan presented before a ministerial meeting in Istanbul earlier this year.

The participants also agreed to strengthen Pakistani institutions, particularly in the tribal areas.


SOURCE: DAWN.COM

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

World applauds Pakistan’s anti-militant operations’


NEW YORK: The global community has greatly appreciated the successful operation against the militants in the Swat and Malakand regions by the present elected government and has expressed strong economic and political support for democratic Pakistan, said Islamabad's envoy to the United States Husain Haqqani.

In an interview with APP here ahead of the Friends of Democratic Pakistan (FoDP) summit to be co chaired by President Asif Ali Zardari, US President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown this week, he said the FoDP member countries would affirm their support for Pakistan in addressing the challenges it faces on the economic and security fronts.

The FoDP summit level meeting will be attended by twenty member countries and international financial institutions including World Bank, Asian Development Bank and the IMF.

Ambassador Haqqani said the FoDP summit will put across an unequivocal message for Pakistan that it would not be left alone in the fight against terror as was done after the Russian-Afghan war and that the international community would extend all possible help and succour to Pakistan to preserve its sovereignty, security, democracy and economic development.

He said it was quite evident that Pakistan's army could perform any arduous task with the backing of the people, adding that the public opinion in Pakistan was absolutely against any extremism.

To a question, Mr Haqqani said the FoDP will also suggest measures to facilitate market access for Pakistani products in the EU and other countries which, he added, however could not be done overnight

The envoy underscored that Pakistan has a strong case for continued international backing as its problems have roots in the world-supported effort when it helped fight the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s and now the country is spearheading the fight against extremism.

‘Pakistan's elected democratic government, its brave armed forces and the people are unanimous in their belief that terrorism is a threat to the country and that the efforts against the menace are not meant to please anybody but they are aimed at ensuring our own security and safety,’ he stated.

Among prominent participants at the FoDP summit will be the prime ministers of Spain, Norway, Denmark, Japan and top leaders from Germany, China, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

‘All these countries stand for security, stability and prosperity of Pakistan and their participation will reassure the Pakistani nation of their support.’

‘The summit will help remove apprehensions that the world will once again abandon the country, as had been the case in the past,’ he said in reference to the United States and world powers abandoning Afghanistan and Pakistan after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989.

U.S. General admits rising Indian influence in Afghanistan


WASHINGTON: U. S. General Stanley A. McChrystal has warned that the rising Indian influence in Afghanistan could exacerbate regional tensions in the region and harm the U.S. interest.

In the clearest statement to date of Washington’s reservations about the rising Indian economic and political profile in Afghanistan, the top American general in charge of the war against the Taliban and other insurgents there has said India’s increasing influence in the insurgency-wracked country “is likely to exacerbate regional tensions”.

“Indian political and economic influence is increasing in Afghanistan, including significant development efforts and financial investment. In addition, the current Afghan government is perceived by Islamabad to be pro-Indian”, the McChrystal report notes.

General Stanley said that the Indian ongoing activities would exacerbate the tensions in the region and this could heighten the anxieties of Pakistan. U.S. General said that the tense situation in the region could result harming the U.S. interest.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

New Wardrobe Brings Freedom to Women in Swat

COURTESY: NEW YORK TIMES

MINGORA, Pakistan — When the Taliban took control here in February and forced women into burqas, an epidemic of clumsiness swept this city. Women began banging into lamp posts. Nurses fumbled needles. Many simply stopped going out altogether.

Burqas Disappear From a Pakistani City

Now the Taliban are mostly gone, driven out by a military operation this summer, and the women of this northern Pakistani city, the largest in the Swat Valley, are returning to public life. Teachers are back at work, maids are commuting to jobs across town and nurses are giving injections without having to squint through a coarse layer of netting.

People here still worry that the war could return anytime. Last month, a suicide bomber killed 15 police officers at the central police station here. But for now, at least, women are feeling steady on their feet, a cautious vote of confidence in security here by society’s most vulnerable.

“When the Taliban fled, our burqas went with them,” said Shahin Begum, 40, an elementary school teacher, who returned to work on Aug. 1.

Women were the main targets of the Taliban’s morals police, and once that rigid rule was imposed their lives froze. They were barred from going to traditional women’s shopping areas, and anyone who worked in a public place, including hospitals, was required to wear a burqa, a sacklike, head-to-toe garment with netting over the eyes.

The burqa is traditional for many women in tribal, conservative western Pakistan. But here in the Swat Valley and its ethnically mixed hill towns north of the capital, Islamabad, women are relatively more open, and for many the outfit felt clumsy and confining.

“I felt like I was out of air,” said Zaida Bibi, a maid in a green shawl with flowers.

Now, she said, it still feels like a delicious act of revenge to walk into Cheena Market, a maze of glittering glass stalls full of cosmetics, dresses and shoes that was forbidden under the Taliban, where she was shopping Sunday.

“It’s a free, light feeling,” she said as she chose gifts for Id al-Fitr, a major Muslim holiday, which was celebrated this week.

For many women here, after nearly two years of twisting themselves into strange shapes to survive, returning to work is its own form of protest. Asia Habib, 28, left a job in Peshawar, the regional capital, to return to her nursing position in a private hospital in Mingora in July. She remembers arguing with a Taliban fighter who threatened her when she refused to buy him medicine. What was worse, she had to wear a burqa to treat him.

“I had two jobs — managing the burqa and treating the patient,” said Ms. Habib, wearing a white shawl. “You wanted to weep but you couldn’t even do that in front of them.”

The burqa was not the worst of women’s troubles, but it was one of the most public displays of what the Taliban wanted of women — that they disappear. At first many women changed to a Persian Gulf niqab, with a slit for the eyes. But that was not enough for the Taliban, so the Afghanistan ghost style became mandatory.

“That’s when we started falling down,” said Shahi Begum, a 45-year-old primary school teacher. Like horses with blinders on, women lost their peripheral vision. Climbing into rickshaws became treacherous, as women gathered billowing material to sit in a small space. “Legs in one direction, hands in another,” Ms. Begum said.

Sharisa Rehman, a teacher who returned to her job at the Sangota Girls School on Aug. 3, said she still had difficulty thinking about the time she spent under Taliban rule. “I was bound like a prisoner,” she said.

Her postcommute changing routine out of her burqa reminded her of a superhero. “Like Spider-Man,” she said.

Nearly all her students have returned, she said, despite coming from affluent families who had migrated to larger, safer Pakistani cities. That ratio is much lower in rural areas of Swat.

Taliban rule left people here poorer. As girls schools began to close, Ms. Bibi’s work cleaning them dried up, and she could no longer risk traveling to work in private homes. Her children’s shoes grew tight. Her daughter was separated from her baby long enough that she stopped lactating, and finding the money to buy milk became a daily struggle.

“Life was strangled,” she said, adding, “we hated them.”

That life seems far away now. People take pleasure in once mundane things that disappeared under the Taliban, like traffic and TV. The Swat Cinema held its second screening in two years on Monday; so many people were clamoring to see the Pashtun shoot ’em-up that three more shows were added.

Mingora may seem normal now, but the social ills that fueled militancy are unchanged. Young men in the rural parts of the valley, where the insurgency began, are still unemployed. The Taliban remains a formidable force in other areas of western Pakistan, and the government has yet to fill the vacuum they left in Swat.

“Just because there’s no Taliban, doesn’t mean the problem is gone,” said Sher Yar, a businessman waiting in line for a haircut. “No practical steps have been taken for people to have faith in the government.”

Ms. Begum, the elementary school teacher, said she believed that the Taliban gave false messages to young people, including that Islam required women’s faces to be covered. But in a measure of how wary she still is, Ms. Begum said she would not speak of this in her classroom, for fear that her remarks might bring trouble.

Ms. Rehman, the private school teacher, used her burqa to express her doubts. “It’s still hanging in my room, ready to wear,” she said.

COURTESY: NEW YORK TIMES