Saturday, June 14, 2014

Nisar discharged from hospital after angiography

ISLAMABAD: Federal Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan went through an angiography on Wednesday night and was discharged from the hospital after the treatment, DawnNews reported. The doctors ordered his release from the hospital after his condition stabilised and he was later shifted to his home. Nisar had been taken to a hospital last night after suffering from chest pains. The interior minister was taken to the Rawalpindi Institute of Cardiology where he went through an angiography. The interior ministry has declined to confirm or deny the incident. Nisar has been the interior minister since June 2013. Prior to being made the interior minister he had been PML-N's Leader of the Opposition from 2008 till 2013, when the PML-N won the general elections.

Jirga, militants to discuss deadline

MIRAMSHAH: The elders of the Uthmanzai Wazir tribe and a militants’ council plan to meet here on Saturday to discuss a 15-day deadline given by the government to local tribes for flushing out militants from the area. According to sources, a jirga led by Haji Sher Mohammad and the Mujahideen Shura led by Hafiz Gul Bahadur will meet at an undisclosed place to discuss the situation amidst an exodus of non-combatants from the area during the past couple of days. The government had given the 15-day deadline to a jirga which visited Peshawar on June 6 and met the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa governor and Peshawar corps commander. Later, the tribal elders held several meetings with the Taliban council to persuade them to prepare a joint strategy for ousting militants, including foreigners, from the area. Following a meeting with Gul Bahadur, the Taliban Shura asked militants to stay peacefully or vacate the area, vowing not to allow them to create unrest. On the other hand, the administration imposed a dawn-to-dusk curfew which triggered panic among the people. The move also halted the displacement of people during the time. The scared tribal people continued hoisting national flags on their houses in Miramshah and Mirali to demonstrate their loyalty to Pakistan and avoid bombing by the security forces. At least 361 tribal families, comprising 6,343 people, have crossed into Afghanistan to avoid a conflict and have been registered by the Afghan government. The governor of the neighbouring Khost province, Abdul Jabbar, has announced that ration and monetary assistance of 50,000 afghanis will be provided to the tribesmen who have taken refugee there. A local driver, Abdullah, who had taken a family from Miramshah to Khost via Ghulam Khan, told Dawn that a camp for the migrants had been set up on the directives of the governor.

CJCSC to meet US military leaders

WASHINGTON: Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (CJCSC) Gen Rashad Mahmood begins a week-long visit to the United States on Monday for talks aimed at strengthening the relationship between the two militaries. The visit coincides with a stepped-up military campaign in Pakistan to deal with the Taliban militants who attempted last week to seize the country’s largest airport. According to diplomatic sources, Gen Mahmood is coming to the United States on the invitation of his US counterpart, Gen Martin Dempsey, and he will visit several military bases in the country besides holding talks with key officials in Washington. The visit will help “improve the networking between the top military leaderships of the two allied nations”, said an official source. “It will also help create a better understanding between the two militaries.” Gen Mahmood will also visit the headquarters of the US Central Command in Tampa, Florida, where talks are expected to focus on the current situation in the Pak-Afghan region. The Centcom oversees all US military operations in the area. In Washington, Gen Mahmood will have a detailed meeting with Gen Dempsey and later with all three services chiefs. Meanwhile, the US media reported on Friday that Islamabad had encouraged the Americans to conduct drone attacks in North Waziristan that killed 16 militants. Pakistan has officially condemned the drone strikes but the media called it a “joint US-Pakistan operation”. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

Pakistan has ‘very, very key position’ in South Asia: Kerry

WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Friday that recent developments in South Asia had placed Pakistan in a “very, very key” position and had further increased the need for staying engaged with that country. “Obviously, Pakistan is very, very key now, has been for 70 years,” the secretary said. “Now with the transition in Afghanistan, with the new government in India, with certain challenges that we’re both facing in terms of counter-terrorism,” it had become even more crucial to stay engaged with Pakistan, he added. According to a transcript released by the US State Department in Washington, Secretary Kerry made these remarks before his meeting with Pakistan’s National Security Adviser Sartaj Aziz in London. The top US diplomat noted that the two countries also had “major economic issues” to talk about, particularly the “huge challenge” that Pakistan was facing in meeting its energy demands. “We have a lot to discuss, and particularly at this moment … I think it’s good that we have a chance to be able to meet,” he said. Mr Aziz said he had come to London to attend a conference on ending sexual violence in conflict regions but wanted to avail the opportunity for also discussing bilateral issues with Mr Kerry. He noted that the United States and Pakistan held their strategic dialogue in March, and “it’s always useful to follow up to see what progress has been made, what more needs to be done”. He said that since a lot of things were happening in the South Asia region, “this is a very good chance” for exchanging views on those developments. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

IHC hints at commission to investigate ‘illegal gains’ made by TV anchors

ISLAMABAD: The petition seeking action against ARY News anchor Mubasher Lucman over his alleged contemptuous campaign against judiciary may ensnare a number of television show hosts as the Islamabad High Court (IHC) has hinted at setting up of a commission to investigate the “illegal and unfair gains” made by them. Towards the end of a preliminary hearing on Friday on the petition filed by the District Bar Association of Islamabad, Justice Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui observed: “This situation may constrain the legal fraternity to ask this court and the federal government to constitute a commission to probe the assets of the anchorpersons and their families... foreign tours and the hotels in which they live, shopping made ... and also to ask about the tax they pay and to know how they live beyond their means.” The proposed commission might also investigate connections of land mafia with certain news channels and anchorpersons “who are on the payroll of land grabbers and receive plots for looking after their interests”, said Justice Siddiqui. The court also issued contempt of court notices to Mr Lucman, chief executive officer of ARY News Salman Iqbal, information and broadcasting secretary Nazir Saeed and acting chairman of the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority, and directed them to appear before the court on the next date of hearing, in the first week of July. Representing the bar association, Syed Nayyab Hassan Gardezi contended that certain elements had begun targeting the Supreme Court of Pakistan, in particular Justice Jawwad S. Khawaja, without any lawful justification. He lamented that neither had any case been registered against persons involved in inciting hatred against institutions nor had any restrictions been imposed on them to check “their unlawful acts”. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

Seven charged in Kerala with defaming Indian PM

NEW DELHI: Police in southern India have arrested seven people, including four students, and charged them with defaming the country’s new prime minister in a college magazine, officials said on Friday. The arrests came after an annual student magazine at the Government Polytechnic College in Kerala state included a photo of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a collage of what it called “negative faces.” Others included in the collage were Adolf Hitler, Osama bin Laden and former US President George W. Bush. The seven people were arrested Wednesday and charged with defamation and criminal conspiracy, said district police chief N. Vijaya Kumar. They were released on bail on Thursday. If found guilty, they could face prison terms and stiff fines. The four students helped edit the magazine. The others who were arrested included the college’s top official, the magazine’s faculty adviser and the owner of the company that printed the publication. Police seized a printing press and computers used to design the magazine, as well as nearly 400 copies of the magazine, Kumar said. “They were arrested under several charges, including defamation, intentional insult to provoke breach of peace, criminal conspiracy and printing matter known to be defamatory,” he said. Police made the arrests after Yuva Morcha, or Youth Front, a group affiliated with Modi’s right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party, complained about the photo. An official said the college has temporarily suspended five students involved in planning and printing the magazine. All five belong to the Students’ Federation of India, a student wing of the Communist Party of India (Marxist). The SFI runs the college’s student union.The student union publishes the magazine each year based on a theme. This year’s issue, which was distributed last week, explained world history through pictures of faces. The magazine listed people under five categories: spiritual, literature, world leaders, negative and sports. Modi, who was sworn in as prime minister late last month, was chief minister of the western Indian state of Gujarat when it was ripped by sectarian violence in 2002. More than 1,000 Muslims were killed and Modi was widely seen as having done little to stop the carnage, though he denies any wrongdoing.The SFI has openly accused Modi of being responsible for the sectarian violence. Indian politicians are known for being sensitive to public criticism or ridicule. In November 2012, two 21-year-old college students were arrested in Mumbai for posting a comment on Facebook criticizing the shutdown of India’s financial hub for the funeral of a powerful right-wing politician. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

Man’s fingers chopped off in India, acid poured into eyes

PATNA: Police in eastern India were searching on Friday for six men who allegedly chopped off a 19-year-old man’s fingers before pouring acid into his eyes following a minor dispute, an officer said. The man was recovering in hospital following the attack late on Thursday in which most of his fingers were hacked off in a village in Bihar state, local police superintendent Chandrika Prasad said. “He was attacked, beaten half dead, his fingers chopped off and acid poured into his eyes by some people over a dispute,” said Prasad, from Samastipur district where the attack took place. “Police have began an investigation into the case and raided several places to arrest the named accused in the case, who are absconding after the shocking incident,” he said. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

UN human rights chief concerned over situation in Iraq

UNITED NATIONS: As Sunni insurgents continue to overrun parts of northern Iraq, the United Nations human rights chief expressed “extreme alarm” on Friday at reports of summary executions and extra-judicial killings, and the massive displacement of some half a million people, many of whom are now in urgent need of shelter. The UN human rights commissioner Navi Pillay said in a statement that she was deeply disturbed by reports that fighters belonging to the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria “including prisoners they had released from jails in Mosul and provided with arms, have been actively seeking out — and in some cases killing — soldiers, police and others, including civilians, whom they perceive as being associated with the government”. The full extent of civilian casualties was unknown, but “the number of people killed in the conflict in recent days may run into the hundreds, and the number of wounded is said to be approaching 1,000,” Ms Pillay said. She said the conduct of ISIS fighters in Iraq would be under “particular scrutiny” because of what she said was the well-documented record of the insurgents in committing grave international crimes in Syria. The United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Syria has accused the insurgents of committing crimes against humanity and other serious human rights violations in the Syrian provinces of Raqqa, Idlib and Aleppo. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

Three health workers face murder charge over measles deaths

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa health department on Friday announced it would book three of its technicians for intentional murder over four deaths during the recent anti-measles campaign in the province. It also announced suspension of 10 doctors and health technicians from Peshawar hospitals for negligence in the case. Health minister Shahram Khan Tarakai told a news conference here on Friday that the suspension had been ordered in light of a high-level inquiry into the deaths of four children and hospitalisation of dozens in Peshawar after their vaccination against measles during the 12 days campaign, which began across the province on May 19. He said the inquiry committee had found that technician Tariq, supervisor Majid and helper Zareef wrongly administered anti-measles vaccine to children causing their deaths and therefore, cases would be registered against them for intentional murder under Section 302 of the Pakistan Penal Code. Minister says technicians didn’t administer vaccine properly The officials said around 9.6 million children were vaccinated during the campaign and that the federal government had purchased anti-measles vaccines used in it from India. After the death of four children and hospitalisation of many more, the provincial government had ordered inquiry into it. There followed formation of an inquiry committee headed by Peshawar deputy commissioner Zaheerul Islam and consisting of senior doctors and a representative of the World Health Organisation. “The committee found that three technicians didn’t inject vaccines properly to children and thus, causing their deaths. In this light, the three have been suspended forthwith and a case against them will be registered under Section 302 of the PPC,” said Shahram Tarakai, who was accompanied by information minister Shah Farman. The health minister said after improper administration of the vaccine, the children were brought to three major hospitals of Peshawar, including Khyber Teaching Hospital (KTH), Lady Reading Hospital (LRH) and Hayatabad Medical Complex (HMC), for treatment. “The affected children didn’t survive due to the negligence of relevant doctors at these hospitals and therefore, the committee also recommended their suspension,” he said. Shahram Tarakai said the government had zero tolerance for medical negligence and that action would be taken against the culpable ones under the law. He said the health department had ordered suspension of provincial Expanded Programme for Immunisation coordinator Dr Janbaz Afridi and that Rs500,000 would be paid to the family of every child died of improper administration of vaccination as compensation. According to him, other doctors and associate professors, who have been suspended for negligence in the case, are LRH medical officer Dr Sher Aslam, KTH medical officer Dr Mudassir Shahzad, HMC junior registrar Dr Ahmad Saeed, LRH associate professor Dr Afzal Khattak, LRH senior registrar Dr Faridullah Shah, LRH senior registrar Dr Rashida Kareem, LRH senior registrar Dr Mohsin Hayat, LRH senior registrar Dr Ameer Mohammad and HMC associate professor Dr Younis Paracha. In addition, the department has asked Post Graduate Medical Institute to impose lifetime ban on the training of four trainee doctors in the government health institutions of the province. Among them are LRH medical officer Arif, LRH TMO Fazle Ahad, LRH TMO Fakhruddin and HMC TMO Asif Siddiqui. Earlier, information minister Shah Farman said the anti-corruption department had either arrested or issued orders for the arrest of 144 government employees for corruption during the ongoing campaign. He said Rs13.9 million ill-gotten money had been recovered from the said employees. Shah Farman said the anti-corruption campaign would be accelerated in the days ahead. He said the price control committee had been dissolved due inefficiency but the government had no plans to dissolve the anti-corruption department. The minister said prices of daily commodities had decreased after dissolution of the committee. “We won’t allow artificial price hike during and after Ramazan,” he said. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

Fresh probe ordered into Dera jailbreak

PESHAWAR: The provincial government has ordered a fresh inquiry into the Dera Ismail Khan jailbreak, which had occurred in the last week of July 2013. According to a handout here on Friday, Dr Hammad Uwais Agha, BS-21, secretary, environment department, will be convener of the inquiry committee, while Fazli Rabbi, BS-20, chairman BISE Malakand, would act as member of the committee. The committee will have the mandate to fix responsibility over acts of omissions and commissions in express terms on the officers/officials for negligence in the incident. The committee would give its findings in two weeks to proceed further in the matter. Heavily armed militants had attacked the DI Khan central prison on the night between July 29 and 30 last year and had got freed 253 prisoners and then returned to their sanctuaries with ease. Soon after the incident, the government had formed an inquiry committee to probe the jailbreak and fix responsibility. Instead, the 21-page inquiry report was shelved. The report recorded how a group of some 20 to 25 Mehsud militants, aided by a number of Punjabi militants as well as several Uzbeks and other supporters, travelled undetected from their hideout in South Waziristan to assemble at the Town Hall in Dera city just across the prison by 8:30pm. Referring to the inquiry report into the jailbreak, a former chief secretary lamented that disciplinary action should have been taken immediately against those responsible for the security lapse. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

Afghans vote again in final test as Taliban threats loom

KABUL: Afghans headed back to the polls on Saturday for a second round of voting to elect a successor to President Hamid Karzai in a decisive test of Afghanistan's ambitions to transfer power democratically for the first time in its tumultuous history. The vote pits former anti-Taliban fighter Abdullah Abdullah against ex-World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani after neither secured the 50 percent majority needed to win outright in the first round on April 5. Voters were not put off by a couple of rockets landing in the capital and formed long queues at polling station before voting began at 7 a.m. (0230 GMT) “Afghan people always rise from the ashes to face challenges. Today is one such challenge and we will rise to the occasion,” said Arash Yarmand, an electrical engineer preparing to cast his vote in Kabul. “There's a lot of expectations from the new government and we hope they live up to it.” As most foreign troops leave by the end of 2014, whoever takes over from Karzai will inherit a troubled country with an increasingly violent Taliban insurgency and an economy crippled by corruption and the weak rule of law. The process has been fraught with accusations of fraud by both candidates and many fear a close outcome will make it less likely the loser will accept defeat, possibly dragging Afghanistan into a risky and protracted stand-off over the vote. Independent Election Commission chief Ahmad Yousuf Nuristani sought to reassure voters and observers the organisers would ensure the process would deliver a legitimate winner. “We have zero tolerance for fraud and if we detect any case of election staff working in favour of a candidate, they will be sacked immediately,” he said. From windswept deserts on the Iranian border to the remote, rugged Hindu Kush mountains, 12 million eligible voters can cast ballots at 6,365 polling centres. “The country is in a crisis ... Only a strong leader can rescue it,” said Shukria Barakzai, a female member of parliament. “Everyone - young, old, rich and poor - came out in unpleasant weather, despite threats, to vote in April and we hope it will be the same this time. This is Afghanistan's spirit,” she said. The Taliban may prove a formidable obstacle. The insurgents, now at the height of their summer offensive, have warned people not to vote in an election they have condemned as a US-sponsored charade. “This time the Taliban will try to compensate for what they couldn't achieve in the first round of the election,” said Defence Ministry spokesman General Zahir Azimi. The high turnout of nearly 60 per cent in the first round was a major defeat for the Taliban. Observers expect fewer than 5 million voters this time, partly because of security concerns. Ethnic lines Officials in Kabul are haunted by the prospect of a close outcome that could furnish the losing candidate and his supporters with an excuse to reject defeat, and, in the worst scenario, propel the country back into war along ethnic lines. Both candidates set the stage for complaints with repeated attacks on electoral organisers, accusing them of incompetence and bias. “Some of the teams openly played ethnic politics and that is not good for the country,” said Habibi Aminullah, former campaign manager to Qayum Karzai, the president's brother, who was a candidate in the first round. “I hope the election ends at a point in which no violence takes place. I hope the international community helps the country.” The United Nations has appealed to candidates to refrain from attacking the organisers to safeguard the process. “There's a short-term gain only in trying to undermine or bully the institutions at the expense of their legitimacy,” said United Nations deputy chief Nicholas Haysom. “It's going to be the legitimacy of the elections which will give legitimacy to the new head.” Abdullah polled 14 percentage points ahead of Ghani in the first round with 45 per cent of the vote, but Ghani, who is ethnic Pashtun, stands to gain a portion of the Pashtun vote that was splintered in the first round. Pashtuns are Afghanistan's biggest ethnic group, making up about 45 per cent of the population. Abdullah is partly Pashtun but is identified more with the ethnic Tajik minority. The chances of an equal split between candidates are hard to gauge because there are few reliable polls. ACSOR research centre, asking respondents to choose between Abdullah and Ghani, predicted a 50:50 split shortly before the first round. A more recent survey by Glevum Associates indicates that Ghani may have overtaken Abdullah, predicting 49:42 in Ghani's favour.

Three mortar shells fired from Afghanistan

PESHAWAR: Three mortar shells were fired from Afghanistan on Saturday which fell near the Pak-Afghan border. According to sources, the mortar shells landed in Lowai Shalman area of the Landikotal Tehsil of the Khyber Agency. No casualty was reported in the incident. Meanwhile, a curfew was imposed on main Pak-Afghan Highway from Jamrud to Torkham apparently due to a cleanup operation launched by security forces. Military sources said security forces were carrying out sanitisation of the area along the Jamrud-Torkham Road in the Khyber tribal region which was why curfew had been imposed and it would be lifted at 5 pm. Although, some sources said the border had been sealed on account of the second phase of the Afghan presidential polls today to avoid any untoward incident. Separately, security forces and militants clashed in Khyber tribal region’s Bakarabad area during a search operation. In another incident in Bara Qamberabad area of Khyber, peace committee member Rafiq Khan Orakzai was killed in an explosion caused by a remote controlled blast. Pakistan boosts security along Pak-Afghan border Additional troops have been deployed on the Pak-Afghan border to reinforce existing security arrangements for conduct of peaceful presidential elections in Afghanistan, a spokesman for the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said. A number of measures have been taken for the purpose after due deliberation and coordination with Afghan security forces. While ensuring that a smooth flow of voters move, checking by immigration staff at crossing points has been enhanced and patrolling has been increased in areas close to the border. Strict checking measures are being employed on routes from mainland leading towards border areas, the spokesman said. Communication at Border Coordination Centres on both sides has also been enhanced and a hotline contact has been established between the two Military Operations directorates. Additionally, aerial surveillance is also being carried out to check any untoward cross border movement. Moreover, the Foreign Office has termed the second phase of the Afghan presidential elections a milestone in what it called the country’s democratic journey. "We reiterate that these elections are an Afghan affair, with the Afghan electoral institutions in the lead. They bear a heavy responsibility, and we wish them well in accomplishing their task successfully,” FO spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam told Dawn. “We also hope that the voters would once again demonstrate their firm resolve and exercise their right to determine their future through democratic means, in an optimal way,” she said. Aslam said that for its part Pakistan remains committed to supporting all efforts for a free and peaceful electoral process in Afghanistan. Mateen Haider contributed to reporting

Earthquake tremors felt in Peshawar, surrounding areas

ISLAMABAD: A moderate earthquake struck northwest Pakistan, causing panic in towns and cities, but there are no immediate reports of casualties or damage, an official said. Mohammad Riaz, a senior scientist at the Pakistan Meteorological Department, said the magnitude 6.0 quake was felt in the northwestern city of Peshawar and several nearby areas on Saturday. He said the quake's epicentre was located in the Hindu Kush in neighbouring Afghanistan. Peshawar is the capital of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan. Pakistan is often hit by earthquakes. In September 2013, a magnitude-7.7 quake struck the Balochistan province, killing at least 376 people and creating a new island in the Arabian Sea. Earlier on Friday, a 5.3-magnitude earthquake had struck southwestern Pakistan with its epicentre in the city of Khuzdar, in Balochistan province and at a depth of 26 kilometres. The quake, which struck late morning, was also felt in surrounding towns and districts.

Musharraf's name on ECL: Govt challenges SHC ruling in apex court

ISLAMABAD: The federal government on Saturday challenged the Sindh High Court's ruling which had struck down its order of preventing retired General Pervez Musharraf from leaving the country. Attorney General Pakistan Salman Aslam Butt filed an appeal in the Supreme Court against the ruling of the high court which ordered the removal of Musharraf's name from the exit control list. The appeal requests the court to not allow the removal of Musharraf's name from the list and continue travel restrictions on the former military ruler. The attorney general has contended that the federal government could not take the risk of allowing the former president to leave the country because there was a great incentive for him to flee in view of a treason case that involved the death penalty. The high court which had struck down the travel restrictions on Musharraf on Thursday had said at the time that the ex-army strongman will have to wait for two weeks to find out if he could actually travel abroad. The court had suspended the operation of its judgment for 15 days enabling the federation to file an appeal in the Supreme Court. Moreover on Friday, the special court trying Musharraf for treason rejected his plea to seek details of the over 1,000 ‘abettors’ who had met him before the imposition of Nov 3, 2007 emergency. However, the court left the door open for the retired general to file such an application in the future when Justice Faisal Arab called the current petition “premature”.

Twin blasts target security forces' vehicle in Mohmand

PESHAWAR: Twin blasts in Mohmand Agency on Saturday left one paramilitary soldier dead and five others injured in a remote-controlled improvised explosive device (IED) blast near a security forces' vehicle in Chamarkand area of northwestern Pakistan's Mohmand tribal region. The political administration and security sources confirmed that the first blast occurred in Lower Chamrkand area of Safi Tehsil in Mohmand agency, leaving one security man and two civilians injured. The vehicle was destroyed in the explosion however the officer in it remained safe, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) confirmed. The second explosion took place in the same area when the Khasadar force personnel reached the spot to investigate the issue. The second blast left Hussain Hawaldar dead and two others injured. Military officials confirmed that one Khasadar force official was killed in the blast. Mohmand is one of Pakistan’s seven tribal regions near the Afghan border which are rife with homegrown insurgents and are said to be strongholds of Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives. In a separate incident one security personnel was injured and a passersby killed in a blast near a security forces convoy near Shinkayari area of Mansehra. Two explosions occurred near the convoy. Two killed, three injured in Hangu militant infighting Two militants were killed and three others were injured on Saturday reportedly as a result of infighting between two militant groups in the Spin Thall area on the outskirts of Hangu district. Official sources said the two groups clashed at one of the bases of militant commander Mullah Nabi in Spin Thall area of Hangu which borders the Orakzai tribal region. Sources said militants involved in the clash were reportedly the personal guards of Nabi.

Country's leadership must unite against Taliban: Rehman Malik

KARACHI: Former interior minister and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader Rehman Malik on Saturday said time had come for the country’s leadership to come together and stand united against the Taliban instead of taking the dialogue route, DawnNews reported. Malik was speaking to media representatives at the airport in Karachi which recently suffered a terrorist attack that claimed 34 lives. The PPP leader told reporters that the attack on the airport had resulted in portraying the country in a very negative light, adding that the government should ensure increased security and better patrolling at airports across Pakistan. Malik added that terrorist groups posed a serious threat to the state and the citizenry and that the country’s security situation was not looking up at least in the near future. Blaming Afghan agencies for allegedly supporting terrorist groups operating inside Pakistan, Malik said a thorough investigation should be carried as to how weapons in such a heavy quantity were brought within the premises of the country’s busiest airport. Malik’s statement comes as the PPP-led Sindh government and the Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz-led federal government is engaged in a war of words over assigning responsibility in one of the most brazen attacks on a key installation in recent years. The attack was claimed by the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) which carried out the attempted siege along with a number of Uzbek fighters from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU). It extinguished a nascent peace process and raised questions about how the Taliban were able to penetrate the airport serving Pakistan's economic hub.

World Cup football fever grips Pakistan

KARACHI: A corner of Karachi will forever be Brazil. Karachi this week issued a fresh reminder of its reputation for chaos and violence but on its teeming streets, the more burning topic of interest is the World Cup now under way. The “beautiful game” offers residents a brief respite from the maelstrom of violence that blights their everyday lives. Earlier this week militants laid siege to the city's airport in a nighttime raid that killed 38 people, the latest in a series of militant attacks to bring chaos to the country's vital economic hub. But in Lyari, the talk is all football. Most of the homes in the gang-blighted slum are festooned with the flags of different national teams, with Brazil's yellow and green colours by far the most popular. Local resident Mohammad Ameen was busily preparing for his wedding Friday. Yet he was equally determined not to miss out on any footballing action, despite cricket ranking far ahead of football for most Pakistanis. “I can't miss the World Cup,” the 27-year-old said. “I have asked my relatives to come early so that we can wrap up the ceremonies early and I can watch the match with my friends. “Lyari has overcome miserable facilities and a notorious reputation for gang violence that has killed hundreds of people over the past 15 years to produce the country's best football players. Former Pakistan international Aurangzeb Shahmir, who lives in the neighbourhood, said local residents are obsessed with the tournament, even if his countrymen have never even qualified for the finals. “When you come to Lyari these days, you will realise that the football World Cup is on,” he said. Load shedding Finding a working television is not easy in a city beset by regular power outages. Like thousands of fans, Shahmir almost missed the opening ceremony on Thursday night after much of the city's southwestern suburbs were plunged into darkness. “The power came on just minutes before the opening ceremony, so I was lucky. But we appeal to the authorities to reduce load-shedding (rolling blackouts) so that we can watch all the matches,” he said. In Malir, a football fiesta is also under way as people do their best to forget about how the country's aviation hub was briefly turned into a war zone only a few days before. “We started preparations for the World Cup late because of the airport attacks,” said local resident Jalil Baksh, whose house is painted with a tournament schedule and group standing tables. “But now we can't wait any more as the festival is on. “The timing of the tournament suits school children, who are currently on their holidays and can stay up late into the baking summer nights. “I am gearing up to watch matches and there will be no school to worry about,” said local student Abbas Ali Shabbir, an avid football fan. Those who can afford it have also taken advantage of a recent relaxation of visa restrictions to go and watch the games in person. “We have issued visas to around 200 people from Pakistan, while some 300 Pakistanis are travelling to our country from other parts of the world, “Brazil's ambassador Alfredo Leoni told reporters in Islamabad on Thursday. “Here in Pakistan, we've given 100 per cent waiver on visas to Pakistani fans to help them enjoy football extravaganza in our country,” he added. But for the vast majority of Karachi's estimated 20 million inhabitants, a television — and a prayer that the city's electricity supplies hold up — will just have to do.

Iraq's implosion could redraw Middle East boundaries

BEIRUT: The capture of Iraqi cities Mosul and Tikrit by al Qaeda-influenced militants has not only redrawn the map of a country corroded by sectarian hatred. It could also redesign Middle Eastern national boundaries set nearly a century ago after the fall of the Ottoman empire, and lead to a forging of new regional alliances. As well-armed forces of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) raised their black flags over Mosul this week, routing an Iraqi army that fled rather than fight, the future of Iraq as a unitary state hung in the balance. As they pressed south towards Baghdad, the rest of the region, the United States and other powers woke up to the prospect that this militant comeback could establish a dangerous base in the heart of the Middle East — an Afghanistan on the Mediterranean. “What we are witnessing is the fragmentation of power. The government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki will never be able to centralize power in the same way he has,” says Fawaz Gerges, a Middle East expert at the London School of Economics. “We are seeing a redrawing of boundaries for sure,” he said. As the conflict escalated, Iraq's most senior Shia cleric on Friday urged his followers to take up arms to defend themselves against the Sunni revolt. A rare message from Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the highest religious authority for Shias in Iraq, said people should unite to fight back against the insurgency by ISIL fighters and former Saddam loyalists. Sistanis's intervention followed the failure of the government of Nuri al-Maliki, the Shia prime minister re-elected in April, to convene a quorum in parliament to grant him emergency powers. Sunni and Kurdish lawmakers had stayed away. A STUNNED REGION: The peshmerga forces of the Kurdish region of northern Iraq meanwhile seized Kirkuk, the oil-rich region bordering their self-governing territory, stepping into a security vacuum to claim a prize they have always regarded as their own. The ease with which ISIL, a Sunni militant movement that has fed on the civil war in Syria and staked out the ungoverned space between eastern Syria and western Iraq, swept into Iraqi cities has stunned a region seemingly inured to shock. The insurgents, led by Iraqis who broke with al-Qaeda, are pressing south to Baghdad. Some experts say they may be over-reaching. But while ISIL's predecessors were defeated in 2007-08 by Sunni tribal militias empowered by U.S. forces, ISIL has exploited Sunni anger at Maliki's sectarianism and inherited networks from Saddam Hussein's army. “ISIL has been able to embed itself with a disaffected and alienated Sunni community”, says Gerges. “In fact, the most important development about ISIL in the last year is its ability to recruit former officers and soldiers of the dissolved Iraqi army. If you observe how ISIL has been waging war you see a skilled mini army, confident, that has command and control, is motivated and using war tactics.” The ISIL advance has been joined by former Baathist officers who were loyal to Saddam as well as disaffected armed groups and tribes who want to topple Maliki. So far the towns and cities that have fallen to the militants have been Sunni. “The Sunnis of Iraq are willing to go to bed with the devil to defeat Maliki, this is where the danger lies,” Gerges said. Redrawing the borders The million-strong Iraqi army, by contrast, trained by the United States at a cost of more than $20bn, is hobbled by low morale and corruption that impedes its supply lines. Its effectiveness is hurt by a perception among Sunnis that it pursues the hostile interests of the Shias, a majority in Iraq, raised to power by the U.S. led invasion of 2003. The Kurdish capture of Kirkuk overturns a fragile balance of power that has held Iraq together since Saddam's fall. Iraq's Kurds have done well since 2003, running their own affairs while being given a fixed percentage of the country's overall oil revenue. But with full control of Kirkuk — and the vast oil deposits beneath it — they could earn more on their own, eliminating the incentive to remain part of a failing Iraq. U.S. President Barack Obama threatened military strikes against ISIL, highlighting the gravity of the group's threat to redraw borders in a region already wracked by war. Hayder al-Khoei, Associate Fellow at Chatham House, said the militant onslaught leaves Washington in an awkward position. “With US-made military vehicles and weapons being paraded by militants in Mosul, policy-makers will be questioning the effectiveness of providing Baghdad with even more military hardware that may end up in the hands of the very people they want to defeat,” he said. Ambivalent to hostile Reactions inside the region are ambivalent to hostile. Deep down Saudi Arabia and its Sunni allies, which have never reconciled themselves to the loss of Sunni-ruled Iraq to the Shias, detest Maliki for his alliance with non-Arab Shia Iran. They would like to see Maliki brought down but did not want al-Qaeda affiliates to be the ones doing it. They believe Iran, backed by its allies, wants to build a Shia crescent from Iraq through Syria to Lebanon. “I can imagine a Saudi official saying 'the wrong people are doing the right thing',” said Jamal Khashoggi, head of a TV news station owned by Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal. On the other hand, Iran, which has strong leverage in Iraq, is so alarmed by the ISIL advances that it may be ready to cooperate with Washington in helping Baghdad fight back. A senior Iranian official said that the idea is being discussed among the Islamic Republic's leadership. For now, officials say, Iran will send its neighbour advisers and weaponry, although probably not troops, to help Maliki. Turkey, which has turned a blind eye to militants crossing its border to fight Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, is not ready to intervene militarily because it fears its own sectarian demons and will focus on securing its borders, experts say. The Kurds, crucial players, will likely resist Baghdad's calls to be drawn in by sending troops to recapture Mosul and other towns. They will instead consolidate their presence in Kirkuk and along their borders, Kurdish officials said. Iran weighing in Iraq watchers say ISIL, estimated to have a few thousand fighters inside Iraq, won't be able to advance into Baghdad, a capital of 6 million where Maliki has his special forces deployed, backed by Iranian-trained militias. “I don't think they will run as far as Baghdad. They haven't got the numbers, they overreached themselves...It is more about the weakness of the Iraqi state than it is about the state of ISIL,” said Toby Dodge, Director of the Middle East Centre at the London School of Economics. Just as there is little chance of ISIL taking over the Shia-dominated capital, the Iraqi army is unlikely to dislodge ISIL from Mosul or regain full control of the north of the country, even with Shia militia volunteers and likely Iranian support. With the rising Sunni insurgency, Iran may have to weigh in to salvage its ally and Tehran's influence in Iraq as it did in neighbouring Syria. Diplomatic sources said Iran already has high-ranking commanders, including two close aides of Qassem Suleimani, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards elite Quds force, regularly holding meetings with Maliki. Malikis' mobilisation of Shia militias, endorsed by the highest religious authority, has the potential to trigger all-out sectarian strife, analysts say. And there are concerns that Iraq might disintegrate into sectarian and tribal conflict, shattering into Shia, Sunni and Kurdish entities. “Maliki is playing with fire by trying to unleash Shia militias, this is a recipe for disaster. That's exactly what ISIL wants — to trigger all-out sectarian war,” Gerges said. “Iraq has never healed, it is a mutilated country. The crisis is reaching a tipping point whereby Iraq will splinter into three or four states or reconcile. To reconcile you need a new leader, a new mindset and you don't have it there.”

Pervez Musharraf | Analysis: The final flight?

Retired Gen Pervez Musharraf’s desperation to take possibly his last flight out of the country has been increasing ever since the Sindh High Court ordered the removal of the over 14-month-old travel ban on him but gave the federal government 15 days to appeal its decision before the apex court. The former military ruler has already requested the interior ministry to let him fly to Dubai, in view of the judgment, to visit his ailing mother and have his back treated. His lawyers have also filed a review petition with the Sindh High Court, seeking reduction in the number of days given to the government for appeal to three. The general’s desperation is understandable. He is the first dictator facing the death penalty in a treason case — not for his ‘original sin’ but for imposing emergency on Nov 3, 2007 that led to the suspension of the Constitution, and the dismissal and detention of superior court judges. He is also facing charges in the Benazir Bhutto and Akbar Bugti killings as well as in other cases since his return to Pakistan to lead his party in last year’s elections. His opponents fear that once out, he will not return home to face the cases. Hence, they want him to remain on the Exit Control List. His supporters scoff at this argument. “How can someone be restricted from travelling if he is neither convicted nor has detention orders against him? You can’t deny a person the fundamental right of movement because you think he’ll run away; the law does not work on presumptions,” notes one of his lawyers Chaudhry Faisal Hussain. Both the courts and the government know this. Yet neither is ready to go soft on the dictator. Many insist it is one of those cases where nobody wants to accept responsibility because it involves a former army chief, and believe that the court judgment only confirms this. The interior ministry has twice rejected Musharraf’s request to allow him to travel abroad, saying it is a decision for the courts. In December last, the Sindh High Court had directed him to contact the appropriate forum — the government — to get the ban lifted. “It’s like ping-pong,” says Hussain. “Nobody is willing to take responsibility [of letting Musharraf off the hook]. It shows the weaker side of the judiciary and the government both.” Lawyers such as Tariq Mahmood, a former judge, agree. “There’s a lot of pressure on the courts from the ‘outside’... otherwise there’s no reason to put him on the ECL.” He went so far as to blame the apex court and the TV talk shows for bringing immense pressure on the interim government to put restrictions on the former general. And this is precisely what political commentators like Hasan Askari Rizvi say of Nawaz Sharif’s dilemma. “If he doesn’t challenge the high court’s order, Nawaz Sharif will risk facing embarrassment. His political adversaries will try to exploit it. If he goes for an appeal or places new restrictions on Musharraf it could mean confrontation with the military, which wants the matter closed,” he argues. Askari feels the premier is in a “difficult and problematic” situation. “How he handles it will largely influence his political future [as the issue has already soured his government’s ties with the military].” Some believe that Nawaz Sharif has already done a deal with the military to allow the general who toppled his second government to leave the country. However, he wants the courts to lift the ban on him because of public and media pressure. His departure will remove a major source of the government’s friction with the powerful military establishment and let it focus on more pressing issues like the economy, energy and militancy. But government ministers including Khawaja Asif and Saad Rafique deny any compromise. The risks of further straining ties with the military notwithstanding, there are indications the government would rather challenge the order than appear to have struck a deal with the military. The statements of the ministers testify to this. “I think the government will try and stretch the issue as far as it is possible,” says Mohammad Waseem, a Lahore University of Management Sciences professor. But he considers the cases against Musharraf just an irritant in civil-military relations. “Both the government and the military know that nothing is going to happen to him. The judiciary too has been very accommodating vis-à-vis the former military ruler. I don’t see the issue straining civil-military relations.” There’s almost a broad consensus that the apex court’s review will determine the entire course of cases against Musharraf if Sharif decides to approach it for the reversal of the Sindh High Court decision. Waseem doesn’t think the Supreme Court has any option but to strike down the order. “The apex court had prompted the government to institute the [treason] case against him and it knows if the ban is lifted he will leave for good. Both the government and the judiciary will try to stretch the case against him.” Musharraf’s counsel Hussain views it differently. “If the Supreme Court sets aside the high court’s decision, it will put a big question mark on its impartiality.” In either case, it will again be for the apex court to rule whether Musharraf’s flight is to be delayed a little longer or cancelled. And the status of his flight will determine, even if to a limited extent, how government-military ties shape up. Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2014

Balochistan minority MPA shot dead in Quetta

QUETTA: Minority member of the Balochistan Assembly Handery Masieh was killed by his guard in Quetta on Saturday, an official said. He was killed in a firing incident in Nawan Killi — located in the suburbs of Quetta — the provincial capital of Balochistan. Jan Muhammad Buledi, the government spokesperson of Balochistan, told Dawn.com that his security guard opened fire on Masieh outside his residence as a result of which he suffered serious bullet wounds. "Masieh succumbed to his injuries in the hospital," Buledi added. Masieh was elected on a ticket of the National Party (NP) as a minority member in the Balochistan Assembly. He belonged to Balochistan’s Mastung district and was an active leader of the ruling NP. "The same guard was serving with Masieh for the past 15 years," Rehmat Baloch, the provincial health minister and central leader of NP, told Dawn.com. A large number of NP supporters and leaders gathered at Frontier Corps hospital where his body was kept. “Motive behind the killing is yet to be ascertained," Jan Buledi said. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif strongly condemned the incident and directed the Balochistan government to bring the perpetrator of his killing to book. Chief Minister Balochistan Dr. Malik Baloch, who also belongs to the NP, strongly condemned the incident and directed police to arrest the accused person involved in the murder.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

POWER CRISIS: Mr Goyal won't be able to keep his promise; only 3 days of coal supply left with power plants

New Delhi: The government may have said that the Capital’s power crisis will ease in the next few days but poor summer rains and plunging coal stocks at plants nationwide are set to worsen north India’s energy woes. The Union power ministry’s latest data shows that as many as 21 power projects have less than four days of coal supply, while another 15 projects are running less than 7 days of coal stocks. These plants together produce 55,000 mega watts (MW) or more than 20% of the total power generated in India. Out of these, six projects of the NTPC — some of which provide power to northern India including Delhi — are running on zero coal stocks, with supplies at bare minimum to make the plant run. Authorities are also monitoring supplies from the northern grid to states such as Uttar Pradesh and Haryana to prevent a collapse similar to the one in August 2012 that had left more than 600 million people across north and east India powerless for more than 24 hours. A grid — a network of transmission lines carrying power produced at plants — calibrates supplies to states. Each state has a quota of power that it can draw from the grids. “We are resorting to strict measures including cutting power supplies of states that do not react to warnings on over-draw of power,” said a senior official of POSOCO, the authority that manages the grid. Union power secretary PK Sinha has called a meeting on Thursday to put a contingency plan in place to deal with delayed rains, low coal supplies in power plants and better grid management. Read: Power crisis looms across north India as UP overdraws from grid Power ministry officials agreed that poor rains can potentially dry out reservoirs prompting hydro stations to cut down generation, leading to increased dependence on coal-based power stations. But with alarmingly-low coal stocks, the crisis will worsen. A grid — a network of transmission lines carrying power produced at plants — calibrates supplies to states. Each state has a quota of power that it can draw from the grids. “We are resorting to strict measures including cutting power supplies of states that do not react to warnings on over-draw of power,” said a senior official of POSOCO, the authority that manages the grid. Union power secretary PK Sinha has called a meeting on Thursday to put a contingency plan in place to deal with delayed rains, low coal supplies in power plants and better grid management. Power ministry officials agreed that poor rains can potentially dry out reservoirs prompting hydro stations to cut down generation, leading to increased dependence on coal-based power stations. But with alarmingly-low coal stocks, the crisis will worsen. Long power outages in Delhi have become emblematic of north India’s crushing power shortage amid the sweltering heat across the plains of North-west India. The shortage have hurt operations in tens of corporate towers across the NCR and further squeezed small entrepreneurs, already smarting under a slowdown and costly borrowing and raw material. NTPC, India’s largest thermal power company, produces 43,000 MW of power and is facing alarming coal supplies in plants across Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh. There are signs that UP is drawing more than its share of power, 6,400 MW a day. The Northern Regional Load Dispatch Centre (NRLDC)—an agency that monitors energy pull out by states—has been sending repeated alerts to the UP Power Corporation Ltd asking it stick to the ceiling to maintain the grid safety. After the blackout two years ago, the NRLDC fixed the upper limit for all states to draw power from the central grid to the northern grid.

PM Modi’s message to opposition: Don’t do ‘psychological’ analysis of rape

New Delhi: Reacting strongly against the irresponsible comments made by political leaders, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday asked political leaders to refrain from "doing psychological analysis" of rape and respect women. "I appeal to our political leaders that we should not carry out psychological analysis of rape... Is it correct to make a statement always? Why rpt why can't we just keep quiet. Respect and security for women should be the topmost priority of the entire people," Modi said in Lok Sabha. He was replying to a debate on the Motion of Thanks to the President for his address. "Whenever such incidents happen, we should not just introspect but act... We are playing with the dignity of mothers and sisters. The people and the victims will not wait for long," he said. The Prime Minister said women, who constituted half the population, should be made "active participants" in development. His comments came against the backdrop of the recent rape incidents in various parts of the country, including Uttar Pradesh. Mulayam Singh Yadav, chief of ruling Samajwadi Party in Uttar Pradesh, was present in the House. He also referred to the incidents in Pune (killing of a techie), Manali (where several students were washed away) and incidents of rape, saying "whatever has happened, it is painful. Our conscience will not forgive us"

Five rape cases reported in past 36 hours in UP: DGP says it happens, it's a routine

Lucknow: Racing ahead of politicians and bureaucrats in putting ridiculous remarks on sexual violence, the Uttar Pradesh police described the rising number of rape incidents in the state as part of the "routine life" and therefore, it should not be blown out of proportion. Talking to reporters on Thursday, UP DGP A L Banerjee said, “..manta hun ghatnaaye ho rahi hai…Har saal mein normal routine hai jisme ghatnaayein hoti rehti hai…isiliye police hai, isiliye administration hai, law and order hai (I admit that such incidents are happening...it happens almost every year as part of normal routine. That is why police, administration, law and order exist)." He also said that the incidents of rape have not found an increase over the last few months, as projected in media, but almost the same as each year. Just after giving out such a controversial statement, the top most level cop met Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh. His comment came a day after Maharashtra Home Minister R R Patil said that even deploying policemen in every household will not help since a majority of rapes happen within the confines of home. Before Patil, Chhattisgarh Home Minister Ramsevak Paikra waded into a controversy by saying that rape happens "by mistake". Talking to news channels, Paikra said that "nobody commits rape on purpose" but it happens "by mistake (dhoke se)". He was responding to questions about the rise in incidents of rape. Earlier, facing heat for failing to control law-and-order situation, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav lost cool when he was asked the rising number of rapes in his state. "Have you faced any problem? You are safe, why are you bothered?" he asked a reporter who sought information on the rapidly increasing cases of crime against women in the state. During an election rally in Moradabad, Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav had said the death penalty in rape cases was "unfair" as boys make "mistakes". "Ladkon se aisi galtiyan ho jaati hain to iska ye matlab nahin ki phaansi de di jaye (Boys do make such mistakes but that does not mean that they should be sent to the gallows)," he had said. When our leaders and top cops consider rape and murders just mistakes of boys or part of routine, then criminals are bound to smile. Meanwhile, incidents of rape don’t seem to end in Uttar Pradesh. In a fresh case, policemen in Hamirpur area in the state are accused of raping a woman inside police station premises. It has been learnt that the victim was raped whole night by the cops. In another gruesome incident reported from Moradabad, dead body of a 16-year old girl was found hanging from a tree. The family of the girl alleges that she was raped before getting murdered. One more case of gang-rape was reported from Bharua Samairpur in Hamirpur district where one sub inspector and two constables outraged the modesty of a woman inside the police station. The victim accuses that policemen raped her when she had gone to police station to meet her imprisoned husband.

Saddam’s town Tikrit falls as militants’ offensive gathers pace

KIRKUK: Militants seized the Iraqi city of Tikrit, on Wednesday, but their assault on Samarra was repulsed as a lightning offensive launched in the country’s second city Mosul swept closer to Baghdad. Since the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) began their spectacular assault in Mosul late on Monday, militants have captured a large swathe of northern and north-central Iraq, prompting as many as half a million people to flee their homes. The speed with which ISIL and its allies have advanced after their seizure on Tuesday of Mosul — a city of two million people — has sent alarm bells ringing not only in Baghdad but in Western capitals. It has also triggered a hostage crisis for Ankara, which is scrambling to secure the release of 48 Turks taken hostage by the militants. In a statement on Twitter, ISIL vowed that it would “not stop this series of blessed invasions” that has seen the fall of the whole of Nineveh province in the north and swathes of Kirkuk and Salaheddin provinces further south. Tikrit — hometown of executed dictator Saddam Hussein — was the second provincial capital to fall in as many days as the militants and their allies captured a string of mainly Sunni Arab towns where resentment against the Shia-led government runs deep. “All of Tikrit is in the hands of the militants,” a police colonel said of the Salaheddin provincial capital, which lies roughly half way between Baghdad and Mosul. A police major said the militants had freed some 300 inmates from a prison there. After Tikrit’s fall, the operation spread down the main highway towards Baghdad, with militants battling security forces on the northern outskirts of Samarra, just 110km from the capital. Iraqiya state television said security forces launched air strikes on them, and witnesses said the clashes ended without the militants entering the city. It was not immediately clear what became of the attackers. Militants had tried to seize the city late last week, and were only halted by a massive deployment of troops, backed by tribal militia and air power. Although Samarra too is mainly Sunni Arab, it is super sensitive for the government as it is home to a shrine revered by the country’s Shia majority. A 2006 bombing of the mausoleum by Al Qaeda sparked a Shia-Sunni sectarian conflict that left tens of thousands dead. In other developments, a series of bombings, including a suicide attack on tribal leaders in Baghdad, killed 37 people in Shia areas of central and southern Iraq, officials said. The lightning advance poses significant challenges to Baghdad, with the New York-based Eurasia Group risk consultancy saying they would be bolstered by cash from Mosul’s banks, hardware from military bases and hundreds of men they freed from prison. Published in Dawn, June 12th, 2014

Airport siege aftermath: Pakistan braces for imminent attacks

LAHORE/PESHAWAR: Following the deadly attack on Karachi airport, security for all airports and government buildings has been beefed up across the country. Inspector General Punjab Khan Baig told the media on Thursday that terrorists in the province could attempt to attack government offices, dignitaries, lawyers and journalists, besides the airport. He said that while security had already been on a 'high alert' level, it has been further strengthened for potential targets. Meanwhile, DawnNews quoted sources at security agencies as saying that ‘shoot at sight’ orders have been issued at Peshawar's Bacha Khan International Airport for those who would attempt to gain unauthorised entry. The airport is on high alert, with extra search lights installed and patrol squads employed as safety measures. Furthermore, police claimed to have arrested two alleged terrorists and recovered pistols, fake press and police identity cards from Dera Ismail Khan, a bordering district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa near Southern Punjab. On the night of 8th June, unidentified assailants forged fake ID cards to pose as Airport Security Force (ASF) personnel and managed to enter the old terminal. The militants carried out the attack from three different sides, while there were reports that two terrorists managed to get inside a plane. The long operation against the attackers was successful and all militants were eliminated. On the afternoon of 9th June, Karachi airport was handed over to the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and was opened for general public. Another attack took place a day later on ASF camp number 2 in Karachi. There were no casualties in the attack, in which at least three to four terrorists opened fire near the camp and fled after heavy contingent of security forces reached the spot.

Stocks end lower; rupee strengthens

KARACHI: Pakistani stocks ended slightly lower on Thursday, with the benchmark 100-share index of the Karachi Stock Exchange falling 0.06 per cent, or 16.92 points, to 29,766.38. “The market closed slightly lower after a range-bound session and United Bank Ltd witnessed some profit taking after the government sold its 19.8 per cent stake at a discount to the market price,” said dealer Samar Iqbal at Topline Securities. Renewed interest was also seen in the textile sector in anticipation of a favourable textile policy, Iqbal added. United Bank Ltd fell 2.6 per cent to 169.70 rupees while Nishat Mills Ltd was up 1.06 per cent at 116.75 rupees. The rupee ended higher at 98.37/98.42 against the dollar compared with Wednesday's close of 98.50/98.55. Overnight rates in the money market rose to 9.25 per cent from Wednesday's close of 9.00 per cent

Drone targeted Haqqani network commander, Afghan Taliban: sources

PESHAWAR: A key Haqqani network commander Haji Gul was killed in the early morning US drone strike in Dand-i Darpakhel area of North Waziristan Agency, Dawn News quotes sources as saying on Thursday. The drone strike also killed other prominent Afghan Taliban commanders identified as Mufti Sofian and Commander Abu Bakar. Intelligence and local Taliban sources also confirmed that the drone strikes in Dand-i-Darpakhel targeted some explosive laden vehicles which were meant for some mission across the border. The sources also believe that the militant group was preparing a squad and about to leave when it was attacked. Some other commanders killed in the strike have been identified as Commander Yasin Gardezi, Abdullah Khan, Commander Jamil, Commander Asadullah. Their driver Noor Khan was also killed. The local Taliban and tribesmen have also confirmed that the compound targeted belonged to members of the Afghan Taliban network.

Upcoming KP budget likely to be above Rs4 trillion

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa budget for fiscal year 2014-15 is likely to be above Rs4 trillion as budget recommendations with Rs139 billion for Annual Development Programs (ADPs) and Rs 261 billion for ongoing schemes have been allocated. The budget recommendations are likely to be presented to the provincial cabinet for approval on June 14 before its presentation in the assembly on the same day. Official sources said that as the ADP has been raised by 18 per cent, the government was planning to levy over a dozen new taxes besides agriculture tax along with General Sales Tax (GST) on services. Government employees are likely to get 10 to 15 per cent pay raise while the Annual Development Programme will have 1251 schemes, including 711 current and 540 new schemes. The recommendations also include an allocation of Rs1587 million for agriculture, Rs8132 million for primary and secondary education, Rs3046 million for energy and power, Rs57 million for environment, Rs4094 million for finance, Rs149 million for Aquaf, Rs1271million for buildings, Rs1672 million for district ADPs, Rs501 million for food, Rs1015 million for forests, Rs8280 million for health, Rs6180 million for higher education, Rs956 million for housing, Rs3471 million for industries, Rs224 million for information, Rs26 million for labour, Rs105 million for law, Rs626 million for mineral development, Rs330 million for population, Rs7900 million for the poor, Rs12258 million for local development, Rs2053 for relief activities, Rs 1001 million for research,Rs9590 million for local infrastructure, Rs500 million for social welfare, Rs1325 million for sport and tourism, Rs1000 million for Science and Technology, Rs200 million for Transport, Rs7467 million for urban development and Rs4737 million for water. Responding to a query on the upcoming budget at the KP Chamber of Commerce, Finance Minister Sirajul Haq said that the KPK government was likely to levy some additional taxes as money generated from taxes would be used for public welfare. He said education and health would be the government’s top priority in the next budget instead of building new hospitals, schools and buildings. Haq said that the federal government was giving only one per cent for counter terrorism efforts to KPK which should be enhanced to five per cent in view of the prevailing situation in the province.

Qataris cast eyes on foreigners in modesty push

v> DOHA: Mariam Saleh avoids malls and outdoor markets on the weekends because the low-cut tops, sheer dresses and miniskirts that foreign women wear reveal much more than she would like her impressionable young children to see. Saleh is part of a campaign in Qatar that was spurred by locals who are fed up with the way many tourists and visitors dress, especially as temperatures soar in the Gulf Arab nation. The campaigners say Qatar is, after all, their country, and they should not be the ones feeling uncomfortable because visitors want to show some skin or dress like they would back home. The campaign is aimed at encouraging foreign women to dress more conservatively. However, it is not spearheaded by religious hard-liners, but by moderate locals who are concerned that a steady influx of foreigners is threatening to uproot their customs and traditions, which are intertwined with 1,400 years of Islam on the Arabian Peninsula. The campaigners say they are mothers and wives, but also gatekeepers of Qatar's Islamic society. Most Qatari women cover their hair and wear long, loose black robes. Many also cover their faces as is common in neighboring Saudi Arabia, where morality police enforce the region's strictest dress code on locals and foreigners alike. The campaigners began handing out flyers this week. They will set up booths on June 20 throughout the capital, Doha, and plan to pass out more than 200,000 flyers to raise awareness about local sensitivities with slogans such as: “Leggings are not pants” and “If you are in Qatar, you are one of us.“ Children will be wearing the slogans on T-shirts, and men and women will be passing out traditional coffee, chocolates and roses along with the brochures. The government, which allows alcohol in hotels to accommodate foreigners, is not involved in the campaign, which is being funded by volunteers, as well as a women's business club in Qatar. The campaigners say it is a grassroots effort aimed at spreading information to foreigners rather than pressing for new laws or reforms. Political activism of any kind is heavily restricted by Qatar's ruling monarchy. Similar efforts to curb Westernization are underway in other Gulf countries. In Kuwait, a lawmaker is calling for a ban on public “nudity” — a reference to bikinis on the beach and at hotel poolside. In Bahrain, lawmakers frequently call for banning alcohol in hotels, and in the United Arab Emirates, locals launched a similar dress code campaign in 2012. While some malls in the UAE ticketed women for showing shoulders and knees, the government did not move to create any specific laws against immodest dress. Qatar's pro-Western government, which benefits from tourism and foreign investment, is also not expected to enact any such laws. The tiny nation is home to the world's third-largest gas reserves. A rush of petrodollars transformed its capital in just a few decades from a coastal fishing town into a center for global investment. The speed of the transformation has stunned Qatar's conservative, tight-knit population. Qataris currently make up less than 10 percent of the country's 2.1 million people, with most of the population comprised of Asian, African and Middle Eastern guest workers, as well as Western expatriates living in the country temporarily. Like other Gulf states, Qatar relies on millions of foreigners to provide everything from the muscle to build high-rises to world-class experts to lead mega-projects. It is preparing to host one of the world's largest sporting events, the soccer World Cup in 2022. Four years ago, concerned citizens launched a campaign called “One of Us” to encourage foreign women to cover from their shoulders to their knees, but the campaign had little impact on visitors who felt out of touch with Qatari society. This time around the theme is “Reflect Your Respect.” The flyers that will be passed out have one central plea: “Help us preserve Qatar's culture and values. “ “We're not telling you not to dress up. Get dressed up, but with respect, with modesty,” businesswoman Suhaila al-Harab, a supporter of the campaign, said. “I'm coming to a conservative country. I have to respect the culture of this society. This is a sensitive society and one has to be considerate of this point.“ Speaking from her home in Doha, al-Harab says her boys are inundated with Western movies, music and fashion trends. She says Qatar is used to foreigners and is ready to welcome people from around the world for the World Cup, but she is urging visitors to be open to learning and embracing new ideas. “It's very nice for a woman to dress modestly,” she said. British tourist Roger Maynard recently visited Doha's old souk, or market, with his Spanish wife, who wore a sleeveless dress that came down to her knees. He said they were being careful not to dress inappropriately. “I think when in Rome, you should behave like the Romans, and I think you should be conscious of the local culture, and I think it's quite reasonable,” he said of the campaign's request. “That doesn't mean to say I agree with the culture or particularly the way women are, in a sense, discriminated against. But nonetheless, you come to visit a country, you should accept the culture of that country.“ Among Qatari men and women, conservative dress is seen as a way of deterring premarital sex and adultery, as well as treating women with respect. Islamic teachings hold that most or all of a woman's body should be concealed from people outside her immediate family. “The earth has an outer sphere, an atmosphere, to cover and protect it. The egg has its shell. Everything has something that protects it,” Saleh said. “We feel that a woman is like a pearl. She has to have a shell to grow and flourish. “

Pakistan's coast safe from Oman-bound cyclone: Met office

KARACHI: Karachi Met office on Thursday stated that so far Pakistan’s coastal belt is out of danger from a cyclone which is expected to strike the coastal areas of Oman on June 15. An official at the Met office told Dawn that Nanauk was at a significant distance from Karachi and there were no chances of it striking Pakistan's coastal areas. He added that the Met office was continuously monitoring the situation in case the cyclone is found to be changing its course or developing differently. Responding to a question about rains within Pakistan's coastal areas as a result of the cyclone, he said the storm would have its impact in that regard and rainfall was quite likely. DawnNews earlier reported that light rains were expected on the coastal belts of Sindh and Balochistan once Nanauk hit the Omani coast.

Nisar, Memon indulge in blame game over airport attack

KARACHI/ISLAMABAD. Sindh Information Minister Sharjeel Memon on Thursday slammed Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan for his criticism of the provincial government’s handling of the Karachi airport attack that left scores dead. Pointing out weak spots in the security plan, Nisar said earlier that the Sindh government ignored the federal government’s recommendations to appoint competent officers and instead assigned chief secretaries at its own discretion. Talking to DawnNews, Memon criticised the government and said it is heaping the blame on the Sindh government to hide its flaws. “Nisar is trying to hide the government’s weakness and cast a cloud over the peace talks,” he said, lauding the Sindh police’s efforts alongside Rangers and military personnel to kill and repel terrorists. “The Taliban are attacking all over the country,” he said. “By entering dialogue with them they are trying to fool Pakistan.” He also said the ammunition used in the Karachi attack was traced back to Punjab. “Why are there no operations against extremists in Punjab?” he asked. While he admitted that the federal government has alerted the province about the threat from terrorists, he said that the government’s soft stance towards terrorists is the main hurdle in eradicating terrorism.

Freed Taliban leaders may remain in Qatar beyond travel ban: sources

DOHA: Five Taliban leaders released by the United States have told visitors that they are likely to seek to remain in Qatar beyond an agreed one-year travel ban, sources who have spoken to the visitors told Reuters. The United States released the men from Guantanamo in exchange for American soldier Bowe Bergdahl, held prisoner in Afghanistan for five years. Under the terms of the swap, mediated in secret by Qatar, the leaders must remain in the Gulf kingdom under surveillance for at least a year. Domestic critics of President Barack Obama's decision say the men could return to the battlefield in Afghanistan, where the US is winding down its 13-year military presence. The chance that they may remain in Qatar could assuage those concerns. “It's very likely that the five men will be asking to stay in Doha even after their one-year travel ban ends,” said one source who had received reports of contacts with the men. Diplomats and Qatari sources say the men are in a “safe location” within a guarded compound in Doha, where they have received medical care and have reunited with their families. They have been allowed to receive guests from the Afghan community in Qatar, including Taliban members who were previously living in Doha, the sources said. Qatari authorities have prevented all media access. According to diplomats, the five men, who lack passports, have yet to approach the Afghan embassy in the Qatari capital Doha to acquire them. Sources close to the men say they have avoided contact with Afghan and Pakistani officials. “So far they haven't asked for political asylum, but it's just too early to tell and, besides, not many countries would accept them even after the travel ban ends,” said an Afghan source familiar with the matter. Another Afghan source, living in Doha, said: “They owe their loyalty for their freedom to Qatar and not anyone else, so why should they make contact that would only cause them trouble?” The five, who had been held at the American Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba since 2002, arrived in Qatar last week. US security personnel handed them over to Qatari authorities at a U.S. military base west of Doha.

Karachi airport attack signals alarming tactical shift by Taliban

KARACHI: It was the shoes that betrayed Corporal Faiz Mohammad's would-be killers. When 10 Taliban militants attacked Karachi airport on Sunday night, sparking a five-hour gun battle that killed at least 34 people, Mohammad and his fellow officers from the Airports Security Force (ASF) were the first line of defence. “There was a moment of confusion because the militants had the same ASF uniforms as us,” said Mohammad, 30. “But then we saw their shoes.” ASF officers wear black leather shoes, but the men who stormed Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, wore white-soled sneakers. All 10 militants were dead by dawn, shot down by the security forces or blown up by their own suicide vests. That the Taliban failed in its main objective - to hijack an aircraft and hold its passengers hostage - should bring no comfort to embattled Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, since the attack signals an alarming shift in tactics by an increasingly formidable foe. The strike at the airport in Karachi, home to 18 million people, deals a blow to Sharif's bid to attract foreign investors to revive the economy. It has also destroyed prospects for peace talks with the Taliban and made an all-out military offensive against militant strongholds along the Afghan border a near-certainty. Government air strikes on the strongholds in the North Waziristan region triggered the tactical shift, said sources at Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Angered by the raids and anticipating a ground assault, the militants are targeting Pakistan's heartland. A top Taliban commander confirmed to Reuters that attacks involving aircraft were part of a new strategy to counter the government's preparations for a full-scale operation against them in North Waziristan. “We decided to change our strategy and hit their main economic centres,” he said. “They will kill innocent people by their bombs and we will hit their nerve-centres in major cities.” Tariq Azeem, a senior official in Sharif's administration, said a full-scale military operation was imminent in North Waziristan, and seemed resigned to it sparking terror attacks elsewhere in Pakistan. “Everybody knows there is going to be a blowback,” he said. Pattern of Mumbai, Westgate Mall The Taliban is most likely to rely on small militant teams, emulating the protracted, high-impact operations like those in Mumbai in 2008 and Nairobi's Westgate mall last year. “In Mumbai, and in Kenya, you will find a lot of similarities,” said Muhammad Amir Rana, director of the Islamabad-based think tank Pak Institute for Peace Studies. “They (the Taliban) are adopting this as their prime strategy.” The similarities between the Karachi and Mumbai incidents are startling and instructive. The attack on Mumbai, India's largest city, was carried out by Lashkar-e-Taiba. It lasted three days, killed 166 people and transfixed the world. As with Karachi, it was meticulously planned and involved well-trained and heavily armed militants. In both cases, a 10-man team quickly split into pairs and carried provision-stuffed knapsacks in preparation for a long siege. In Mumbai, militants used mobile phones to coordinate with handlers in Pakistan and with each other in the heat of battle. Their Karachi counterparts were also seen using mobile phones during the assault. Lashkar-e-Taiba has said it has no connection with any attacks on Pakistani soil and there is no evidence that it works with the Taliban. Neither the military nor the ISI could forestall the havoc caused by 10 men who got out of a minivan near Karachi's cargo terminal on Sunday night. The attack began at 11.05 p.m, with five of the militants breaching the Fokker Gate with assault rifles and grenades. Minutes later, as the ASF fought back, a second five-strong squad attacked the nearby Cargo Gate. Both gates granted access to the cargo area in the airport's west. Azeem, the administration official, praised the ASF while admitting how hard it was to protect the sprawling airport. “You need almost two brigades to cover . . . every inch of it,” he said. “Any entrance will have two, three, four people who are fully armed, but one burst of machinegun fire will kill all four of them and you can enter.” When Faiz Mohammed ran across the tarmac, shouldering his AK-47, to reinforce his fellow ASF officers, four were already dead. “Our men were fighting relentlessly,” he said. Mohammad was shot in the thigh and, like other wounded ASF, waited hours until it was safe for ambulances to evacuate him. “The ASF put up very stiff resistance and that apparently sowed panic among the attackers, who then split up and were eventually taken out by security forces,” said a senior Pakistani security official, speaking on condition of anonymity. The militants' dispersal added to the mayhem and drew in more security forces. By 11.30 p.m., a contingent of police and paramilitary Rangers had arrived at the airport, followed 30 minutes later by an army unit. They formed what Azeem called “the second or the third layer” of airport security which stopped the militant advance on the main passenger terminal further east. “I was terrified.” The gunfire was now punctuated by the boom of militants firing rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs). They had come prepared for a long fight. Their knapsacks contained water, medicine and food. Some were spotted using cellphones during the attack, said a security official involved in the investigation, although it was unclear who they were talking to - each other, or distant commanders. Phimraphat Wisetsoem could see and hear explosions from her seat on a Thai International Airways aircraft. It was trapped near the runway along with an Emirates jet and contained hundreds of passengers. Phimraphat suspected that hijackers in disguise had already boarded her plane. “I was terrified,” she told reporters as she arrived back in Bangkok. “I sat still and didn't dare move around.” Passengers on both planes were later safely evacuated. Just after midnight, as all outbound flights were suspended and inbound flights diverted to other airports, there was a large explosion near Fokker Gate: the first militant had detonated his suicide vest. By now, dead and wounded were being ferried to the nearby Jinnah Hospital. Their numbers rose steadily through the night - by morning, the hospital would report 16 dead and dozens injured - as security forces intensified their counter-attack. As the fighting raged outside, seven employees from a cargo company took refuge in a warehouse - as it turned out, a fateful decision. They burned to death. Elsewhere, Hamid Khan, 22, a junior technician, hid with eight other men in the washroom of an aircraft maintenance company. A hand-grenade blew off part of the roof and bullets peppered a nearby container. “If anyone is inside, come out now!” shouted someone - friend or foe, Hamid couldn't tell. He and his colleagues kept silent and stayed put. “I was so afraid that I started reading my last prayers,” he said, his voice still shaking with emotion days later. Two more militants would blow themselves up. By 4 a.m, all 10 were dead, their shattered bodies sprawled in pairs across the tarmac. It had taken 150 security personnel to counter them. The Rangers identified them as ethnic Uzbeks. Pakistani officials often accuse foreign militants of staging attacks alongside the Taliban. “We admit we carried out this attack with the help of our other brotherly mujahideen groups,” the senior member of Taliban told Reuters. A second attack In daylight, Karachi airport resembled a war zone. Smoke billowed from gutted buildings. Rescue workers retrieved the seven cargo company employees, their corpses charred beyond recognition, and raised the death toll to 34. Junior technician Hamid Khan and the other eight emerged unscathed from their washroom refuge. “I felt as if God had heard our prayers,” he said. At least three passenger aircraft, all unoccupied, were damaged during the battle, a senior Pakistani security official told Reuters. A satellite photo on Google Earth showed a fourth aircraft in the cargo area completely destroyed, its broken wings lying amid the blackened remains of its fuselage. However, officials have not confirmed the destruction of any aircraft. Even as flights resumed and the clean-up began, Taliban struck the airport again. On Tuesday evening, gunmen on motorbikes opened fire on an ASF academy, although there were no casualties. There would be “many more such attacks” in future, Pakistani Taliban spokesman Shahidullah Shahid told Reuters. Adil Najam, dean of Boston University's Pardee School of Global Studies, agreed. Karachi was “not just another terrorist attack,” he said. “It is among the latest skirmishes in what is now an actual war between the Pakistan Army and the Taliban.

Pakistan condemns US drone strikes in North Waziristan

ISLAMABAD: Two hours after her official briefing, Foreign Office spokesperson Tasneem Aslam confirmed and condemned two pre-dawn US drone strikes that struck militant hideouts in North Waziristan in the past 24 hours. “The government of Pakistan condemns the two incidents of US drone strikes that took place near Miranshah in North Waziristan on 11 and 12 June,” said a statement from the foreign office. “These strikes are a violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and additionally, these strikes have a negative impact on the government’s efforts to bring peace and stability in Pakistan and the region,” it said. Earlier during her briefing, foreign office spokesperson Tasneem Alsam had said that facts were being ascertained and added that Pakistan’s position on drones is very clear. The American drone program is extremely unpopular in Pakistan because it is perceived as killing innocent civilians, which the US denies. In the past, the Pakistani government has strongly condemned drone strikes – maintaining a stance that strikes violate the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. The FO and government have previously raised concern over drone strikes with the US administration and at the United Nations, saying the attacks are counter-productive, entail loss of innocent civilian lives and have human rights and humanitarian implications. Two successive US drone strikes killed at least 16 suspected militants in Pakistan's northwest tribal area early Thursday, as pressure was building on Islamabad to react after the brazen attack on Karachi airport. The first strike late Wednesday was said to have targeted a vehicle and a compound near the Afghan border in Tabbi village, killing four Uzbek militants. Sources told DawnNews that the second strike in Dand-i Darpakhel area reported early Thursday killed key Haqqani network commander Haji Gul as well as prominent Afghan Taliban commanders. These were the year’s first such strikes in Pakistan’s tribal belt bordering Afghanistan. The last US drone attack on Pakistani soil was carried out on December 25, 2013, killing three suspected militants. The strikes had been temporarily halted at the government's request. Use of foreign weapons in Karachi airport attack being investigated Responding to a question, the foreign office spokesman said the attack on the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi and the use of foreign-made weapons was being probed, and that Pakistan does not have "a habit of leveling allegations without investigation or evidence". She said a comprehensive probe into the incident had been launched to determine the facts. Afghan elections Responding to a question, Aslam said Pakistan supported a peaceful and democratic transfer of power in Afghanistan. About the second phase of the Afghan Presidential elections on 14 June 2014, she said these elections are a milestone in the democratic journey of the Afghan people and that Pakistan congratulates the government and people of Afghanistan on this achievement. “We reiterate that these elections are an Afghan affair, with the Afghan electoral institutions in the lead. They bear a heavy responsibility, and we wish them well in accomplishing their task successfully. We also hope that the voters would once again demonstrate their firm resolve and exercise their right to determine their future through democratic means, in an optimal way,” she told reporters. She said Pakistan remains committed to supporting efforts for a free and peaceful electoral process. “On the eve of the first round on 5 April 2014, Pakistan had taken special steps to beef up security along the border and our authorities are taking additional measures for the second round of elections, including by retaining additional troops for this purpose,” she said. “The measures include enhanced vigilance and security along the border, enhanced patrolling in close border/border crossing areas, enhanced checking by immigration staff, enhanced communication through existing coordination and cooperation mechanism, and availability of hotline contact with Afghan counterparts,” she added. “As a close neighbor and fraternal nation, Pakistan stands committed to supporting the Afghan people in every possible way in their quest for peace and progress,” she added.

Blog Archive