Editor's Choice

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Featured Post
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Let us build Pakistan" has moved.
30 November 2009

All archives and posts have been transferred to the new location, which is: http://criticalppp.org

We encourage you to visit our new site. Please don't leave your comments here because this site is obsolete. You may also like to update your RSS feeds or Google Friend Connect (Follow the Blog) to the new location. Thank you.



"Let us build Pakistan" has moved.
30 November 2009

All archives and posts have been transferred to the new location, which is: http://criticalppp.org

We encourage you to visit our new site. Please don't leave your comments here because this site is obsolete. You may also like to update your RSS feeds or Google Friend Connect (Follow the Blog) to the new location. Thank you.


"Let us build Pakistan" has moved.
30 November 2009

All archives and posts have been transferred to the new location, which is: http://criticalppp.org

We encourage you to visit our new site. Please don't leave your comments here because this site is obsolete. You may also like to update your RSS feeds or Google Friend Connect (Follow the Blog) to the new location. Thank you.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Wednesday, 29 April 2009

At least 11 per cent of Pakistan's landmass has been ceded to the Taliban. Where is the Pakistan army? Questions Dr. Farrukh Saleem






Where is the Pakistan army?

By Dr. Farrukh Saleem

Five thousand square kilometres of Swat are now under Taliban control -- de jure. Chitral (14,850 sq km), Dir (5,280 sq km), Shangla (1,586 sq km), Hangu (1,097 sq km), Lakki Marwat (3,164 sq km), Bannu (1,227 sq km), Tank (1,679 sq km), Khyber, Kurram, Bajaur, Mohmand, Orkzai, North Waziristan and South Waziristan are all under Taliban control -- de facto.

That's a total of 56,103 square kilometres of Pakistan under Taliban control -- de facto.Six thousand square kilometres of Dera Ismail Khan are being contested. Also under 'contested control' are Karak (3,372 sq km), Kohat (2,545 sq km), Peshawar (2,257 sq km), Charsada (996 sq km) and Mardan (1,632 sq km). That's a total of 16,802 square kilometres of Pakistan under 'contested control' -- de facto. Seven thousand five hundred square kilometres of Kohistan are under 'Taliban influence'. Additionally, Mansehra (4,579 sq km), Battagram (1,301 sq km), Swabi (1,543 sq km) and Nowshera (1,748 sq km) are all under 'Taliban influence'. That's a total of 16,663 square kilometres of Pakistan under 'Taliban influence' -- de facto. All put together, 89,568 square kilometres of Pakistani territory is either under complete 'Taliban control', 'contested control' or 'Taliban influenced'; that's 11 per cent of Pakistan's landmass.

Where is Pakistan army? To be fair, under our constitution law enforcement -- and establishing the writ of the state -- is the responsibility of our civil administration. Yes, under Article 245, the federal government can call in the army "in aid of civil power" but the overall strategy has to be devised by our politicians. Counter-terrorism and counter-insurgency are very specialised operations. Textbook counter-insurgency has three elements: Clear-Hold-Build (C-H-B). The army may be required to 'clear' insurgents from a particular area but every army operation creates a vacuum that has to be filled by a civil-political administration. After the 'clearing' of insurgents it has to be the politicians to 'hold' that area and then fulfil the social contract -- dispensation of justice, municipal services etc -- between the ruled and the rulers (classic counter-insurgency is DDD, disrupt, dismantle and defeat).

At least 11 per cent of Pakistan's landmass has been ceded to the Taliban. Where is the Pakistan army? I Corps is in Mangla, II Corps is in Multan, IV Corps in Lahore, V Corps in Karachi, X Corps in Rawalpindi, XI Corps in Peshawar, XII Corps in Quetta, XXX Corps in Gujranwala and XXXI is in Bahawalpur, In effect, some 80 to 90 per cent of our military assets are deployed to counter the threat from India. The Pakistan army looks at the Indian army and sees its inventory of 6,384 tanks as a threat. The Pakistan army looks at the Indian air force and sees its inventory of 672 combat aircraft as a threat. The Pakistan army looks at the Indian army and notices that six out of 13 Indian corps are strike corps. The Pakistan army looks at the Indian army and finds that 15, 9, 16, 14, 11, 10 and 2 Corps are all pointing their guns at Pakistan. The Pakistan army looks at the Indian army and discovers that the 3rd Armoured Division, 4 RAPID Division and 2nd Armoured Brigade have been deployed to cut Pakistan into two halves. The Pakistan army looks at the Taliban and sees no Arjun Main Battle Tanks (MBT), no armoured fighting vehicles, no 155 mm Bofors howitzers, no Akash surface-to-air missiles, no BrahMos land attack cruise missiles, no Agni Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles, no Sukhoi Su-30 MKI air superiority strike fighters, no Jaguar attack aircraft, no MiG-27 ground-attack aircraft, no Shakti thermonuclear devices, no Shakti-II 12 kiloton fission devices and no heavy artillery.

Pakistan is on fire and our fire-fighters are on the Pakistan-India border. To be certain, none of those Indian tanks can cross the Himalayas into China so Arjun MBTs must all be for Pakistan. Thus, the Pakistan-India border has to be defended. Then, what about this hyperactive insurgency that is snatching away Pakistani physical terrain -- bit by bit? There certainly is no easy way out. America wants the Pakistan army to neutralise threats to the mainland US. The Pakistan army, on the other hand, has to defend the Pakistan-India border. The need of the hour, therefore, is for all organs of the Pakistani state -- the executive, the legislature, the judiciary and the military -- to put their heads together and devise a National Counter-Insurgency Policy.

Source: The News International





Source: Daily Express


Read more...

Tuesday, 28 April 2009

Malakand Commissioner AKA "Commissioner Taliban" has been transfered !



فضل کریم خٹک نئے مالاکنڈ کمشنر مقرر
عبدالحئی کاکڑ


صوبہ سرحد کی حکومت نے طالبان کے مبینہ حامی ہونے کے الزامات کی زد میں رہنے والے مالاکنڈ ڈویژن کے کمشنر سید محمد

جاوید کے تبادلے کا باقاعدہ نوٹیفیکیشن جاری کردیا ہے اور ان کی جگہ فضل کریم خٹک کو نیا کمشنر مقرر کیا گیا ہے۔
صوبائی حکومت کی جانب سے جاری ہونے والے نوٹیفیکیشن میں ان کے تبادلے کی وجہ نہیں بتائی گئی ہے۔ انہیں سرکار بکار خاص بنادیا گیا ہے۔
اس سال سولہ فروی کو ہونے والے امن معاہدے کے بعد صوبائی حکومت نے فضل کریم خٹک کو ہٹا کر سید محمد جاوید کو مالاکنڈ ڈویژن کا نیا کمشنر مقرر کیا تھا۔
کمشنر مقرر ہونے کے بعد طالبان ترجمان مسلم خان نے بی بی سی سے بات کرتے ہوئے ان کی تعیناتی کا خیر مقدم کیا تھا۔ سید محمد جاوید پر سول سوسائٹی الزامات لگاتی رہی کہ وہ طالبان حامی ہیں اور مبینہ طور پر ان کی مدد کررہے ہیں۔ تاہم صوبائی حکومت اور انہوں نے خود ان الزامات کی تردید کی تھی۔
ذرائع کے مطابق سید محمد جاوید کا طالبان اور کالعدم نفاذ شریعت محمدی میں زیادہ اثر و رسوخ تھا اور انہیں بڑی قدر کی نگاہ سے دیکھا جاتا تھا۔ ان کے تبادلے کے بارے میں مسلم خان کا کہنا ہے کہ انہوں نے طالبان اور حکومت کے درمیان بڑے اچھے روابط قائم کیے تھے۔ ان کے بقول وہ بیک وقت بحیثیتِ سرکاری ملازم اپنی ذمہ داری احسن طریقے سے نبھاتے رہے اور دوسری طرف ’دین کی خدمت‘ بھی کرتے رہے۔
یاد رہے کہ سوات میں اکتوبر دو ہزار سات میں جب باقاعدہ آپریشن شروع کیا گیا تھا اس وقت سید محمد جاوید سوات کے ضلعی رابط آفسر تھے جنہیں فوجی کارروائی کے آغاز کے ساتھ ہی تبدیل کردیا تھا۔


’طالبان کا پیارا، حکومت کو گوارا‘
عبدالحئی کاکڑ


وضع قطع سے مذہبی معلوم ہونے والے سید محمد جاوید اس وقت ملاکنڈ ڈویژن کی سب سے جانی پہچانی شخصیت ہیں۔ طالبان انہیں ’راسیخ العقیدہ مسلمان‘ اور طالبان کے مخالفین انہیں ’کمشنر طالبان‘ یا ’کمشنر فضل اللہ‘ کے نام سے یاد کرتے ہیں۔
سوات امن معاہدے کے بعد صوبائی حکومت نے سید محمد جاوید کو ملاکنڈ ڈویژن کا کمشنر مقرر کر کے انہیں طالبان کی صفوں تک رسائی حاصل کرنے کے لیے بطور ’پُل‘ استعمال کیا لیکن اب ان کے تبادلےکے بعد خیال کیا جا رہا ہے کہ حکومت نے اس ’پل‘ کو توڑ دیا ہے۔
ضلع مردان کے شیرگڑہ کےگاؤں شمعون میں ایک دینی عالم کے گھر میں پیدا ہونے والے سید محمد جاوید زمانہ طالبعلمی میں اسلامی جمیعت طلبہ کے فعال رکن تھے۔ شمعون گاؤں ان کے والد کے نام سے منسوب ہے۔ انہوں نے اسی کی دہائی میں ’سی ایس ایس‘ ایسے وقت کیا جب جنرل ضیاءالحق اسلامائزیشن کے ایجنڈے کے تحت قومی اداروں میں مذہبی سوچ رکھنے والوں کو بھرتی کرنے کو ترجیح دے رہے تھے۔

ذرائع کا کہنا ہے کہ سید محمد جاوید کو ان بیورو کریٹس میں سے شمار کیا جاتا ہے جنہوں نے نوے کی دہائی میں مولانا صوفی محمد کی کالعدم نفاذ شریعت محمدی کی تشکیل میں اہم کردار ادا کیا تھا۔ لیکن انہیں اس وقت شہرت ملی جب سنہ دوہزار چھ میں تحریکِ طالبان سوات کے سربراہ مولانا فضل اللہ اپنے سخت گیر خیالات کے ساتھ ایک عسکری قوت کے طور پر ابھر رہے تھے۔
سید محمد جاوید سوات کے ضلعی رابطہ افسر کے طور پر مولانا فضل اللہ کے ساتھ ملاقاتوں کے لیے ان کے مرکز امام ڈھیرئی جایا کرتے تھے۔انہوں نے بالآخر ایک ’معاہدے کے تحت مولانا فضل اللہ کو غیر قانونی ایف ایم چینل چلانے کی بھی اجازت دیدی‘۔
جنرل ریٹائرڈ پرویز مشرف کی حکومت نے مولانا فضل اللہ کو شرپسند اور ملک دشمن قرار دیا تھا مگر اس دوران سوات کے ضلعی رابطہ افسر کے طور پر ریاست کی نمائندگی کرنے والے سید جاوید اور مولانا فضل اللہ کے درمیان امام اور مقتدی کا رشتہ قائم ہوگیا تھا۔ وہ خود کہتے ہیں کہ ’کبھی وہ اور کبھی مولانا فضل اللہ نماز کی امامت کیا کرتے تھے‘۔
دونوں کے تعلقات اتنے گہرے ہوگئے تھے کہ صوبہ سرحد کے بیوروکریٹ نجی محفل میں کہا کرتے تھے کہ ’سید محمد جاوید رات کو طالب اور دن کو ضلعی رابطہ افسر ہوتے ہیں‘۔ایک دفعہ جب میں نے یہ بات ان کے گوش گزار کی تو انہوں نے ہنس کے جواب دیا کہ ’لوگ کہتے رہیں میں کیا کرسکتا ہوں‘۔
لیکن ان کے درمیان قائم ہونے والے تعلقات کی یہ کہانی اس وقت کے صدر جنرل پرویز مشرف کے کانوں تک بھی پہنچ گئی تھی اور ایک دفعہ وہ ایک وفد کے ہمراہ جب پرویز مشرف سے ملنے گئے تو بقول ایک افسر کے مصافحہ کے وقت انہوں نے اپنا تعارف کراتے وقت کہا، سید محمد جاوید تو پرویز مشروف نے ہنس کرکہا ’اوہ یہ تو طالبان کے ساتھی ہیں‘۔
جب اکتوبر دوہزار سات میں حکومت نے سوات میں باقاعدہ فوجی کارروائی کا آغاز کیا تو ذرائع کے مطابق انہیں آپریشن کے دوران مبینہ رکاوٹ سمجھتے ہوئے حکومت نے بطور ڈی سی سوات سے ان کا تبادلہ کر دیا۔

سید محمد جاوید سوات میں خدمات سرانجام دینے والے وہ واحد افسر ہیں جن کی بطورِ کمشنر مالاکنڈ ڈویژن دوبارہ تقرری کا طالبان ترجمان مسلم خان نے بھی خیر مقدم کیا۔ عینی شاہدین کے بقول گزشتہ دوماہ کے دوران ان کا دفتر طالبان اور نفاذ شریعت محمدی کے رہنماؤں کا مرکز بن گیا تھا اور وہ جہاں کہیں بھی جاتے پولیس کی بجائے طالبان کمانڈر محمود خان ان کی حفاظت کے لیے ہمرا ہوتے تھے۔
طالبان اور سید محمد جاوید کے درمیان بڑھتے ہوئے تعلقات نے وہاں پر موجود افسران کو بھی پریشانی میں مبتلا کردیا تھا۔ سوات کےسابق پولیس سربراہ نے سید محمد جاوید کے خلاف صوبائی حکومت کو باقاعدہ ایک مکتوب بھی لکھا۔
ذرائع کے مطابق مکتوب میں پولیس سربراہ نے الزام لگایا ’ کہ سید محمد جاوید کی رہائش گاہ ریاست مخالف سرگرمیوں کا گڑھ بن چکی ہے‘۔ مکتوب میں مزید کہا گیا کہ ’ کمشنر سید محمد جاوید پولیس اور عدلیہ کو طالبان کے سامنے سرینڈر کرنے کی کوشش کررہے ہیں اور بے شک ان کی ان کوششوں سے امن قائم تو ہوجائے گا لیکن یہ حکومت کی نہیں بلکہ طالبان کی عملداری قائم ہونے کی قیمت پر‘۔
ذرائع کے مطابق صوبائی حکومت نے پولیس سربراہ کو جواباً کہا کہ ’آپ کمشنر کے ماتحت ہیں لہٰذا یہ کیسے ممکن ہے کہ آپ ان کے خلاف اعلٰی حکام کو سرکاری طور پر خطوط لکھتے رہیں‘۔ بعد میں پولیس سربراہ کا سوات سے تبادلہ کردیاگیا۔

سرکاری ذرائع کے مطابق بونیر میں کمشنر کے کردار اور طالبان کی طاقت میں کمی کے بجائے دن بدن اضافے کے نتیجے میں حکومت کو ان کے تبادلے کا فیصلہ کرنا پڑا۔ ان پر الزام تھا کہ بونیر میں طالبان کے داخلے کے وقت انہوں نے مقامی پولیس اہلکاروں کو کارروائی نہ کرنے کی ہدایت کی جبکہ عمائدین کو مذاکرات میں الجھا کر طالبان کو مزید کمک پہنچنے کا موقع فراہم کیا۔ تاہم سید محمد جاوید نے ہمیشہ اس الزام کو رد کیا ہے۔
سید محمد جاوید کے قریبی حلقوں کا کہنا ہے کہ ان کی اب بھی جماعت اسلامی کے ساتھ گہری وابستگی ہے اور ہر اتوار کو شیرگڑھ میں ان کے حجرے پر درسِ قرآن کا انعقاد ہوتا ہے اور اس موقع پر لنگر بھی تقسیم کیا جاتا ہے۔
ان کے بقول وہ اسلامی نظام کے نفاذ کے لیے سیاسی اور ارتقائی عمل پر نہیں بلکہ انقلابی تبدیلی پر یقین رکھتے ہیں۔ وہ حتی المقدور کوشش کرتے ہیں کہ ان کی تصویر نہ لی جائے اور ٹیلی ویژن دیکھنے سے بھی احتراز کرتے ہیں۔ تاہم پاکستان میں میڈیا کی یلغار نے انہیں تصویر اور فوٹیج بنوانے پر مجبور کردیا۔
ذرائع کے مطابق کمشنر تعینات ہونے کے بعد انہوں نے کمشنر ہاؤس سے ٹیلی ویژن کو ہٹادیا تاہم مذاکرات کے لیے جانے والے صوبائی وزراء کے حکم پر ٹیلی ویژن کمشنر ہاؤس میں واپس رکھ دیا گیا۔
جب وہ سوات کے ضلعی رابط افسر تھے تو ان دنوں جب طالبان نے سی ڈی فلمیں فروخت کرنے والے دکانوں کو نشانہ بنانے کا سلسلہ شروع کیا تو ایک ملاقات کے دوران سید محمد جاوید نے دکانداروں سے کہا کہ ’آپ لوگ بھی دوکانوں کو بند کردو اور اس غیر شرعی کاروبار کو چھوڑ دو‘۔
Source: BBC Urdu

Read more...

At last Tableeghi Jamaat denounce Talibani Shariat !




Tableeghi Jamaat leaders denounce gunpoint Sharia


ISLAMABAD: In an unprecedented move, top leaders of the Tableeghi Jamaat have denounced enforcement of Sharia at gunpoint, religious extremism, militancy and terrorism.
Leaders of the Jamaat, who scrupulously avoid speaking on controversial issues, also called for promoting inter-faith harmony, tolerance, human rights, social justice and peace.
They were speaking at the conclusion of a three-day congregation near here on Monday. ‘Shariah cannot be enforced at gunpoint,’ declared Haji Abdul Wahab, Amir of the Tableeghi Jamaat, Pakistan.
Had that been the case, Allah Almighty would have sent fierce angels to protect prophets and enforce their faiths, he said.
The 90-year-old scholar, who left his job as sessions judge in pre-partition India and joined the Jamaat, cited the example of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH), said the Holy Prophet never used force. Instead he spread the word of God only by peaceful means.
Haji Abdul Wahab also condemned extremism and militancy in the name of Islam, apparently a reference to the growing trend of Talibanisation and enforcement of Shria in Swat and other areas in the NWFP.
The congregation of tens of thousands of people was also addressed by Maulana Jamshaid, Maulana Mohammad Ahmed and Mualana Fahim.
‘Muslims should preach peace, brotherhood and tolerance across the world, including Israel. They must avoid imposing their creed or faith by force because Islam is a religion of peace and promotes tranquillity,’ another scholar told the mammoth gathering.
Maulana Mohammad Ahmed, a former educationist, said that Muslims should inspire adherents of other religions by their good moral and social behaviour. People who thought that Shariah could be imposed by force were simpletons, he said. ‘We should reach out to all human beings and guide them out of darkness. Before the advent of Islam, people were so inflexible that they used to bury their daughters without remorse. (But they changed.) Remember …human beings are above other creations of God,’ said Maulana Ahmed, the custodian of the largest seminary of the Tableeghi school of thought in Raiwind near Lahore.
The main message of the gathering was that Islam could not be confined to Pakistan or any other geographical area and there was a need to spread the religion of peace in every corner of the world.
People from across the country who had converged there pledged that they would continue the mission of spreading Islam across the world.
Source: Dawn, Jang

Read more...

Talibans start making their presence felt in Karachi !

Co-edu institutions in city receiving threats from Taliban?

KARACHI: Panic has spread in the city’s co-education institutions after receiving threats, believed to be from the Taliban, in which they have been warned to close down or face the consequences, Daily Times learnt on Monday.
Various educational institutions including schools, colleges and universities have received threatening letters and phone calls by the Taliban. A source privy to the matter revealed that mostly schools having affiliation with the Cambridge Board where male and female students are studying together without any discrimination have received threatening phone calls and also letters posted by the militants.
The source further pointed out that the sender of the threat posed themselves, either on the phone or in the letter, as the Taliban while demanding the end of the co-education system or prepare for an attack.
It was also learnt that the vice chancellor of the largest university of the city had also received phone calls by intelligence agencies inquiring about the possible threat of the Taliban. The source revealed that the agencies suggested to the VC of the universityto make the veil (burqa) compulsory for all girl students as a precautionary measure.
It is pertinent to mention here that a number of schools have also received fake phone calls of there being a bomb on the school premises.
The source further pointed out that the British Council Pakistan delayed the schedule of the O and A level exams because of the possible threat of terrorism. There are 22 centres that will be announced to host the examinations by the British Council Pakistan, however, the announcement of the centres was delayed and it has been decided by the authorities concerned that the schedule of the examination centres will be disclosed late because of minimum risk.

Source: Daily Times ---- 28th April, 09
Read more...

Thursday, 23 April 2009

USA TODAY: Momentum builds against Taliban in Pakistan




ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A public backlash is building against the Pakistani Taliban, who looked triumphant after gaining control of the northern Swat region last week.
Since Pakistan's parliament approved a peace deal turning Swat over to militants on April 13, their leader Sufi Muhammad has moved forces into a neighboring district, rejected the legitimacy of the country's elected leaders, vowed to spread Islamic law across the country, and offered sanctuary to Osama bin Laden and other foreign terrorists.
These moves have turned hopes for peace in a strife-torn area into fears that the entire country will fall into the hands of militants, said Shoaib Bhutta, a journalist and confidant of Pakistan's president."If there is no peace, the government will use force," Rehman Malik, head of the Interior Ministry, told parliament Wednesday.
Even conservative politicians appear to be distancing themselves from the Swat militants. Sayed Munawar Hasan, new head of the religious Jamaat Islamic party, ridiculed Muhammad for labeling as "infidel" anyone who participates in democratic elections, noting that the militant leader had run — and won — in local elections a few years ago.
"Does this mean he is some sort of infidel?" Hasan said. "Whatever Sufi Muhammad said is not serious. He should not make these statements. He should consult mainstream clerics in the country."
In Washington on Wednesday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said "the Pakistani government is basically abdicating to the Taliban and the extremists."
Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, whose followers include religious conservatives, told USA TODAY this week that he had misgivings about the peace agreement and was worried the militants would try to expand control beyond Swat.
Over the past year, Pakistan's army proved unable to prevent Swat militants — led in combat by Muhammad's son-in-law Mullah Fazalullah — from terrorizing the district by executing local politicians, burning schools and publicly flogging anyone who violated their harsh version of Islam by trimming their beards or wearing their pants too long.
The secular Awami National Party, which governs the province that includes Swat, negotiated a peace deal with Muhammad's militants after seeing its ranks decimated by assassinations. The national parliament approved the deal last week.
But the deal — and Sufi Muhammad's audacious comments rejecting democracy and calling for imposing Islamic law nationwide — have drawn heavy criticism.
"He is denying the legitimacy of higher courts and the political system," said Murtaza Mughal, head of the Pakistan Economy Watch think tank. "It's not the proper attitude."
"They have a misunderstanding that the government has surrendered," Bhutta said. "But the government wanted to show the people and supporters of the militants what kind of people they are. Now all those who were in favor of the militants and of the agreement are turning against them and are unified on one issue: supporting this evil, which is eating our own people, would be a sin. If there is war, the public will support the government to crush the militants by force."

Read more...

Wall Street Journal: Taliban Move Closer to Islamabad !

By ZAHID HUSSAIN
ISLAMABAD -- Pakistan's Taliban seized control of another district in the country's northwest just 70 miles from the capital after consolidating their hold on the Swat Valley, according to local government officials and residents.
The latest Taliban advance into the Buner district has spurred fears that a controversial peace accord, which allows the militants to enforce sharia law in Swat, has emboldened them to expand their influence.
Militants have been moving into Buner since the Swat peace deal was signed with the government in February. But starting Tuesday night they seized control of the entire district, which has a population of more than one million people, local government officials and residents said. Heavily armed militants, streaming in from neighboring Swat, occupied government offices and set up their own checkposts. Terrified residents fled their homes.
Dozens of hooded fighters carrying rocket launchers and machine guns ransacked the offices of international aid and development agencies working in the district and took away their vehicles. Some employees of the agencies were also briefly taken hostage. The militants set up their headquarters in the town of Buner after driving out government officials.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Wednesday the Taliban advance poses "an existential threat" to Pakistan and urged Pakistanis world-wide to oppose a government policy yielding to them. Pakistanis "need to speak out forcefully against a policy that is ceding more and more territory to the insurgents," Mrs. Clinton said in testimony before a House committee.The Taliban have banned music and television and stopped women from entering a popular shrine of a Muslim saint. They are also using mosques to invite local youth to join them.
A Taliban commander said Islamic sharia courts would soon be established in the Buner district as they have already been in Swat. Mohammad Khalil said the main objective was to end the "sense of deprivation" among locals and provide speedy justice to the people.
Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the information minister for North West Frontier Province, warned that the militants' activities in Buner were in violation of the Swat peace accord. "After the agreement, there is no justification to take up arms," Mr. Hussain said in a statement Wednesday. He denied, however, that the Taliban have total control over the area.
Rehman Malik, the federal home minister, said the government has the option of using force if the Taliban don't withdraw from Buner. A senior military official said a military operation couldn't be ruled out to stop the Taliban advance. Analysts said the fall of Buner to the Taliban comes as a blow to the government's efforts to contain Islamic militancy, which threatens Pakistan's overall security. The people of the area had previously rebuffed Taliban raids, but lack of support from the security forces broke their resistance.
The development came after Sufi Mohammed, a radical cleric who played a central role in signing the peace accord, called on his followers to continue their struggle for the enforcement of Islamic rule in the entire North West Frontier Province. "The Western democracy is infidels and should be rejected by Muslims," he said.
U.S. officials have warned the Swat peace deal could turn Swat into a launching pad for militant expansion into Pakistan's more densely populated plains. The militants have made it clear they wouldn't lay down their weapons, which is a crucial plank of the peace accord.—Jay Solomon in Washington contributed to this article.

Read more...

Wednesday, 22 April 2009

Sufi Mohammad doesn't speak for himself ----- He speaks for thousands of barbarians who don't respect the law !

Some Examples of Talibani Justice !


Teenaged girl being flogged in Swat.
Talibans flogging a man in Swat.
Some Examples of Talibani Justice in Afghanistan !


















Sufi’s world ----- Editorial Dawn ---- 22nd April, 09

THE uproar is understandable but should it really come as a surprise that Sufi Mohammad and his band of barbarians are opposed to all that we hold dear? Of course not. The position held by people who kill those who don’t subscribe to their point of view is diametrically opposed to that of all right-thinking persons.
From day one, the stance of these militants who murder in the name of religion has been all too clear. These people are savages, yet we don’t put them behind bars. Why? If we don’t have the wherewithal to take them on, we should admit as much and stop making ludicrous claims that the enemy will be defeated in due course.
Striking ‘deals’ with an enemy that is simply buying time won’t help either. Talibanisation is not just a threat, it is the reality today. Face it.Sufi Mohammad’s organisation, which is sympathetic to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, is interested less in matters of faith and more so in power in Pakistan. It is now clear that the Taliban will not stop until they have their way. And this is their prescription for Pakistan: a nation, armed with nuclear weapons, jerked back to a mediaeval age. A country where men without beards are flogged, and women killed if they choose to express themselves. That is where we are headed.
And one is wrong if one thinks this can’t happen in Pakistan. It can and it will unless we strike a decisive blow for the silent majority.We must resist this onslaught. Should we be surprised when Sufi Mohammad says that that the high courts and the Supreme Court are un-Islamic? Certainly not. Are we to register shock when he says that democracy is un-Islamic? Of course not. He is merely articulating what he and his followers have thought from day one.
Sufi Mohammad’s Tehrik-i-Nifaz-i-Shariat Mohammadi, the Pakistani Taliban and Al Qaeda are all committed to overthrowing the State of Pakistan. How many times do we have to say this? Their interest is not limited to enforcing — at gunpoint — Sharia law in Swat and the rest of Malakand. They want to take over all of Pakistan and subject each and every citizen to their brand of ‘justice’.
This government is ceding them territory and emboldening them to an extent where they will be able to dictate terms without fear. Fazlur Rehman of the JUI may say that Sufi Mohammad, a terrorist Mr Rehman supports despite being a member of parliament, speaks for himself. No, you are wrong Mr Rehman. He speaks for thousands of extremists who have no respect for the law. He is renouncing the constitution, which is perhaps tantamount to treason.We didn’t vote for this on Feb 18, 2008. We didn’t vote for barbarity in the garb of religiosity.

Read more...

If you call me Kafir then I will call you Kafir too !



Read more...

Where is lawyers' movement ? Will lawyers, Imran Khan, Munawwar Hassan, & Nawaz Sharrif go to Shangla ?

Taliban warn lawyers against appearing in ‘un-Islamic’ courts

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) warned Shangla district lawyers on Tuesday of serious consequences if they continued to appear in un-Islamic courts (civil and district courts) from today (Wednesday). “Lawyers are warned through this notice not to appear before civil and district courts,” a member of Shangla District Bar Association (SDBA) quoted the letter as saying.
The lawyers have suspended a bar election scheduled for April 30 due to the letter, he said on condition of anonymity. He said the lawyers’ association had informed the district police officer and the Shangla district and sessions judge of the warning.On Tuesday, the Taliban allegedly kidnapped the Puran tehsil naib nazim and four others from Jambal area. Around 70 armed Taliban have also occupied the basic health unit in the area. (Daily Times)
Read more...

New rulers invite Osama Bin Laden to Swat ! Well done NWFP government and Pak Army !




TTP says Osama welcome in Swat:

* Taliban reject peace accord

* Muslim Khan wants Taliban model of sharia in Pakistan, ‘even in America’

* Those who disagree with Taliban are non-Muslims


Swat Taliban have said they are not bound to honour the peace accord between the government and cleric Sufi Muhammad, a private TV channel reported on Tuesday.
According to the channel, they said the NWFP government had signed the deal with Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi, and not with the Taliban.
Taliban sharia: Although there was no official confirmation, Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan issued a direct challenge to the legitimacy of Pakistan’s government in a telephone interview with the CNN, by demanding the imposition of the Taliban’s model of sharia throughout Pakistan and beyond, “even in America”.
Disagree: He also denounced any Pakistanis who disagreed with his interpretation of Islam, calling them “non-Muslims”. He also called for the imposition of jiziya, a tax to be levied on all non-Muslims in Pakistan.
In an Associated Press interview, he said Osama Bin Laden was welcome in Swat. “Yes, we will help them and protect them.”Muslim Khan counted the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, the Jaish-e-Muhammad, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Al Qaeda, and the Taliban of Afghanistan among his allies. “If we need, we can call them and if they need, they can call us,” he said. He said his forces would go to help the Taliban in Afghanistan if the United States and NATO continue to fight there.
In an interview to a Srinagar-based newspaper, he dismissed reports the Taliban would attempt to disrupt elections in Indian-held Kashmir. ( daily times monitor/ap/iftikhar gilani )

Read more...

Mission Buner accomplished ! What's next ?


A scenic view of beautiful Buner Valley.

The above map shows Talibans are only 55 miles away from Islamabad.


Buner falls into the hands of Swat Taliban

BUNER: Taliban militants from Swat took control of Buner on Tuesday and started patrolling bazaars, villages and towns in the district.

The militants, who had sneaked into Gokand valley of Buner on April 4, were reported to have been on a looting spree for the past five days.
They have robbed government and NGO offices of vehicles, computers, printers, generators, edible oil containers, and food and nutrition packets.

Sources said that leading political figures, businessmen, NGO officials and Khawaneen, who had played a role in setting up a Lashkar to stop the Taliban from entering Buner, had been forced to move to other areas.

The Taliban have extended their control to almost all tehsils of the district and law-enforcement personnel remained confined to police stations and camps.

The Taliban, equipped with advanced weapons, were reported to be advancing towards border areas of Swabi,
Malakand and Mardan, the hometown of NWFP Chief Minister Amir Haider Khan Hoti.

According to reports reaching here, the militants have set up checkposts and camp bases in Kangar Gali village, along the Malakand border; Naway Dhand village, along the Mardan border; and Tootalai village, along the Swabi border.

The sources said officials of the FC camp in Jorh had asked people to vacate their homes in view of threats of an attack.

The militants have started digging trenches and setting up bunkers on heights in strategic towns of Gadezi, Salarzai, Osherai and other tehsils.

After occupying the Buner district and setting up their headquarters in the bungalow of businessman Syed Ahmed Khan (alias Fateh Khan) in Sultanwas, the militants started patrolling the streets and roads with no signs of law-enforcement personnel.

Led by Fateh Mohammad, the militants were asking local people, particularly youngsters, to join them in their campaign to enforce Sharia.

They have established checkposts on roads and are searching all passing vehicles. They have virtually established their writ in Buner region, once a stronghold of the Awami National Party. A Taliban commander said they would set up strict Islamic sharia courts in Buner as they have already done in Swat, but would not interfere with police work.
‘The Taliban who have arrived from Swat have increased patrolling, banned music in public transport and rampaged (through the) offices of NGOs and taken their vehicles,’ local government official Rashid Khan said.

‘Taliban militants armed with rocket launchers were manning the checkpoints and operating from local mosques,’ he said, adding that a report had been filed at the local police station against ‘unknown militants.’ ‘We will soon establish our radio station. Our Qazis (Islamic judges) will also start holding courts in Buner soon,’ Taliban commander Mohammad Khalil told AFP.
‘We will not interfere in the police work, they can continue their job,’ he said, adding their purpose was to end a ‘sense of deprivation’ and to provide speedy justice.

‘People in their dozens have come to invite us’ to extend sharia.Muslim Khan, a Taliban spokesman, told AFP from Swat that ‘the government writ is not being challenged in Buner and Taliban are not creating any hurdle in the administration's work.’
‘The Taliban will leave Buner after enforcement of Islamic justice system,’ he said.
However, several residents said they felt ‘scared’ and planned to leave the Buner area, fearing similar violence to that in Swat.

On Tuesday, armed groups entered the Rural Health Centre at Jure in Salarzai area and took away a Land-Cruiser being used by the Expanded Programme of Immunisation (EPI), Buner.

On April 17, they raided a basic health unit in tehsil Chamla and looted 480 cans of edible oil. They took away from the house of a lady health visitor a large number of food and nutrition packets supplied by USAID and sewing machines from an Action Aid-sponsored vocational centre in the Korea village of tehsil Chamla.

On April 18, they looted a huge quantity of medicine from a health facility at the Afghan refugee camp in Koga in the same tehsil and 640 cans of edible oil from a godown of the World Food Programme in Nawagai.

On April 19, armed men took away a Suzuki Potohar Jeep from a rural health centre in Nagrai. A group of 20 militants took away a Suzuki Ravi car and 400 cans of edible oil from a basic health unit in Garga.

Another armed group snatched an ambulance, a pick-up provided by Gavi for EPI cell, a Suzuki Ravi from a health centre in Swari.

They also broke into the offices of Paiman (Save the Children) EPI, Jica offices and took away several computers, printers, two generators, fax machines, UPS and other appliances.

The armed men stopped near Ambela a double-cabin vehicle of Paiman going to Buner from Peshawar and took it along with the driver to a nearby camp. Later, they released the driver and escaped with the vehicle.

They have also occupied the main office of Rahbar in Swari.

Swat’s Taliban expand operations

LAHORE: After a peace deal with the NWFP government, the Swat Taliban are expanding their operations into nearby regions. Dozens have been streaming into the Buner district to take over mosques and government offices, BBC reported. On Tuesday, local sources told Daily Times the Taliban were patrolling bazaars in some tehsils of the Buner district. They said armed Taliban were guarding the entry and exit points of Gadezai, Salarzai and Ghashezi tehsils and other areas of the district. Checkposts: The Taliban have also set up ‘checkposts’ in Kanga Gul village on Malakand’s border, at Naway Dhand village on the border of Mardan and Tutalai village on the border of Swabi district, they added. Policemen have stopped attending their duties in the district. Also on Tuesday, Taliban kidnapped four men including servants of ANP leader Afzal Khan Lala from Drashkhela area of Matta tehsil of Swat.Armed Taliban are patrolling Kabal, Matta, Charbagh, Khawzakhela, Shamozo, GT Road and Qambar and have set up checkposts in many areas. They have also set up courts in Imamdheri Markaz in Swat which are deciding cases. They also presented four soldiers kidnapped from Khawazakhela tehsil of Swat. They were identified as Lieutenant Najam, Lieutenant Junaid, Naik Shahid Rehman and Lance Naik Shakeel. daily times monitor/staff report











================================================================











بونیر: طالبان کی سرگرمیاں تیز
عبدالحئی کاکڑ





صوبہ سرحد کے ضلع بونیر میں طالبان نے باقاعدہ کارروائیاں شروع کردی ہیں اور انہوں نےگاڑیوں میں موسیقی بجانے پر پابندی لگانے کے علاوہ مختلف واقعات میں غیر سرکاری اداروں کی گاڑیاں اور امدادی اشیاء لوٹ لی ہیں۔
ضلع بونیر کے پولیس سربراہ رشید خان نے بی بی سی سے بات کرتے ہوئے ان واقعات کی تصدیق کی۔ ان کے بقول گزشتہ کچھ عرصے سے سوات سے آئے ہوئے طالبان کی وجہ سے امن و امان کا مسئلہ خراب ہوا ہے۔
ان کے مطابق بونیر میں غیر سرکاری اداروں کی گاڑیوں اور اشیاء کو لوٹا گیا ہے جس کی ایف آئی آر درج کرائی گئی ہے۔ ان کے بقول چونکہ ان واقعات میں مبینہ طور پر ملوث ہونے والے طالبان کی انفرادی شناخت نہیں ہوسکی ہے لہٰذا انہوں نے نامعلوم افراد کے خلاف ایف آئی آر دراج کرائی ہے تاہم ابھی تک کسی کو بھی گرفتار نہیں کیا گیا ہے۔
رشید خان نے مزید کہا کہ آئندہ ایک ماہ بونیر کے لیے بہت اہم ہے اور قاضی عدالتوں کے قیام سے انہیں امید ہے کہ طالبان کی سرگرمیاں کم ہوجائیں گی۔ ان کے بقول انہوں نے جرگے کی مدد سے سوات کے طالبان کے علاقہ سے انخلاء کی کوشش شروع کر دی ہیں البتہ بونیر کے طالبان اگر پرامن رہنا چاہیں تو انہیں وہاں رہنے کی اجازت ہوگی۔
مقامی لوگوں کا کہنا ہے کہ طالبان نے کوگا کے علاقے میں واقع مہاجر کیمپ کے صحت کے بنیادی مرکز میں گھس کر وہاں سے دوائیاں لوٹ لیں جبکہ اسے ایک دن قبل انہوں نے امبیلہ کے علاقے میں غیر سرکاری ادارے کے لیے کام کرنے والے اہلکاروں کو اغواء کیا تھا جنہیں بعد میں چھوڑ دیا گیا تھا۔ اس کے علاوہ سرکاری حکام کا کہنا ہے طالبان صدر مقام ڈگر میں ڈسٹرکٹ ہیلتھ آفسر کے دفتر سے بعض غیر سرکاری اداروں کی گاڑیاں لے گئے۔ اس کے ساتھ ساتھ انہوں نے پیر کو ڈگر میں گاڑیاں روک کر ڈرائیوروں کو گانے بجانے سے بھی روکنے کی کوشش کی۔سرکاری حکام کا مزید کہنا ہے کہ پیر ہی کو طالبان نے سکولوں میں تقسیم کیے جانے والے گھی کے ہزاروں ڈبوں کو لوٹ لیا۔ مقامی لوگوں کا کہنا ہے کہ طالبان ٹولیوں کی صورت میں مختلف علاقوں کا گشت کر رہے ہیں جبکہ مساجد میں جاکر لوگوں کو شرعی نظام کے نفاذ میں ساتھ دینے کی ترغیب دے رہے ہیں۔
ایک مقامی شخص نے نام ظاہر نہ کرنے کی شرط پر بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ مقامی انتظامیہ کچھ نہیں کر رہی ہے اور جن لوگوں نے طالبان کے خلاف لشکر بنایا تھا وہ بھی اب تقسیم ہوگئے ہیں۔ ان کے مطابق ’حکومت نے طالبان کے ساتھ معاہدہ کرکے ہمارے اور اپنے ہاتھ بھی پیچھے سے باندھ لیے جبکہ طالبان علاقے میں دندناتے پھر رہے ہیں اور کوئی بھی انہیں روک نہیں سکتا۔‘
یاد رہے سوات سے آئے ہوئے طالبان نے تقریباً دو ہفتے قبل ضلع بونیر میں داخل ہونے کی کوشش کی تھی اور اس دوران مقامی لشکر نے مزاحمت کی جس میں تین پولیس اہلکار اور تین رضاکار قتل ہوگئے تھے۔ بعد میں مقامی انتظامیہ اور عمائدین نے طالبان کو علاقے میں داخلے کی اجازت دے دی جنہوں داخل ہوتے ہی پیر بابا کے

تاریخی مزار، مدرسے اور دربار پر قبضہ کرلیا۔ تاہم کچھ دنوں کے بعد یہ قبضہ ختم کر دیا گیا تھا۔


Sources: BBC Urdu, Daily Dawn, Daily Express, and Daily Times ----- 21st April

Read more...

Tuesday, 21 April 2009

Governor Ghani: Pakistan doesn't have any friend in the world except Allah !


*Governor NWFP has said World Powers want Pakistan's division & if the world is 'playing boxing with us' then we don't have any choice but to fight with them and answer them in same manner !
*According to him Pakistan doesn't have any friend in this world, however Pakistan is not alone in the world as 'Allah is our best friend' !



Daily Express ---- 21st April, 09


====================================================================



عالمی طاقتیں پاکستان توڑنا چاہتی ہیں

رفعت اللہ اورکزئی
بی بی سی اردو ڈاٹ کام، پشاور

صوبہ سرحد کے گورنر اویس احمد غنی نے کہا ہے کہ پاکستان میں ایک بڑی قوم کی تمام تر صلاحتیں موجود ہیں لیکن بدقسمتی سے عالمی طاقتیں اس ملک کو ٹکڑے ٹکڑے کرنا چاہتی ہیں۔
پیر کوگورنر ہاؤس پشاور میں قبائلی صحافیوں کی تنظیم ٹرائیبل یونین آف جرنلسٹس کی نومنتخب اراکین کی تقریب حلف برداری سے خطاب کرتے ہوئے گورنر نے کہا کہ قبائلی علاقے اس وقت پوری دنیا کی توجہ کا مرکز بنے ہوئے ہیں جس کی کئی وجوہات اور محرکات ہیں تاہم اس خطے کی تاریخ بتاتی ہے کہ یہاں کسی غیر طاقت کو اپنے قدم جمانے کا موقع نہیں ملا۔
انہوں نے کہا کہ پاکستان چار بڑی اقوام پر مشتمل ہے جن میں ایک بڑی قوم کی تمام تر صلاحیتیں موجود ہیں لیکن بین الاقوامی طاقتیں اس کو ایک مضبوط قوم کے طورپر دیکھنا نہیں چاہتی بلکہ وہ اس کو تقسیم کرنے کی کوششیں کررہی ہیں۔
اویس غنی نے اس تاثر کو غلط قرار دیا کہ دنیا میں پاکستان کا کوئی دوست نہیں۔ ’ہمارا سب سے بڑا دوست اللہ تعالٰی کی ذات ہے اور اس کے علاوہ دنیا میں نہ کوئی دوستی ہوتی ہے نہ دشمنی بلکہ مفاد ہوتا ہے۔‘

گورنر کا کہنا تھا کہ پاکستان اسلامی دنیا کی واحد ایٹمی قوت ہے اور یہ طاقت اس ملک نے عالمی طاقتوں کطرف سے شدید مخالفت کے باجود اپنے زور بازو سے حاصل کی ہے۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ دنیا میں اقوام عالم کے شانہ بشانہ چلنے کے لیے ہمیں اقتصادی، سیاسی اور عسکری طاقت حاصل کرنا ہوں گی کیونکہ عزت اور وقار کی زندگی گزارنے کے لیے طاقتور ہونا ضروری ہے۔
’اگر دنیا پاکستان کے ساتھ باکسنگ کررہی ہے تو پھر ہمارے پاس بھی اس کے علاوہ اور کوئی چارہ نہیں رہے گا کہ ہم بھی ان کا مقابلہ کریں اور اس کا جواب دیں۔‘ انہوں نے کہا کہ جب کوئی کمزور بڑی طاقت کے سامنے پھنس جاتا ہے تو پھر کمزور کے پاس اس کے علاوہ اور کوئی طریقہ نہیں ہوتا سوائے اس کے کہ کمزور طاقتور کے خلاف لڑنے نکل پڑے۔
انہوں نے کہا کہ بحثیت قوم اور اس ملک کے شہری ہونے کے ناطے ہمیں کسی اور کا نہیں بلکہ اپنے ملک کا ایجنڈا آگے لے کر چلنا چاہیے کیونکہ ہمیں اپنے ملکی مفاد کو دیکھنا چاہیے۔ گورنر نے مزید بتایا کہ خطے کے حالات کو دیکھتے ہوئے اردگرد تمام مسائل ہی مسائل ہیں لیکن ان مشکلات کا مقابلہ کرنے کے لیے ہمیں متحد ہونا ہوگا۔
اس سے قبل گورنر نے ٹرائیبل یونین آف جرنلسٹس کے نومنتخب اراکین سے حلف لیا۔ تقریب سے ٹی یو جے کے بانی رہنما سیلاب محسود اور نو منتخب صدر شیر خان آفریدی نے بھی خطاب کیا اور قبائلی صحافیوں کو درپش
مسائل پر روشنی ڈالی۔



Read more...

‘ISI certified Nawaz as patriot in 80s’ says Brig Imtiaz




ISLAMABAD, April 20: Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif is generally believed to be a discovery of General (retd) Ghulam Jilani, the governor of Punjab in Gen Zia-ul-Haq’s dictatorial regime in the early 80s, but actually it was the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) which found him to be “a true patriot and a practicing Muslim”, and, therefore, fully qualified to lead the country.


“I always held this view in our analyses that he (Sharif) was one man who had the making of a good leader. A true patriot and a practising Muslim… time proved that our assessment was right,” revealed Brig (retd) Imtiaz Ahmed, a former intelligence official, in an interview with DawnNews.

Brig (retd) Imtiaz is accused of having masterminded the so-called Operation Midnight Jackal of the ISI to topple the first Benazir Bhutto government by buying off some People’s Party parliamentarians.
He denied his involvement in the operation and described as fake the video tapes – produced by the Intelligence Bureau (IB) in 1994 – in which he and his subordinate Major (retd) Amir were shown ‘working on’ some PPP parliamentarians.
Imtiaz served in the ISI under General Akhtar Abdul Rehman and Lt-Gen Hamid Gul until he was posted outside the agency. After his retirement, he was appointed director general of the IB in 1990 by then prime minister Nawaz Sharif. But he was sacked when Benazir Bhutto came to power in 1993.

Brig (retd) Imtiaz is considered to be quite close to the Sharif family. “I have a very long association with Mian Nawaz Sharif and Mian Shahbaz Sharif. And my friendship with them always stood the test of time,” he told DawnNews.

Brig (retd) Imtiaz has held several meetings with the Sharifs since their return to Pakistan in 2007, and especially after the formation of the PML-N government in Punjab.He observed that the PML-N provincial government was facing a series of conspiracies and said that he was ready to offer his services to the Sharifs in larger national interests.
But he hastened to contradict reports about being part of conspiracies against the PPP government led by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.Asked to comment on the distribution of dollars among Afghan Mujahideen in the 1980s, he said the money was paid directly by the director general of ISI.The complete interview of Brig (retd) Imtiaz will be telecast on DawnNews at 11:05 p.m. on Tuesday.

Daily Dawn ---- 21st April, 09

....

’سو چوہے کھا کر بلی حج کو چلی‘

جس نے بھی یہ کہاوت کہی کیا خوب کہی تھی کہ ’سو چوہے کھا کر بلی حج کو چلی۔‘ ضیاء الحق سے لیکر نواز شریف کی حکومتوں تک پاکستان پرخفیہ ایجینسیوں کی حکومت کے ایک طاقتور کردار ریٹائرڈ بریگيڈئير امتیاز با المعروف ’برگیڈيئر بلا‘ دو دہائيوں کی خاموشی کے بعد ایران کونٹرا سیکنڈل والے کرنل اولیور نارتھ کی طرح طوطا مینا ٹائپ جنگي کہانیوں سے واپس آئے ہیں۔ میں اسے ’ویمپائر اسٹرائیکس بیک‘ کہوں گا۔

اب وہ اپنے متعلق کہتے ہیں کہ وہ ’آدھی شب کا گیدڑ نہیں بلکہ دن دہاڑے چیتا ہے۔‘

مجھے کوئی حیرت نہیں ہوگی کہ کسی صبح کوئي پاکستانی نجی چینل آن کرنے پر سدا امر آمر جنرل ضیاء الحق بھی بیٹھا کہہ رہا ہوگا کہ دنیا و دین کی بھلائی کے لیے وہ جان سے گزر گئے تھے۔ اور یہ کہ ’پاکستان میں آمر مرتے نہیں زندہ ہوتے ہیں۔‘ مرتے صرف بھٹو ہیں، نذیر عباسی ہیں، کہ یہ سولہ کروڑ گیدڑوں کا جنگل ہے جہاں نیم شب کی کوئی صبح نہیں۔ جہاں کی نجی چینلوں پر صبح شام کوئی میجر عامر، کوئي بریگیڈیر با اللہ، کوئی جنرل با پردہ ناصر، کو‏ئي حمید گل کوئی درانی بالم بنے بول رہے ہوتے ہیں۔

نذیر عباسی کون تھا؟

نذیر عباسی پاکستان کے بائيں بازو کا وہ طالبعلم رہنما تھا جسے دوران قید مبینہ طور پر کل کے سندھ میں آئي ایس آئی کے کرنل اسی بریگيڈيئر امتیاز کے حکم پر تشدد کر قتل کردیا گیا تھا۔ نذیر عباسی کے ساتھی اور دوست اور نذیر عباسی کی بیوہ حمیدہ گھانگرو کی طرف سے بینظیر بھٹو کے دوسرے دور حکومت میں انیس سو چورانوے میں کٹوائی جانے والی ایف آئی آر بھی یہی کہتی ہے۔ تیس جولائي انیس سو اسی کو کراچی کے نارتھ ناظم آباد کی ایک بستی کے ایک کوارٹر سے نذیرعباسی کو اپنے ساتھیوں بدر ابڑو (مصنف اور ماہر آثار قدیمہ)، سہیل سانگي (صحافی)، شبیر شر (اب سندھ میں انسانی حقوق کے وکیل)، احمد کمال وارثی (مزدور رہنما) اور پرفیسر جمال نقوی کو فوجی ایجنسی اور آئی ایس آئی کے اہلکاروں نے گرفتار کیا تھا۔

سندھ نیشنل سٹوڈنٹس فیڈریشن کے صدر نذیر عباسی کی وہ کئي دنوں سے تلاش میں تھے۔ ’آج بھی وری ہو فاشی کتا مونکھے قابو کن تھا‘، شیخ ایاز کی مشہور نظم ہے۔ (|آج وہ فاشی کتے مجھے پھر قابو کرتے ہیں‘)۔ دبلا پتلا کنگلا لیکن خوبصورت شکل، خوبصورت آواز ذہن و دل والا نذیر عباسی جناح ہسپتال کے قریب قائم خفیہ ایجینسوں کے نیئپیر بیرکس نام کے عقوبت گھر میں مبینہ طور پر آٹھ اور نو اگست کے درمیاںتشدد کر قتل کردیاگیا۔ نذیر عباسی اور اسکے ساتھی، پاکستانی خفیہ ایجیسسیوں کی نظروں میں را، خاد، کے جی بیکے ایجنٹ تھے۔ نذیر عباسی کا جرم یہ تھا کہ وہ پاکستان سطح پر طالب علموں، مزدوروں، کسانوں کی رابطہ کمیٹی کومنظم کرنے میں سرگرم تھا۔

نذیر عباسی کے لیے بتایا گیا تھا کہ ’حوالات میں اس کی موت دل کا دورہ پڑنے سے ہوئي‘۔ معروف سماجی کارکن عبدالستار ایدھی جس نے نذیر عباسی کی لاش کو غسل دیا تھا کا کہنا تھا کہ ایسا لگتا تھا ‘جیسے کہ اس کے سر کو کسی شیشے سے ٹکرایا گیا ہو۔ ’وہ شخص جو شبخون میں مارا گیا ورنہ اس جیسا بہادرکوئی لشکر میں نہیں تھا‘ نذیر عباسی کے ریاستی قتل پر اس کے دوست شاعر معین قریشی نے کہا تھا۔ نذیر عباسی کا قتل ضیاء الحق کے آمرانہ دور میں پہلا ماورائے عدالت قتل تھا۔

پاکستان میں حزب مخالف خاموش کردینے کی کوشش کی گئي تھی اور ایسے میں یہ بڑی جرائتمندانہ آواز بیگم نصرت بھٹو کی تھی جس نے نذیر عباسی کے ضیا حکومت اور اس کی ایجینسیوں کے ہاتھوں تشدد میں قتل کی مذمت کی تھی جسے مجھے آج بھی یاد ہے بی بی سی نے نشر کیا تھا۔

’برگیڈيئر بلا‘ دو دہائيوں کی خاموشی کے بعد ایران کونٹرا اسیکنڈل والے کرنل اولیور نارتھ کی طرح طوطا مینا ٹائيپ جنگي کہانیوں سے واپس آئے ہیں۔ میں اسے ’ویمپائر اسٹرائیکس بیک‘ کہوں گا۔

کئي سال بعد شجاعت نام کے خفیہ ایجینسی کے اہلکار نے نذیر عباسی کے قتل کی تفتیش کرنے والے ادراے کے اہلکاروں کے سامنے بیان دیا تھا کہ ضمیر کے بوجھنے اسے چین سے رہنے نہیں دیا اور اسنے نذیر عباسی پر تشدد اس وقت کے آئي ایس آئي کے کرنل امتیاز کے حکم پر کیا تھا۔ کئي سال بعد انیس سو چورانوے میں نذیر عباسی کی بیوہ حمیدہ گانگھرو کی درخواست پر بینظیر بھٹو حکومت کے حکم پر سندھ پولیس نے برگیڈئیر امتیاز کے خلاف نذیر عباسی کے تحویل میں تشدد کے ذریعے مبینہ قتل کا مقدمہ درج کر کے ایف آئي آر سیل کردی تھی۔ ’اصل میں آج بینظیر بھٹو حکومت کا پہلا دن ہے‘، انیس سو چورانوے میں انٹیلیجنس بیورو کے اس سابق سربراہ کی گرفتاری کے وقت میرے صحافی دوست جاوید جیدی نے کہا تھا۔ اسکی گرفتاری کے دوسرے دن اسکی خبر کے ساتھ اخبارات میں پاکستان کے صحافیوں کی وہ فہرست بھی حکومت کی طرف سے جاری کی گئي تھی جو برگیڈيئر امتیاز اور اسکی انٹیلیجنس بیورو کے پے رول اور فوائد حاصل کرنے والوں میں شامل تھے۔

وہی برگیڈئیر امتیاز جو بعد میں نواز شریف کی پنجاب میں وزرات اعلیٰ اور پہلی وزرات اعظمیٰ کے دور میں اسکے کان اور آنکھیں تھا۔ وہ اصل میں اس وقت ’جیک دی رپر‘ ٹائپ کردار تھا۔

یہ جو کراچي اور سندھ دیکھ رہے ہو اس میں بشمول ایم کیو ایم کے ٹکڑے کروانے کے ان تمام فتنوں کے پیچھے دماغ اور پے رول برگیڈئیر امتیاز ہی بتائے جاتے ہیں۔ شاید اب بھی کسی بڑے کام کیلیے پھر اس گیدڑ نیم شب کو دن دیہاڑے چیتا بنایا گيا ہے

BBC Urdu.com, 24 July 2009


Also Read:


Read more...

Monday, 20 April 2009

Will the real leader who can get rid of these monsters (Talibans) stand up? Imran Khan? Qazi? Nawaz Sharif? This silence is criminal!

Silence of the Lambs
*The Taliban are here to stay and unless we stand up against them in every possible way Pakistan will be lost – for good! It will be the silence of the lambs which destroys us. You will be responsible if Pakistan fails.

By Samad Khurram


Back in 2002, I was returning from Friday prayers when I saw an unusual gathering of singing and quasi-dancing Mullahs. Unusual because I had always assumed Mullahs to be against all types of Kuffar (Art). The amused crowd were listening to chants of “Taliban aa gayay, Taliban aa gayay”. I smirked. As if! Pakistan is a nuclear country with the seventh largest army. We’re safe.
The Mullahs’ songs have been answered – the Taliban indeed are coming. And with them the cowards are bringing a lifestyle that destroys everything Pakistan and Islam.

Oh no. Wait! This guy is on the paycheck of those who are trying to break Pakistan. Taliban are heroes, its America which is wrong. Yes, this is the typical self defense mechanism coming to full force. Having nothing to lose, and having been already declared a CIA agent earlier in life I suppose I’ll continue. Continuing with a genuine fear, that these words are falling on either deaf or hostile ears. Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s Pakistan is over if all this chaos continues.

Jinnah’s Pakistan is a dream gone wrong. Perhaps if he knew that the dreamland for living in peace, harmony, religious tolerance and freedom was going to become arena for public flogging where laughs of sadist barbarians and the screams of minors will echo, he would not have decided on creating it. Had he known that there would be more suicide bombs in his country than any other place in the world, where fundos would go around the cities threatening women to become religious, where school children would have to undergo security protocols as if they were in a war zone, would he have even bothered to work for the green and white?

Still, Pakistan is not what we worry about. All our esteemed talk shows chatter on is whether there should be 17th Amendment or not and on the statements by America and India. Yes, American drones and Indian statements are a threat to our sovereignty. Yes, the balance of power is important. But even when the Taliban have killed more people than India, American Drones or our tyrant rulers, taken over more of our land and have made us feel more unsafe than anyone else in the past thirty years? What other definition of sovereignty is there than protection of lives and property of people, maintaining writ of the state across the territory and having people feel secured? Why can we have some programs discussing the atrocities of the Taliban, the acts of terror that they do and how they have destroyed Pakistan?

No, it’s the “Hindu Zionists” (notice the contradiction?) working on a CIA sponsored conspiracy to break Pakistan. There are the good Taliban who fought the Kuffar off and the real issue is the CIA. Arguably everyone has all the time in the world to devise every action we do, plan it to perfection and then make the evidence of their involvement disappear. Are we really that important for the rest of the world to worry about when they have their own countries and problems to tend to? Even if the Taliban are foreign funded should does that not mean we should double our efforts?

Remember when India briefly occupied few territories near Lahore in 1965 how the whole country ran to defend it? My grandfather had stories of people going with sticks to support the army. I am afraid I will not have any such stories of patriotic resistance to tell anyone when another enemy has taken control of a fourth of NWFP and roughly one twentieth of Pakistan. Perhaps we should ban “Yeh watan tumhara hai, tum ho pasban is kay” for it seems no one really care about Pakistan, except the Zionist Hindus of course.

But no, remember the glorious days of the Caliphs? Remember the great Pakistani Fauj, who under the Ameer-ul-Momineen, Zia –ul – Haq, which crushed the Russians? This is only a plan to make America taste the same fate! Yes thank you Zaid Hamid. For a nation which already lives in denial, your conspiracy theories are all we need to turn us completely schizophrenic. Army is great and it will deal with any task assigned to it. More of the same comes from everyone turning patriotic everywhere. This automatic knee-jerk mechanism has seeped in our blood and shut off our brains.

For the love of God can anyone explain me why the great Army of Allah, whose laurels we sing from the day we are born, has still not been able to jam radio stations pouring terror in Swat? Have the core commanders not even tried asking the army engineers how radios work and how easy it is jam them without even having to be in the line of fire? Can they not even figure out if they only played “Who let the Dogs out” at the frequencies the Taliban use it would stop this vitriol? Why is it that these Taliban leaders can appear before journalists in broad daylight and roam freely without any trouble even when they claim responsibility of attacking Pakistanis across the country?

Perhaps the real question I should ask is why do I even care? When I took time off from Harvard to be part of the lawyers’ movement I had seen a ray of hope. There were concerned citizens and lawyers who stood for what was right no matter what the consequences. We fought for a principle and won with the hope that things will slowly improve. Today the very judges we had faith in released the cleric of Lal Mosque whose crimes everyone knows about. If the judiciary was going to release people whose crimes were recorded on TV perhaps it does explain why Taliban are spreading like an incurable cancer. Imagine who would be hanging in “khooni chowk” had Mullana Abdul Aziz kidnapped a few Taliban officials or fought against them and killed their men?

Yet when you think all’s over, somehow someone comes up. Someone whose name keeps your head from drowning. Perhaps this sick torture has to be long and painful where we chase mirages of oasis, never to really reach their. Perhaps for all the atrocities we have committed to our own people require us to be made an example of so no other nation follows our path. Why do ray of hopes like Afzal Khan, who has socked it up to Taliban and refused to be removed from Swat alive, appear every now and then? However he stands to die in the rain. Alone. Can anyone please name one Pakistani leader who has said the same? Forget that has anyone Pakistani leader said that he will go and get the Taliban to give up their arms? Will the real leader who can get rid of these monsters stand up? Imran Khan? Qazi? Nawaz Sharif? This silence is criminal!
What’s worse that these leaders of ours have unanimously approved a state within a state run, which is not accountable to anyone, absolves all crimes of the Taliban and gives a safe haven to those who are there to kill us? What sort of a Nizam-e-Nonsense is this when no one even tried to debate the issue properly and even consider for a second that giving blanket amnesty to the Taliban might not, even if it be infinitesimal, the right thing to do? No for the politicians this does not matter. All they are interesting in mudslinging at each other and more ministries. Our media and sheeple are busy devouring the latest gossip while Pakistan burns.

But unlike what people think it will not be because of Zardari’s corruption or Gilani’s incompetence or Salman Taseer’s whiskies. We have survived them in the past, and so we’ll do again. However any country that has fallen to the Taliban has never recovered. The Taliban are here to stay and unless we stand up against them in every possible way Pakistan will be lost – for good! It will be the silence of the lambs which destroys us. You will be responsible if Pakistan fails.
The writer is a student at Harvard University and turned down an award from the US ambassador as a mark of protest against killings of Pakistani soldiers by US drone attacks.

Shorter Version of this appeared in The News on Monday, April 20.

Source: PkPolitics.com
Read more...

Saturday, 18 April 2009

Taliban Barbarians blow up Police officer's grave !

There is no limit to Talibans ruthlessness !
They can not only behead their enemies but they can also blow up graves of their enemies !According to BBC last night Talibans blew up grave of an SHO, who was killed two weeks ago by the militants in Kohat.
SHO Riaz Bangash was very active against Taliban militants in Kohat and Tehrik-e-Taliban Darra Adam Khel claimed responsibility of his death.
This incident reminds us of another barbaric action of Talibans in Swat, they took out body of their opponent Pir Samiullah, who belonged to Berelvi sect and then hanged it on a pole.
Such crimes of Talibans clearly show that they are uncivilised barbarians who have no regard of human values and they don't even spare their enemies after their death !



کوہاٹ: پولیس افسر کی قبر پر دھماکہ
دلاور خان وزیر


صوبہ سرحد کے ضلع کوہا ٹ میں دو ہفتے قبل ہلاک کیے جانے والے ایک پولیس افسر کی قبر کو نامعلوم افراد نے دھماکے سے تباہ کردیا ۔ پولیس نے نامعلوم افراد کے خلاف مقدمہ درج کیا ہے۔
پولیس کے ایک اہلکار عتیق الرحمان نے بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ گزشتہ رات ایک بجے کے قریب شہر سے چند کلومیٹر دور راولپنڈی روڈ پر واقع پہلوان بانڈہ میں نامعلوم افراد نے ایس ایچ او ریاض بنگش کی قبر کو دھماکے سے تباہ کر دیا۔انہوں نے کہا کہ دھماکہ اتنا شدید تھا کہ جس سے قبر میں ایک گہرا گڑھا بن گیا ہے اور ارد گرد کی دوسری قبروں کو بھی نقصان پہنچا ہے۔
راولپنڈی تھانہ صدر کوہاٹ کے ایس ایچ او ریاض بنگش کو دو ہفتے قبل نامعلوم افراد نے روالپنڈی روڈ پر واقع انٹر چینج کے قریب اس وقت فائرنگ کرکے ہلاک کر دیا تھا جب وہ معمول کی گشت پر تھے۔اس حملے میں ریاض بنگش کے ساتھ گاڑی میں پولیس کے دو اہلکار زخمی بھی ہوگئے تھے۔
پولیس کا کہنا ہے کہ قبر پر حملے کی ذمہ داری کسی نے قبول نہیں کی ہے البتہ ریاض بنگش نے اپنی ڈیوٹی کے دوران کوہاٹ کے مختلف علاقوں سے کئی طالبان جنگجوؤں کو گرفتار کیا تھا اور وہ طالبان کے خلاف ہر ایک کاروائی میں موجود ہوتے تھے۔پولیس کے مطابق ان کو دھمکیاں بھی ملتی تھیں۔
یادرہے کہ ضلع کوہاٹ میں پہلے بھی سکیورٹی فورسز کے اہلکاروں پر حملے ہوچکے ہیں ۔لیکن ایک پولیس افسر کی قبر کو دھماکے سے تباہ کرنا اس علاقے میں اپنی نوعیت کا پہلا واقع ہے۔



Read more...

Was it really necessary for the majority of NA to Endorse the Shameful Surrender !!!

Endorsing surrender —Abbas Rashid

Even before the ink has dried on the signed copy of the Nizam-e Adl Regulation 2009, the TNSM/Taliban leadership has seen it fit to clear up any confusion on the part of even the most optimistic among us.
It turns out that from their perspective, the agreement obliges them not to display arms — there can be no question of laying down arms, as this is not allowed by sharia. Second, the militants cannot be called to account for acts of violence or arson because religion obliges us to look to the future. Not least, it has been made clear that when the work of the militants is done in one place, they will move on to another area; which brings us back to why they will not dispense with their arms.
It is not as if any of this was hugely unexpected, but the sheer speed with which the militants have helped clarify the distinction between surrender and peace may have come as a bit of a surprise to some: at least 16 people were killed, including 10 policemen, and several others wounded after a suicide bomber slammed his explosive-laden vehicle into a police check-post in Charsadda on Wednesday.
It might in some ways have been better for President Asif Zardari to sign the document without bringing parliament into the proceedings. Even if we are to go by the support for this agreement on the part of the ANP, it is at best an agreement under duress.
If the only defence against rampaging violence and destruction in the valley is an unequal agreement with the militants, so be it. But why give it the cover of endorsement by a majority in the National Assembly?
We must be thankful to PMLN MNA Ayaz Amir for registering his note of dissent during the session, followed afterwards by the PPP’s Sherry Rehman. And then there is the walkout by the MQM that kept the consensus from becoming quite complete. Such are the ironies of politics and history.In any case, it serves no purpose to make a virtue out of necessity.
Far too many voices now want to make us believe that the Nizam-e Adl Regulation meets a longstanding demand of the people of the area. It is, of course, always difficult to know what is in people’s hearts. But if it is a credibly articulated demand that we have in mind, then the elections just over a year ago tell a different story. The people of the area voted for liberal-secular parties such as the PPP and the ANP, and not the JUI, for instance.And yet, within parliament as well as outside, there is an air of complacency overshadowed by confusion and fear.
If ceding Swat was meant to appease the hunger of the militants, it has obviously served only to whet their appetite.
On the other hand, there is still an acute lack of clarity about what is at stake. This is not about social repercussions and altered lifestyles. What is critical is the political implication of the Taliban’s rigid and intolerant interpretation of what it means to be a Muslim. Imagine the level of tension and violence in a diverse polity ruled by the code of conduct that the Taliban seek to impose. Will the state structure be able to withstand the ensuing conflict and chaos?We are not doing too well as it is.
Certainly, Balochistan is also a reminder of how the state has not delivered. The recent killing of three Baloch leaders can only add to the deepening sense of alienation in that province. There is much that has to addressed, and urgently, by way of equity and justice within and among the provinces.
But a fired-up group of militants rapidly gaining momentum and traction combined with inaction on the part of our ruling elite is taking us towards disaster and not any closer to that crucial objective.
The government has made no real effort to educate people about the nature of the threat that confronts us. The electronic media is the most effective instrument for creating awareness to this end, at a popular level. The government could attempt this at least with the media it controls. But, for the most part, it is business as usual.
To add to our difficulties, the ‘war on terror’ origins of the conflict with its US imprimatur continue to confuse the issue even as our security personnel and law enforcement agencies are targeted, and scores of innocent people die almost every other week across the country as a result of suicide bombings and other terror attacks.
At the same time, India’s increasing presence in Afghanistan reinforces the perception on the part of at least our security establishment that it remains our only real enemy and to the extent possible all defence-related efforts must remain focused towards that end.
But we need to be careful lest we lose the war that has already been thrust upon us even as our strategists focus on the one we may have to fight sometime in the future.There is still no real coordination at the provincial and the federal level within the framework of an effective counter-insurgency or counter-terrorism strategy. There is no provision for rapidly processing intelligence from different sources and for coordinated response. Nor, yet, is there a specialised force that can respond effectively to this very different kind of war.
But even if all such measures were in place, a war of this kind cannot be fought without the support of the people — who will first need to comprehend just what is at stake.

Postscript: The Obama administration’s promise of billions of dollars in development and military aid could help, but as importantly it needs to move ahead on its regional approach. At the same time, it should review its policy on drone attacks. These strikes may be partly successful in removing some key militant leaders but the killing of innocent people in the process cannot be condoned. It is, in any case, providing grist on a continuing basis to the propaganda mills of the Taliban and their supporters while deflecting attention from where it needs to be focused — our survival as an integrated society and state.

Abbas Rashid lives in Lahore and can be contacted at abbasrh@gmail.com

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\04\18\story_18-4-2009_pg3_2
Read more...

Talibans publicly execute couple in Hangu !!! Is this a conspiracy against Islam and Pakistan too ???


Maulvi Imran Khan, Munawwar Hassan, Gen Hameed Gul, Federal Interior Sect. Kamal Shah and yellow journalists Ansaar Abbasi, Shahid Masood, Javed Chaudhry, and Hamid Mir please tell us
Is this video also fake ?
Is this again a conspiracy to defame Islam and Pakistan ?
Aren't RAW, CIA, MOSSAD and enemies of Islam behind this conspiracy ?

Video shows killing of man and woman

KOHAT, April 17: A video footage sent by some unidentified people to Dawn on Friday shows Taliban firing squad killing a man and a woman after accusing them of having committed adultery.
The two, who appeared to be in their 40s, were gunned down in the presence of their relatives. According to sources the incident took place in Hangu district a few days ago.
In the video, the woman is heard appealing to the Taliban for mercy. “Have mercy on me, please have mercy, the charges against me are false and no man has ever touched me.” Taliban first pump bullets into woman’s chest and then fire a burst from Kalashnikovs at her and the man. As the woman appeared to be breathing, some Taliban are heard shouting, “she is alive, kill her”. —

Daily Dawn ---- 18th April, 09

===================================================================

Daily Express ---- 19th April, 09


===================================================================

جوڑے کو ہلاک کرنے کی ویڈیو
عبدالحئی کاکڑ


صوبہ سرحد کے ضلع سوات میں ایک لڑکی کو سرعام کوڑے مارنے کی ویڈیو کے منظر عام پر آنے کے بعد اب ضلع ہنگو میں بھی ایک ایسی ویڈیو سامنے آئی ہے جس میں ایک ایسے جوڑے کو سرعام گولیاں مار تے ہوئے دکھایا گیا ہے جس پر مبینہ طور پر’جنسی تعلقات‘ رکھنے کا الزام لگایا گیا ہے۔
جائے وقوعہ پر بنائی گئی ویڈیو ضلع ہنگو میں موبائل فون پرعام لوگوں اور مقامی صحافیوں کے پاس دستیاب ہے۔ ایک صحافی نے بتایا کہ موبائل فون سے بنائی گئی اس ویڈیو میں ایک خاتون اور مرد کو دوڑتے ہوئے دکھایا گیا ہے جنہیں پیچھے سے بعض افراد کلاشنکوف سےگولیاں مار رہے ہیں۔
ان کے بقول گولیاں مارنے کے بعد دونوں زمین پرگر پڑتے ہیں اور خاتون گولی لگنے کے بعد بھی چیختی چلاتی ہوئی کہتی ہے’مجھ پر رحم کرو، میرے خلاف الزامات بے بنیا ہیں، کسی بھی مردنے مجھے چھوا تک نہیں ہے‘۔
ویڈیو میں دکھایا گیا ہے کہ خاتون زمین پر لیٹی تڑپ رہی ہے جبکہ اس دوران وہاں پر مجمع سے ایسی آوازیں آتی ہیں کہ’ وہ ابھی تک زندہ ہے، مار دو گولی‘۔
مقامی لوگوں کا کہنا ہے کہ یہ واقعہ تیرہ جنوری کو ضلع ہنگو سے تقریباً بیس کلومیٹر دور اورکزئی ایجنسی کی سرحد پر واقع کاہی کے علاقے میں پیش آیا ہے۔
اس سلسلے میں سرکاری موقف جاننے کے لیے ہنگو کے ایس پی شیر اکبر، کاہی پولیس چوکی کے اے ایس آئی غلام رسول سے رابطہ کیا گیا مگر شیر خان کا کہنا تھا کہ انکی مارچ میں ہی ہنگو منتقلی ہوچکی ہے اس لیے انہیں واقعہ کا علم نہیں جبکہ غلام رسول نے واقعہ سنتے ہی فون بند کردیا۔
تاہم اس بابت جب کاہی کے قریب واقع توغ سرئی پولیس اسٹیشن سے رابطہ کیا گیا تو وہاں پر موجود ایک اہلکار نے واقعہ کی تصدیق کرتے ہوئے کہا کہ ان کے پاس اس کی ایف آئی آر درج ہوئی ہے۔ ان کے بقول مقتول مرد کا نام لعل منشاء ہے اور اسکے بھائی نے ایف آئی آر میں کہا ہے کہ کسی نے انہیں ان کے بھائی کی قتل کی اطلاع دی اور جب وہ جائے وقوعہ پر پہنچے تو انہوں نے اپنے بھائی اور ایک خاتون کی لاشیں دیکھی۔
ان کے مطابق مقتول کے بھائی نے ایف آئی آر میں کسی کو بھی نامزد نہیں کیا ہے البتہ کہا ہے کہ جب بھی انہیں کسی پر شک ہوگا وہ پولیس اسٹیشن آکر ایف آئی آر میں نام شامل کردیں گے لیکن تقریباً تین ماہ گزرنے کے باوجود بھی وہ ملزمان کی نامزدگی کرانے نہیں آئے ۔انہوں نے مزید کہا کہ اس کیس کے تفتیشی آفسر بختیار خان ہیں لیکن جب ان سے فون پر رابطہ کیا گیا تو ان کا فون بند آرہا تھا۔
تاہم ہنگو پولیس کے ایک اور تفتیشی آفسر نے نام ظاہر نہ کرنے کی شرط پر بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ تیرہ جنوری کو کاہی علاقے کے قبائلی مشران اور تقریباً سو عام لوگوں کی موجودگی میں ایک چالیس سالہ خاتون ملیاز بی بی اور پینتالیس سالہ لعل منشاء کو قتل کردیا گیا۔
ان کے مطابق دونوں پر الزام تھا کہ ان کے مبینہ طور پر ’ناجائز تعلقات ہیں‘ لہذا دونوں کو اپنے اپنے رشتہ داروں کے ہاتھوں سرِ عام قتل کردیا گیا۔
یاد رہے کہ صوبہ سرحد میں گزشتہ کچھ عرصے کے دوران اپنی نوعیت کی یہ دوسری ایسی ویڈیو سامنے آئی ہے جس میں خواتین کو سرعام سزائیں دیتے ہوئے دکھایا گیا ہے۔اس سے قبل سوات میں ایک لڑکی کو کوڑوں کی سزا دینے والی ایک ویڈ یو منظر عام پر آئی تھی جس پر پاکستان میں سول سوسائٹی اور بعض سیاسی جماعتوں نے غم و غصے کا اظہار کرتے ہوئے احتجاجی مظاہرے منعقد کیے تھے۔
بعد میں چیف جسٹس افتخار محمد چودھری نے اس واقعہ کا از خود نوٹس لیا تھا ۔ کیس کی سماعت کے موقع پر صوبہ سرحد کی حکومت نے ویڈیو کو جعلی قراردیا تھا تاہم عدالت نے صوبائی حکومت کی تفتیشی رپورٹ کو رد کرتے ہوئے سماعت پندرہ دن کے لیے ملتوی کردی تھی۔

Read more...

Friday, 17 April 2009

Victoreous Talibans establish Marriage Bureau in Swat !!


سوات میں طالبان کا ’شادی مرکز‘
عبدالحئی کاکٹر
صوبہ سرحد کے ضلع سوات میں طالبان نے رشتے کروانے کے لیے ’شعبہ عروسات‘ کے نام سے ایک الگ شعبہ قائم کردیا ہے
اور طالبان کے مطابق ان کی فہرست میں شامل شادی کی خواہش مند تین سو لڑکے لڑکیاں اپنی باری کا انتظار کررہی ہیں۔
سوات میں طالبان کے ترجمان مسلم خان نے بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ رشتوں کے لیے الگ شعبہ کچھ عرصےقبل قائم کیاگیا ہے جس کی سربراہی ابو عماد نامی ایک طالب کمانڈر کررہے ہیں۔ ان کے بقول اسے ’شعبہ عروسات‘ کا نام دیا گیا ہے جس کا مقصد ان مردوں اور خواتین کے رشتے کروانے ہیں جو اپنی مرضی سے شادی کرنا چاہتے ہیں مگر خاندان والے کسی نہ کسی حوالے سے انہیں ایسا کرنا نہیں دے رہے ہیں۔
ان کے بقول انہوں نے اس مقصد کے لیے ایک فون نمبر مختص کیا ہوا ہے جس پر لڑکے یا لڑکیاں رابطہ کرکے اپنی مرضی سے شادی کے خواہش کا اظہار کرتے ہیں اور طالبان ان کے کوائف اپنے پاس درج کرنے کے بعد ان کے خاندان والوں سے رابط کرتے ہیں۔ان کے بقول اپنی مرضی سے شادی کرنا ہر مسلمان کا شرعی حق ہے۔
مسلم خان کا کہنا تھا کہ انہیں زیادہ تر ان لڑکیوں یا ا ن کے خاندان والوں کی طرف سے فون موصول ہوتے ہیں جو طالبان جنگجوؤں کے ساتھ شادی کے خواہشمند ہوتے ہیں۔ ان کے مطابق گزشتہ نو دنوں کے دوران گیارہ جوڑوں کی شادیاں کرائی گئی ہیں جبکہ تین سو لڑکے لڑکیاں ایسی ہیں جنہوں نے فہرست میں نام لکھوایا ہے اور اب وہ اپنی باری کا انتظار کررہی ہیں۔ان کے مطابق اس قسم کے رشتوں میں شادی بیاہ کی تقریبات شان و شوکت سے نہیں بلکہ محض سادگی کے ساتھ نکاح پڑھوانے کے بعد رخصتی ہوتی ہے۔
اس سلسلے میں ایک مقامی شخص نے نام ظاہر نہ کرنے کی شرط پر بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ ان کے محلے میں ایک لڑکی ہے جس کے ساتھ ایک لڑکا شادی کرنا چاہ رہا تھا مگر خاندان والوں نے رشتہ دینے سے انکار کردیا تھا۔ ان کے بقول لڑکے نے طالبان سے رابطہ کیا جنہوں نے بعد میں لڑکی کے خاندان والوں کو زبردستی دونوں کے نکاح کرنے پر مجبور کردیا۔
بعض ذرائع کا کہنا ہے طالبان کے حالیہ اقدام کا مقصد دراصل طالبان جنگجوؤں کی اپنی مرضی سے شادی کرنے کے لیے راستہ ہموار کرنا ہے۔ مبصرین کا کہنا ہے کہ ایک طرف تو طالبان نے سوات میں لڑکی اور لڑکے کو اس بنیاد پر کوڑوں کی سزائیں دینے کا اعتراف کیا ہے کہ انہوں نے آپس میں ساتھ مبینہ طور پر رابطہ رکھا تھا اور دوسری جانب اب وہ خود مرضی سے شادی کرنے والے لڑکی اور لڑکے کے درمیان رشتے کرانے کی بات کر رہے ہیں۔
اس کے علاوہ مبصرین یہ سوال بھی اٹھا رہے ہیں کہ یہ کیسے ممکن ہے کہ لڑکا اور لڑکی ایک دوسرے کو دیکھے بغیر شادی کی خواہش کریں۔ ان کے بقول اگر ایسا نہیں ہو سکتا تو اسکا مطلب ہے کہ طالبان کی سوچ میں یا تو تضاد پایا جاتا ہے یا پھر انہوں نے خود اپنے رشتوں کے لیے ایک محفوظ راستہ تلاش کر نے کی کوشش کی ہے۔
یاد رہے کہ سوات میں ڈیڑھ سال کی فوجی کاروائی کی بظاہر ناکامی کے بعد ہونے والے معاہدے کے بعد سوات مکمل طور پر طالبان کے کنٹرول میں آچکا ہے۔ حکومت نے طالبان کے مطالبے پر وہاں نظام عدل ریگلولیشن کےتحت قاضی عدالتیں قائم کردی ہیں۔اگرچہ حکومت اور مولانا صوفی محمد کا مؤقف ہے کہ وہاں پر صرف عدالتی شریعت نافذ ہوچکی ہے اور زندگی کے باقی شعبوں پر اسکا اطلاق نہیں ہو رہا مگر طالبان نے عملاً اسے زندگی کے دیگر شعبوں پر نافذ کرنا کا سلسلہ شروع کردیا ہے۔

Read more...

The Return of Lal Masjid Brigade ????



Maulana Abdul Aziz AKA Burqa-posh Maulvi of Lal Masjid (Red Mosque) has got released under an agreement that he will not create any trouble for the government, however according to Dawn hate literature and militant propaganda pamphlets and CDs were openly sold outside Lal Masjid during Friday prayers today.
Charged environment in around Lal Masjid last night and today suggests that we may be witnessing return of notorious Lal Masjid Moral Squad, which used to go to markets around Lal Masjid and threaten the shopkeepers to avoid selling music and video film CDs and cassettes or face their wrath !



Jihadi literature available once more outside Lal Masjid

LAHORE: The arrival of Maulana Aziz after release on bail coincides with the appearance of militant motivational literature and propaganda videos in front of Lal Masjid, according to DawnNews.

As Interior Ministry informed the National Assembly that publication and distribution of hate literature has been banned, militant videos and pamphlets professing jihad were being sold openly just a few kilometers from there out side the Lal Masjid.

However, just outside the mosque, Saeed, a video seller told DawnNews ‘Now that Maulana Aziz has been restored, all activities will return.’

The motivational militant videos being sold outside the Lal Masjid include scenes from battles of Iraq and Afghanistan showing the attacks on US led coalition forces.

The jihadi films being sold in the heart of the capital shows videos of suicide bombers, and incite others to join in the fight.

In one of the videos, young boys are shown being launched as suicide bombers covered in glory, aiming at motivating young impressionable minds to follow them.

Some of the videos being sold outside the Lal Mosque are brought in from other areas, including the tribal agencies while others are made in local markets.

With the release of Maulana Aziz on bail, it was hoped things will be different from the past. But, the very act of selling militant videos resonated with scenes before the military action against Lal Masjid clerics in July 2007 when militant literature was being sold openly in a similar manner.






Read more...

Maulana Abdul Aziz AKA Burqa Posh Moulvi Released after making a deal with Pak Government !




THEN









NOW


Lal Masjid cleric vows not to seek revenge

ISLAMABAD, April 16: The former Khateeb of Lal Masjid, Maulana Abdul Aziz, was released on Thursday reportedly under a ‘deal’ and he announced that he would not seek revenge on former president Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf who has been accused of killing hundreds of students of the seminary attached to the mosque in a military operation in October 2007.
Maulana Aziz was released on bail only two days after President Asif Ali Zardari signed a controversial agreement with Taliban militants in Swat.
The Maulana is facing 26 cases against him on different charges. After about 18 months, the Lal Masjid was again thronged by a large number of religious activists and Burqa-clad women students of Jamia Hafsa.
Shortly after reaching the mosque, Maulana Aziz led Isha prayers offered at about 10:45, instead of the scheduled time of 8pm.
Maulana Aziz who was arrested during the Lal Masjid operation when he tried to deceive security personnel by coming out of the complex wearing a burqa, was brought to the mosque by hundreds of his supporters. They paid tribute to people killed in the operation, including the Maulana’s younger brother Ghazi Abdul Rashid and chanted: “Ghazi is alive today as he was yesterday.” “Ghazi your blood will bring about revolution” and other slogans.
There are reports here that Maulana Aziz has been released under an agreement that he will not create any trouble for the government and will not make any demand which may be difficult for the government to meet. “I leave it to Allah Almighty,” he said when asked by journalists if he would file a case against former president Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf.
He, however, categorically rejected a perception that he had been released under a deal. “We will look into the past, but will look forward to helping maintain peace, improve economic conditions and stop suicide bombings across the country,” he said.
He said he would continue his struggle for enforcement of Sharia, not only in the country but in the entire world. “We support enforcement of Sharia in Swat and the day is not far off when Sharia will be enforced across the country,” he said.
When asked if activists of Lal Masjid would again take up arms, he said: “If we are pushed to the wall we would have no option but to defend ourselves.” He claimed that he had never supported suicide bombings in the country and that he had only warned the government by saying if an operation was launched against Lal Masjid, suicide bombings could take place throughout the country. (Daily Dawn ---- 17th April, 09)
History of Lal Masjid (from Wikipedia)
The Lal Masjid was built in 1965 and is named for its red walls and interiors.According to CDA records the Lal Masjid is one of the oldest Mosques in Islamabad.Maulana Muhammad Abdullah was appointed its first imam.Abdullah was critical of all Governmants except Zia's with whom he was very close.General Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq had very close relationship with Maulana Muhammad Abdullah, the former head of the Mosque. During the Soviet war in Afghanistan (1979–1989), the Red Mosque played a major role in recruiting and training mujahideen to fight with the Afghan mujahideen. Throughout its existence, it has enjoyed patronage from influential members of the government, prime ministers, army chiefs, and presidents. Several thousand male and female students live in adjacent seminaries.[1]
After Abdullah was assassinated in 1998, his sons Abdul Aziz and Abdul Rashid Ghazi took over the mosque, making it a centre for hardline Sunni Deobandi teaching and open opposition to the government. Abdul Aziz remained the official khatib of the masjid until he was removed in 2005 for issuing a controversial fatwa stating no Pakistani Army officer could be given an Islamic burial if died fighting the taliban.
The plot on which Lal Masjid was built was alloted by CDA. With the passage of time, the mosque administration encroached the surrounding area and a big complex like a fort was constructed. Due to influence and strong connections Lal Masjid have with the government high officials, the CDA remained unable to get the encroached land vacated till end 2006. In early 2007, CDA strongly persuaded and issued a vacation notice. Aziz and Rasheed, initiated move by taking possession of the Children Library located in the adjacent by using the female student force. These students were motivated in the name of religion and thus the visible conflict started. All this was to force the government to come to some compromise.
Some Pics of Infamous Lal Masjid Drama !

Also Read:

http://letusbuildpakistan.blogspot.com/2008/12/lal-masjid-arms-seized-during-operation.html

http://letusbuildpakistan.blogspot.com/2008/11/lal-masjid-and-ugly-role-of-isi-in.html


Read more...

Thursday, 16 April 2009

Feica's & Zahoor's Cartoons on Swat's situation !





Read more...

Threat of Talibanisation to the land of Sachal and Lal Shahbaz: Religious Fanatics Start Slaughtering Caretakers of Shrines in Sindh !


SANGHAR: Another shrine caretaker butchered


*Religious fanatics are behind slaughter campaign: Local people


SANGHAR, April 15: Caretaker of a shrine was slaughtered at the shrine near Jhol on Tuesday. Imdad Shah was asleep at the shrine of Miskeen Shah when unidentified people slaughtered him. They also severed his one hand. This is the fourth incident of its nature in the Sinjhoro area during last one year.

Earlier Neno Jatt was killed at the shrine of Juman Jali, Gul Khan at the shrine of Chhutto Pir and Malang at the shrine of Juman Shah near Sinjhoro. All of them were caretakers of the shrines and were slaughtered in the same manner. Sharp weapons were used in the murders. Nothing was looted from the shrine in any case.

The Sinjhoro police have failed to find any clue and the cases were pending in the police files. Even the motives behind the murders could not be ascertained.

Local people believe that religious fanatics, who do not like Sufi culture, are behind the murders.


Daily Dawn ---- 16th April, 09
Also Read:

Read more...

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

Talibans' Shariah doesn't allow them to lay down arms !!! Talibans vow to to take their 'struggle' to new areas !




Swat Taliban refuse to lay down arms




ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Taliban will not lay down their arms in a northwestern valley as part of a deal that included the introduction of sharia law but will take their 'struggle' to new areas, a militant spokesman said on Wednesday.
President Asif Ali Zardari, under pressure from conservatives, signed a regulation on Monday imposing sharia law in the Swat valley to end Taliban violence.
The strategy of appeasement has alarmed US officials, while critics say the government has demonstrated a lack of capacity and will to fight the Taliban and al Qaeda.
Details of the deal have not been made public but government officials backing the pact have said part of it was that militants would give up their arms.
But a Pakistani Taliban spokesman in the scenic valley, a one-time tourist destination 125 km northwest of Islamabad, said they would be keeping their guns.
'Sharia doesn't permit us to lay down arms,' Muslim Khan said by telephone. 'If a government, either in Pakistan or Afghanistan, continues anti-Muslim policies, it's out of the question that Taliban lay down their arms.'
Some Taliban fighters last week moved out of Swat and into Buner district, only 100 km from Islamabad, and Khan said his men would push into new areas.
'When we achieve our goal at one place, there are other areas where we need to struggle for it,' he said.
Earlier on Wednesday, the Tehrik-i-Nifaz-Shariat-i-Muhammdi, which Sufi Mohammad heads, announced a public rally in Mingora on April 19, DawnNews reported.
Sufi Mohammad said the rally is ‘intended to appreciate the sincere efforts and cooperation of the government which has ensured the enforcement of Sharia.’
He reiterated that laws under the Nizam-i-Adl regulation will be tailored for the common man and will provide amnesty to militants.
He further said ‘the decisions of Qazi courts will not be allowed to be challenged in any other court of the country, including the Supreme Court.’
The TNSM Chief asked the people of Swat to work together with the government to maintain peace in the region and praised the Awami National Party for its efforts in implementing the Sharia regulation.
Militants infiltrated into Swat in 2007 from strongholds on the Afghan border to the west to support cleric Sufi Mohammad.
Khan said militants would go to Afghanistan to fight US-led forces if Afghan Taliban called for help.
'Our struggle is for a cause and that's to enforce Allah's rule on Allah's land. We will send mujahideen to Afghanistan if they demand them,' he said.
One security analyst, retired Brigadier Syed Mehmood Shah, said peace could be found if the government disarmed the militants: 'The agreement should be given a chance.'
But another said the Swat militants were part of an expanding network.
'There is no comprehensive counter-insurgency strategy from the military or government. They are not taking it seriously,' said Khadim Hussain of the Aryana Institute think-tank.





Read more...

Who Rules Orakzai Agency: Talibans or Govt. of Pakistan ?

Map of FATA and NWFP (Source: FATADA)

We've been hearing news of Talibanisation of Orakzai Agency for months and there were also statements from officials of Pak Army and Federal Government denying such news.
However, a news item appeared on today's Daily Times should leave no doubt in our minds about Talibans comprehansive control in Orakzai Agency.
If Talibans are demanding or collecting Taxes in Orakzai Agency then still can we claim that Orakzai Agency belongs to Pakistani State ??
How long does it take for our right-wing politicians and psuedo-journalists to open up their eyes ?
How many cities and villages of Pakistan will be taken over by the Talibans to make Pak Army own this war ???
Is Pak Army waiting Talibans to take over Peshawar ?
Isn't it the duty of Pak Army to confront both external and internal threats to the State of Pakistan ?


Sikh families leave Orakzai after Taliban demand jizia


By Abdul Saboor Khan HANGU: Sikh families living in Orakzai Agency have left the agency after the Taliban demanded Rs 50 million as jizia (tax) from them, official sources and locals said on Tuesday.

Residents of Ferozekhel area in Lower Orakzai Agency told Daily Times on Tuesday that around 10 Sikh families left the agency after the demand by the Taliban, who said they were a minority and liable to pay the tax for living in the area in accordance with sharia. Locals said the Taliban had notified the Sikh families about the ‘tax’ around a week ago.

They said of the 15 Sikh families in Ferozekhel, 10 had shifted while the remaining were preparing to do so. The locals said the families were impoverished and had left the area to avoid any Taliban action.


Daily Times ---- 15th April, 09


Orakzai becomes new haven for Taliban ---- Daily Times --- 4th Feb, 09
* Residents say Taliban forces have introduced sharia law in region

* Analysts claim militants can reach Peshawar unless government restrains them


By Abdul Saboor KhanHANGU: The Talibanisation of Orakzai Agency in the past few months has resulted in a drastic change in the lifestyles of the tribal residents, as the political administration has retreated and is now restricted to functioning in its Hangu district headquarters. “Talibanisation has taken strong roots in Orakzai and the region is now run by the Taliban council, which has introduced sharia law,” tribesmen who have moved from Orakzai to escape Taliban-style rule told Daily Times on Tuesday.

Orakzai, which borders Kurram in the west and Hangu district in the east, provides a means to the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) to expand its influence to Peshawar through Khyber Agency.

The organisation has already made its presence in the region known by attacking truck terminals for Afghanistan-bound supplies for NATO and US forces. Despite government attempts to block their infiltration, the Taliban recently celebrated their “complete control” over the region by inviting a group of journalists to the area in a show of power.

According to former residents, the Taliban have set up their own courts to provide ‘justice’ to the people. They said that the traditional tribal jirga system had been abolished and all development schemes had been halted.

The anti-polio drive has also failed and local and foreign militants are seen manning checkposts that were previously held by government forces. “The Taliban have set up sharia courts in Ghaljo, Kundi Mishi, Dabori, Mashti Meli and Ferozkhel in Upper Orakzai,” the residents added.They said the Taliban council had banned women from travelling outside their homes without the escort of male family members. “There is a ban on music and dancing during wedding ceremonies; working of NGOs; and development works,” they added. Each area now has its own Taliban chief and is patrolled by Taliban militants to keep the local population under the control of the TTP, the residents said.Warning: With the increasing Taliban presence in Orakzai, the pressure is now mounting on Hangu district, where analysts suggest the TTP is fuelling sectarian strife to extend their base.

They have warned that unless the government acts to protect the strategic Kohat garrison from the TTP, the group could easily extend its reach to Peshawar.

Read more...

A Critique of Nizam-i-Adl Regulation (formal surrender of Swat to Taliban) by Latif Chaudhry




Daily Express --- 15th April, 09

Read more...

According to Sufi Mohammad's Shariat: Talibans would not be punished for their crimes against humanity !





Militants enjoy immunity from law: TNSM


ISLAMABAD, April 14: The chief of Tehrik Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Muhammadi came up with an audacious interpretation of the Nizam-i-Adl regulation on Tuesday, asserting that the law would protect militants accused of brutal killings from prosecution.

The assertion highlights the dilemma facing the government as it seeks to halt 18 months of bloodletting in the Swat Valley while convincing the nation, and the West, that it is not capitulating to militants.

Asked on Tuesday in a television interview whether the new courts would hear complaints from Swat residents about Maulana Fazlullah or his followers, Sufi Mohammad said they could not. “'We intend to bury the past,”’ the TNSM chief told the ARY channel, sitting off-screen. “’Past things will be left behind and we will go for a new life in peace.”

Asked if the Taliban would enjoy such immunity, an NWFP minister only pleaded for calm so that peace could take hold. “Everyone should understand what we have gone through and what kind of hardship people in Swat have suffered,” Wajid Ali Khan said. “’We can look into any disputes and controversy at some later stage.”

A spokesman for the Taliban said the militants would cooperate if the law was quickly implemented. “The world will see how much peace and prosperity comes to this region,” Muslim Khan said. Sufi Mohammad said his followers would tour all districts of Malakand, including Buner, to “ensure peace”.

He also said the courts would interpret civil rights according to Islamic strictures. “Women will have full protection and rights under Sharia. They will live a better life _ but behind the veil,” he said. —Agencies Our Correspondent in Mingora adds: The Swat Taliban have ‘banned’ display of weapons in bazaars, urban areas and even their Imamdheri centre, saying there is no need of taking up arms if ‘Shariat’ is enforced in letter and spirit.

The decision was taken on an appeal of Tehrik Nifaz-i-Shariat Muhammadi chief Maulana Sufi Mohammad, Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan told journalists. He said the Taliban had achieved their goal and they were ready to cooperate for quick implementation of the Nizam-i-Adl regulation.

The spokesman praised President Asif Ali Zardari and members of the National Assembly for their quick decision about the regulation. He expressed the hope that the law would soon be implemented in letter and spirit.

Our Correspondent in Batkhela adds : Talking to Dawn at the TNSM headquarters in Amandara, Sufi Mohammad said there was no justification of Taliban activities in Malakand region after the ‘enforcement of Shariat’. He said the Taliban should stop their activities and all decisions would now be taken by qazi courts.
Daily Dawn ---- 15th April, 09

Read more...

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

President Zardari finally signs so-called Nizam-i-Adl Regulation & Swat officialy given to Talibans !









Daily Times' Editorial: Getting parliament to endorse Swat laws





President Asif Ali Zardari has sent the Nizam-e Adl Regulation to parliament for a vote of endorsement before he signs it into law for Swat and its traditionally linked jurisdictions. The ANP is understandably miffed because the February 16 “peace agreement” was signed between Sufi Mohammad of the Tehreek-e Nifaz-e Shariat-e Muhammadi (TNSM) and the government of the NWFP with the approval of the PPP-led federal government.
The President had only to sign the Regulation to turn it into law. Why has he sent it to the National Assembly?Although he has not spelt it out, he may not have wanted to take responsibility for perpetuating a system in Swat that clearly promises to be “subversive” in the eyes of many people.
Objections to the Regulation are coming both from inside and outside the country although the view inside Pakistan is split and subject to violent argument. On the other hand, the world seems certain that the “deal” will bring more trouble for Islamabad in the shape of curtailment of state sovereignty and encouragement to the Taliban.

Since Pakistan is poised to receive crucial financial assistance from multilateral institutions, the President may want to be seen riding on a national consensus rather than alone on the issue of the Regulation.

Opinion is so polarised in Pakistan that developments in Swat after the February 12 agreement can hardly be presented as ominous. Facts are being juxtaposed with blind faith in the saintly person of Sufi Muhammad to transform Swat into a cradle of peace.

The Taliban, after entering Buner for tabligh (spreading the faith), have killed a number of people supporting the local jirga and are using local mosques to recruit the youth of the district. Such is the effect of intimidation that it is the fresh “mujahideen” of a victimised Buner who will now ensure that the reign of warlord Fazlullah is perpetuated. Sharia will serve as their handmaiden rather than as the guiding light.

Questions are being asked that are difficult to answer. The News (April 13, 2009) had an op-ed piece stating: “Fazlullah, the leader of Swat Taliban, led the prayer at his home village, Mamdairi on Friday, April 3. He was warmly received by his followers, as well as military officials and officials of the district administration. Those who prayed behind him were key military and civil officers — including Brigadier Tahir Mubeen, Syed Javed Hussain, the commissioner of Malakand region, Khushal Khan, the DCO of Swat, Danishwar Khan, Swat’s DPO and the man in charge of Operation Rah-e-Haq. After the prayers, Fazlullah gave an emotional and threatening speech which was heard with zeal and respect by all, including the military and civil officials, like obedient subjects.”
The warlord son-in-law of Sufi Muhammad is not only swelling the ranks of his army, he is also putting together an economic base for his satrapy that will serve as the future backbone of the Taliban invasion of the NWFP. He has taken control of the Mingora emerald industry and will soon be in the international market selling precious stones. Two mines that were a source of income to the state, Shamozai and Gujaro Kalay, are being operated by him. Every Sunday, Mingora is the scene of auction of precious stones, and dealers from all over Pakistan throng the market to buy them.

In the eyes of many, the agreement with Sufi Muhammad is the treaty of the defeated. There are others who think that the PPP must stick to the commitment made earlier by it to sign the deal. The PPP on the other hand says the presidential signature was conditional to peace and that there is hardly any peace after Sufi Muhammad’s takeover in Swat. The ANP replies by asking another question: is there peace in Punjab and Balochistan? There is justifiable cynicism too in this because the Pakistan army, in the eyes of the ANP, is either unwilling to take on the Taliban or is incapable of doing so. If Peshawar is teetering on the brink, why should they worry about Swat and get selectively killed while Islamabad and GHQ watch the mayhem from the sidelines? *











Daily Dawn's Editorial: Simply endorsing the Nizam-i-Adl in a bid to bring peace to the Malakand Division may be too little and have come too late.

DID the federal government do the right thing by placing the Nizam-i-Adl regulation before parliament for debate? We believe it did.
With a matter as complex as Swat, there are inevitably many aspects to consider. Begin with the ANP. The party threatened to pull out of the federal government if President Zardari did not sign the Nizam-i-Adl regulation immediately. But this was not the kind of politics the country needed. Granted the constitution gives the president the authority to make “regulations for the peace and good government of a Provincially Administered Tribal Area”, and the Sharia deal was struck on the understanding that the president was on board. But what the ANP and TNSM agreed to implement in the Malakand Division is no ordinary change — it effectively cedes judicial control of a part of Pakistan to a band of militants who have been waging a savage war against the state.
Surely the correct approach politically was to bring parliament into the loop on such a dramatic change to the state’s writ. However, President Zardari must shoulder some of the blame for the mess. If the pact with the TNSM was unacceptable, then why did the president originally give his approval, tacit or otherwise? And if parliament was the right forum to debate the issue, then why wait for two months to do so?The fact is that both the ANP and the president painted themselves into corner over the Nizam-i-Adl.

The ANP perhaps calculated that in caving in to the militants’ demand in Swat, the party would at least be able to govern the rest of the province and consolidate support among the electorate. Having relied on the president for backing, the ANP found itself in an awkward position vis-à-vis the militants to whom they promised much. As for President Zardari, he tried to appease all sides — an impossible contortion act always destined to leave both allies and enemies fuming. The Nizam-i-Adl has been approved by parliament and promulgated by the president. But the debate in parliament was yet another missed opportunity.

The bigger point is that the politicians still need to reach a consensus on how to counter militancy. When force is used some segments in the political spectrum erupt in anger and indignation. When peace deals are pursued, other segments denounce them as appeasement. Yet, no one seems serious about devising a credible strategy to fight militancy. The time for platitudes has passed. If Swat and the Nizam-i-Adl were a test case, then the politicians have not done justice to finding that credible strategy. Already the militants have spread to Buner. Mardan and Swabi seem to be the next likely districts. Simply endorsing the Nizam-i-Adl in a bid to bring peace to the Malakand Division may be too little and have come too late.





’صدر کی بدنامی نیک نامی میں تبدیل‘
عبدالحئی

صوبہ سرحد کے ضلع سوات میں طالبان کا کہنا ہے کہ صدر آصف زرداری نے نطام عدل ریگولیشن پر دستخط کر کے ایک ایسا کام کیا جو ماضی میں علماء کی حکومت بھی نہ کرسکی۔
دوسری طرف کالعدم نفاذ شریعت محمدی نے پارلیمنٹ کی توثیق اور صدر آصف علی زرداری کی جانب سے مسودے پر دستخط کو خوش آئند قرار دیتے ہوئے سوات میں امن کیمپ دوبارہ لگانے کا عندیہ دیا ہے۔
طالبان کے ترجمان مسلم خان نے بی بی سی کو بتایا نظام عدل ریگولیشن پر صدر آصف علی زرداری کے دستخط پر مولانا فضل اللہ کی جانب سے جو پیغام جاری ہوا ہے اس میں انہوں نے اس اقدام کا خیر مقدم کیا ہے۔
ان کے بقول مولانا فضل اللہ نے کہا ہے کہ ’مسودے پر دستخط کرنے میں تاخیر سے زرداری نے جو ’بدنامی‘ سمیٹی تھی دستخط کرنے سے وہ ’نیک نامی‘ میں بدل گئی ہے‘۔
ماضی میں صوبہ سرحد میں مذہبی جماعتوں کے اتحاد متحدہ مجلس عمل کی حکومت کی جانب اشارہ کرتے ہوئے مولانا فضل اللہ کا کہنا تھا کہ صدر آصف علی زرداری نے وہ عظیم کارنامہ سرانجام دیا جو علماء بھی اپنے دورِ حکومت میں سرانجام نہ دے سکے۔ انہوں نے یقین دلایا کہ طالبان حکومت کے ساتھ ہر قسم کے تعاون کے لیے تیار ہیں۔

جب مسلم خان سے پوچھا گیا کہ نظام عدل ریگولیشن پر دستخط ہوجانے کے بعد کیا وہ اسلحہ رکھنے کے لیے تیار ہیں تو ان کا کہنا تھا ’ہمارے پاس تو روایتی اسلحہ ہے جو ہر پشتون کے گھر میں ہوتا ہے ہم تو الٹا یہ مطالبہ کرتے ہیں کہ حکومت ہمیں اسلحہ دے تاکہ ہم امریکہ کے ساتھ حساب برابر کردیں۔
دوسری طرف کالعدم نفاذ شریعت محمدی کے سربراہ مولانا صوفی محمد نے پارلیمنٹ کی توثیق اور مسودے پر دستخط کو خوش آئند قرار دیتے ہوئے کہا ہے کہ وہ سوات میں امن کیمپ کے دوبارہ قیام کے بارے میں سوچ رہے ہیں۔
مولانا صوفی محمد کے صاحبزادے ضیاء اللہ نے بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ نظام عدل ریگولیشن پر دستخط کرنے پر وہ آصف علی زرداری کے شکرگزار ہیں۔ ان کے مطابق انہوں نے سوات میں امن کیمپ اس لیے ختم کردیا تھا کیونکہ وہ سمجھ رہے تھے کہ مرکزی حکومت عملی اقدامات نہیں اٹھا رہی ہے لیکن اب اس عملی اقدام کے بعد وہ سوات میں دوبارہ امن کیمپ لگانے پر غور کررہے ہیں۔
انہوں نے مزید کہا کہ صوبائی حکومت اور ان کی تنظیم مل کر اب دارلقضاء کے لیے قاضیوں کی تعیناتی پر بات چیت کرے گی جو تین علماء پر مشتمل اپیلیٹ بنچ ہوگا۔ نظام عدل ریگولیشن میں ہائی کورٹ کو دارلقضاء اور سپریم کورٹ کو دارال دارلقضاء کہا جائے گا جو صرف ملاکنڈ ڈویژن اور ضلع کوہستان میں کیسوں کی سماعت کرے گا۔
صدر آصف زرداری نے قومی اسمبلی سے قرارداد کی منظوری کے بعد شرعی نظامِ عدل ریگولیشن پر پیر کی شب دستخط کردیے تھے۔


Source: Daily Dawn, Daily Times, BBC Urdu, & Daily Express

Read more...

NY Times: Militants have gained strength in D.G. Khan, which is a gateway both to Taliban-controlled areas and the heart of Punjab !

Students practice memorizing the Koran at the Darul Uloom Rahmaniya Madrassa in Dera Ghazi Khan.
Students at a seminary school in Dera Ghazi Khan.




Allied Militants Threaten Pakistan’s Populous Heart

DERA GHAZI KHAN, PakistanTaliban insurgents are teaming up with local militant groups to make inroads in Punjab, the province that is home to more than half of Pakistanis, reinvigorating an alliance that Pakistani and American authorities say poses a serious risk to the stability of the country.
The deadly assault in March in Lahore, Punjab’s capital, against the Sri Lankan cricket team, and the bombing last fall of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad, the national capital, were only the most spectacular examples of the joint campaign, they said.
Now police officials, local residents and analysts warn that if the government does not take decisive action, these dusty, impoverished fringes of Punjab could be the next areas facing the insurgency. American intelligence and counterterrorism officials also said they viewed the developments with alarm.
“I don’t think a lot of people understand the gravity of the issue,” said a senior police official in Punjab, who declined to be idenfitied because he was discussing threats to the state. “If you want to destabilize Pakistan, you have to destabilize Punjab.”
As American drone attacks disrupt strongholds of the Taliban and Al Qaeda in the tribal areas, the insurgents are striking deeper into Pakistan — both in retaliation and in search of new havens.
Telltale signs of creeping militancy abound in a belt of towns and villages near here that a reporter visited last week. Militants have gained strength considerably in the district of Dera Ghazi Khan, which is a gateway both to Taliban-controlled areas and the heart of Punjab, the police and local residents say. Many were terrified.
Some villages, just north of here, are so deeply infiltrated by militants that they are already considered no-go zones by their neighbors.
In at least five towns in southern and western Punjab, including the midsize hub of Multan, barber shops, music stores and Internet cafes offensive to the militants’ strict interpretation of Islam have received threats. Traditional ceremonies that include drumming and dancing have been halted in some areas. Hard-line ideologues have addressed large crowds to push their idea of Islamic revolution. Sectarian attacks, dormant here since the 1990s, have erupted once again.
“It’s going from bad to worse,” said a senior police official in Dera Ghazi Khan. “They are now more active. These are the facts.”
American officials agreed. Bruce Riedel, who led the Obama administration’s recently completed strategy review of Pakistan and Afghanistan, said the Taliban now had “extensive links into the Punjab.”
“You are seeing more of a coalescence of these militant groups,” said Mr. Riedel, a former C.I.A. official. “Connections that have always existed are becoming tighter and more public than they have in the past.”
The Punjabi militant groups have had links with the Taliban, who are mostly Pashtun tribesmen, since the 1980s. Some of the Punjabi groups are veterans of Pakistan’s state-sponsored insurgency against Indian forces in Kashmir. Others made targets of Shiites.
Under pressure from the United States, former President Pervez Musharraf cut back state support for the Punjabi groups. They either went underground or migrated to the tribal areas, where they deepened their ties with the Taliban and Al Qaeda.
At least 20 militants killed in American strikes in the tribal areas since last summer were Punjabi, according to people from the tribal areas and Pakistani officials. One Pakistani security official estimated that 5 percent to 10 percent of militants in the tribal regions could be Punjabi.
The alliance is based on more than shared ideology. “These are tactical alliances,” said a senior American counterterrorism official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss intelligence matters. The Pashtun Taliban and Arab militants, who are part of Al Qaeda, have money, sanctuary, training sites and suicide bombers. The Punjabi militants can provide logistical help in Punjabi cities, like Lahore, including handling bombers and target reconnaissance.
The cooperation between the groups intensified greatly after the government’s siege of Islamic hard-liners at the Red Mosque in Islamabad, in mid-2007, Pakistani and American security officials say. The siege has since become a rallying cry.
One such joint operation, an American security official said, was the Marriott bombing in Islamabad in September, which killed more than 50 people.
As this cooperation intensifies, places like Dera Ghazi Khan are particularly vulnerable. This frontier town is home to a combustible mix of worries: poverty, a growing phalanx of hard-line religious schools and a uranium processing plant that is a part of Pakisitan’s nuclear program.

It is also strategically situated at the intersection of two main roads. One is a main artery into Pakistan’s heartland, in southern Punjab. The other connects Baluchistan Province in the west to the North-West Frontier Province, both Taliban strongholds.
“We are being cornered in a blind alley,” said Mohammed Ali, a local landlord. “We can’t breathe easily.”
Attacks intended to intimidate and sow sectarian strife are more common. The police point to a suicide bombing in Dera Ghazi Khan on Feb. 5. Two local Punjabis, with the help of Taliban backers, orchestrated the attack, which killed 29 people at a Shiite ceremony, the local police said.
The authorities arrested two men as masterminds on April 6: Qari Muhammad Ismail Gul, the leader of a local madrasa; and Ghulam Mustafa Kaisrani, a jihadi who posed as a salesman for a medical company.
They belonged to a banned Punjabi group called Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, but were tied through phone calls to two deputies of the Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, the police said.
“The phone numbers they call are in Waziristan,” said a police official, referring to the Taliban base in the tribal areas. “They are working together hand in glove.” One of the men had gone for training in Waziristan last summer, the police said. The operations are well-supported. Mr. Kaisrani had several bank transfers worth about $11 million from his Pakistani account, the authorities said.
Local crimes, including at least two recent bank robberies in Dera Ghazi Khan, were also traced to networks of Islamic militants, officials said.
“The money that’s coming in is huge,” said Zulfiqar Hameed, head of investigations for the Lahore Police Department. “When you go back through the chain of the transaction, you invariably find it’s been done for money.”
After the suicide attack here, the police confiscated a 20-minute inspirational video, titled “Revenge,” for the Red Mosque, which gave testimonials from suicide bombers in different cities and post-attack images.
Umme Hassan, the wife of a fiery preacher who was killed during the Red Mosque siege, now frequently travels to south Punjab, to rally the faithful. She has made 12 visits in the past several months before cheering crowds and showing emotional clips of the attack, said a Punjabi official who has been monitoring her visits.
“She claimed that they would bring Islamic revolution in three months,” said Umar Draz, who attended a rally in Muzzafargarh.
The situation in south and west Punjab is still far from that in the Swat Valley, a part of North-West Frontier Province that is now fully under Taliban control after the military agreed to a truce in February. But there are strong parallels.
The Taliban here exploit many of the same weaknesses that have allowed them to expand in other areas: an absent or intimidated police force; a lack of attention from national and provincial leaders; a population steadily cowed by threats, or won over by hard-line mullahs who usurp authority by playing on government neglect and poverty.
In Shadan Lund, a village just north of here, militants are openly demanding Islamic law, or Shariah, said Jan Sher, whose brother is a teacher there. “The situation is sharply going toward Swat,” Mr. Sher said. He and others said the single biggest obstacle to stopping the advance of militancy was the attitudes of Pakistanis themselves, whose fury at the United States has led to blind support for everyone who goes against it.
Shabaz Sharif, the chief minister of Punjab, said he was painfully aware of the problems of insurgent infiltration and was taking steps to restore people’s faith in government, including plans for new schools and hospitals. “Hearts and minds must be won,” he said in an interview Monday. “If this struggle fails, this country has no future.”
But people complain that landowners and local politicians have done nothing to stop the advance and, in some cases, even assist the militants by giving money to some of the religious schools.
“The government is useless,” said Mr. Ali, the local landlord. “They live happy, secure lives in Lahore. Their children study abroad. They only come here to contest elections.”
The police are left alone to stop the advance. But in Punjab, as in much of the rest of Pakistan, they are spread unevenly, with little presence in rural areas. Out of 160,000 police officers in Punjab, fewer than 60,000 are posted in rural areas, leaving frontier stations in districts virtually unprotected, police officials said.
Locals feel helpless. When a 15-year-old boy vanished from a madrasa in a village near here recently — his classmates said to go on jihad — his uncle could not afford to go look for him, let alone confront the powerful men who run the madrasa.
“We are simple people,” the man said. “What can we do?”
Source: The New York Times

Read more...

Monday, 13 April 2009

Zohra Yusuf: It is only the army that can confront and overpower the Taliban. The question is: does it have the will to do so?

Day of the Taliban
By Zohra Yusuf

TO say that the entire nation hangs its head in shame over the flogging of young Chand Bibi in Swat would not only be a cliché. It would be a lie. There have been voices of denial. There have been voices of accusation. There have been voices of justification.
Whenever this barbaric episode happened, pre or post the peace deal with the Taliban, is irrelevant. If this occurred before the signing of the so-called peace treaty (as the ANP leadership claimed in an effort to defend the deal), the question arises: how could the government even contemplate negotiating with those who flout the law in the most contemptible way possible? If the incident of flogging took place after the peace pact, then it is a clear signal (apart from other disturbing signs) that the deal was dead even as it was being inked.
No, the Pakistani nation and the government that represents it are not innocent. The list of the guilty is fairly representative of today’s power-brokers. They include religious parties and sectarian groups, the army that has been propping the jihadi groups for its own vested interests, those that stubbornly stick to irrational anti-West positions and, consequently, tend to favour the extremists, and the media (the Urdu-language section) that glorify those fighting in the name of religion.
The military-mullah nexus has long been acknowledged and is the subject of many studies by various think tanks. Its historic context is also well established. Whether it was directed at putting down the freedom movement in Bangladesh or propping up the one in Kashmir, this has been a dangerous liaison for the people of Pakistan. As keepers of the ‘ideology’ of Pakistan, the military has for long displayed the fervour that comes with that ideology.Today, the Taliban’s creed is perhaps closer to the hearts and mind of a soldier than that of an average citizen’s. How else does one explain the failure of 20,000 professional security personnel ranged against approximately 5,000 Taliban fighters in Swat? Or the six years of uninterrupted FM broadcasts of Mullah Fazlullah when cable channels are blocked for far less serious offences?
It must be noted that condemnation of the flogging by religious leaders has been rare and muted. Most JUI-F (a coalition partner of the present government) members have, as expected, termed the incident a conspiracy of western NGOs.The JUI-F federal minister, Maulana Swati, has gone a step further in describing it as a ‘Jewish conspiracy’, questioning the authenticity of the video clip. Munawar Hasan, the newly elected amir of the Jamaat-i-Islami, wondered why the US drone attacks were not being condemned instead of the flogging of the young woman which to him appeared to be a non-issue. Religious groups have also had the gall to demonstrate in favour of the Swati Taliban to counter the protests voiced by members of civil society.
The tendency to go into denial in the face of culpability is now fairly widespread in Pakistan. The ANP information minister, Iftikhar Hussain, accused filmmaker Samar Minallah of trying to sabotage the Swat deal by bringing public attention to this barbaric act. The state of denial, however, was also exhibited by the interior adviser, Rehman Malik, who added to the chorus of voices claiming that the video was faked.
The inability to face reality is so deeply ingrained in the Pakistani psyche that the interior adviser, who was expected to make a statement only after examining evidence, chose to echo popular perceptions.Today, the average citizen is equally struck by this denial disease. The Daily Times (5 April) quoted a student of Shifa College of Medicine as opining “This (public lashing) is a US conspiracy to sabotage law and order in the country”, going on to describe it as “media bias” and suggesting that Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry “first try former president Pervez Musharraf before taking action against those who lashed the girl in public”.
This kind of effort to deflect an argument, which has no basis in rationality, is increasingly becoming the norm in Pakistan. With ideology rammed down their throats both through the curriculum and the media, today’s youth has lost the power — and indeed the will — to reason. It’s easier to explain away the ills of the country by resorting to conspiracy theories, rather than through serious and objective analyses. The villains are the usual suspects: the US, India and the Jews. The young in Pakistan are growing up with hardened ideological values, rather than humanitarian ones.The media is responsible, to a considerable degree, for vast sections of the population clinging to this state of denial. For years the Urdu language press — and now the Urdu language channels which far outnumber the English language ones — has fed audiences on a steady diet of intolerance, misplaced chauvinism and conspiracy theories.
Conspiracy theories are peddled as verified truth and enemies are seen everywhere across our frontiers, as well as among the small liberal section of Pakistanis. Islam is glorified to the exclusion of other religions.
Today, many Pakistanis are not only intolerant of other cultures and religions but also increasingly xenophobic. To such minds, the condemnation of anything done in the name of Islam is reprehensible. Space is thus being created for the Taliban in the national psyche. The ANP’s transformation from an avowedly secular party to one defending deals with Islamic militants is an ominous sign of the times.
The only challenge to Talibanisation has come from civil society groups and from the MQM in Karachi. Though civil society has demonstrated tremendous anger and resolve, it is no match for well-armed militants, while the MQM’s influence is restricted to urban Sindh. It is only the army that can confront and overpower the Taliban. The question is: does it have the will to do so?It’s said that those who ride the tiger sometimes end up inside. The army must ensure that this does not become its fate.
Meanwhile, the prime minister has been quoted as claiming that Pakistan is “capable of defeating terrorism”. How many Pakistanis will be reassured by this statement?

Daily Dawn --- 13th April, 09
Read more...

Buner finally falls to Talibans: Thanks to Pakistan Army and NWFP Government !







A view of beautiful Buner Valley.



An armed Taliban militant stands beside the body of one of two policemen killed in Buner district, April 7, 2009.—Reuters


Militants recruit followers, extend patrols in Buner

BUNER: Militants extended their patrolling to new parts of the district and have started preaching at different mosques asking local youth to join their fold and assume control of their areas.
Giving sermons in different mosques at Sultanwas, Pacha, Bhai Kaly, Malkpur, Kalakheelam, Jure, Bagra, Manyarai, Gokand, and other areas they stated that the Tehrik-i-Taliban had its roots both within and outside of the country and the local population should join them for spreading the message of Islam.
They called upon all the people to allow their near and dear ones to join the ranks of Taliban for enforcement of Shariah laws in the Malakand division and rest of the country.
The militants extended their patrolling to the villages in Chamla Tehsil on Sunday as the law enforcing agencies continued to remain indifferent to their movement and activities.
‘We are in constant touch with the leadership of Taliban in Swat and the situation will return to normal in next few days,’ said the Buner district coordination officer Jawed Ahmad.
The DCO told Dawn by phone: ‘We have adopted policy of restraint as a slight mistake could derail the entire peace initiative launched by the government. These Taliban are peaceful and have till now not harmed any individual in the district.’
He dispelled the impression of any recruitment by the Swat Taliban in Buner stating that they had not received any such report. He added that the local people had entered into an agreement with the Taliban in Swat through a jirga.
A local police official told Dawn that the latest weapons carried by these Taliban had turned into a source of attraction for the youngsters who had been roaming with them in large number. ‘I fear that in next few days they will be joined by sizeable number of people mostly youngsters and will announce their organization setup in Buner,’ he added.
On Sunday a leader of the Swat Taliban, Maulana Khalil, delivered a sermon at a mosque in Malakpur village during which leaders of Ishaat –Al-Sunnah-wat-Tauheed, Maulana Minhajudeen and Maulana Tajur Rehman and large number of locals welcomed him.
He said that Pakistan came into existence on the name of Islam but despite the passage of 60 years that objective could not be achieved. He said that the movement for enforcement of Islamic Shariah in Malakand Division was started 20 years ago, but the desire goal could not be achieved through peaceful means and thus armed movement was started.
Maulana Khalil urged the local youth to come forward and shoulder responsibility of their localities. The local population has now been trying to adjust themselves with the Taliban and large number of them is visiting them at Sultanwas, Pir Baba and rest of their stations.
As the Taliban assured them complete peace in case of no resistance, the people here are averse to any military operation which they view would inflict more problems and devastation on the people.
Moreover, the Taliban remained in the Darbar Pir Baba, Jamia Masjid Pir Baba, Pacha Bazaar, Sultanwas, Bagra, Manyarai, and Gokand as main stations while their patrol continued to rest of district unabated. Their presence continued in the shrine of a saint Pir Baba as the management of the shrine has now been barred from entering the premises.




====================================================================





Read more...

Farhat Taj: Life in Swat after the peace deal


On Feb 16 a peace agreement was signed between Sufi Mohammad, leader of the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM) and the government of the NWFP with complete blessing of the PPP-led federal government.

Sufi Mohammad reached Swat with a promise to convince his son-in-law, Maulana Fazlullah, and his fighters to surrender weapons for the sake of peace.

Two months after the peace deal, how is life in Swat? What is happening to people? Is the peace deal working?

‘The peace deal is not working and will fall sooner than later,’ veteran ANP politician Afzal Khan Lala tells me. He is the only politician who is still standing up to the barbaric Taliban in Swat despite several death threats and the demands of his old age — the rest of the ANP leadership has fled the area.During a telephone conversation, he elaborated: 'The peace deal has been made by non-Swatis. People of Swat have not been taken into confidence on the deal. Also, I was never consulted by the ANP government in making of the peace deal.’

Day-to-day happenings in Swat clearly indicate that the apprehensions of Afzal Khan Lala are not misplaced and the peace deal has been strengthening the writ of the Taliban over Swat's 5,337-square-kilometre area. The Taliban have made the 1.7 million people of Swat hostage, and the people continue to suffer. The government in Swat seems helpless and paralysed. I will elaborate it with some examples.

Fazlullah, the leader of Swat Taliban, led the prayer at his home village, Mamdirai on Friday, April 3. He was warmly received by his followers, as well as military officials and officials of the district administration. Those who prayed behind him were key military and civil officers—including Brigadier Tahir Mubeen, Syed Javed Hussain, the commissioner of Malakand region, Khushhal Khan, the DCO of Swat, Danishwar Khan, Swat's DPO and the man in charge of Operation Rah-e-Haq. After the prayers Fazlullah gave an emotional and threatening speech which was heard with zeal and respect by all, including the military and civil officials, like obedient subjects. How funny is it that key state functionaries are praying behind the terrorist who killed soldiers of the Pakistani army, NWFP police officers and civilians of the Valley.

During the telephone conversation with this writer Afzal Khan Lala said: ‘There cannot be two swords in one sheathe. There cannot be two kings of one land. In Swat one king is Fazlullah and the other the government.’ The conduct of the state functionaries in Swat showed who the real king of Swat is. The people of Swat owe an explanation from the Pakistani army and the government of the NWFP. Would the army care to explain why its commander in Swat was offering namaz behind the terrorists who killed soldiers of the army and policemen? Would the ANP government care to explain why its senior-level government servants pray behind a terrorist who killed civilians in the very constituency that elected the ANP to power? It is also pertinent to mention that police in Swat have registered at least 60 cases related to suicide bombings, kidnappings, attacks on civilians, police and armed forces and damage to public and private property against Fazlullah.


Taliban have created their own income-generation sources in Swat. They have taken over the possession of the famous Mingora emerald mines. Mingora city is the district headquarters and a busy commercial centre of the valley. The Shamozai emeraled mine, some 25 kilometres from Mingora and now the Gujaro Killay emerald mine in the adjacent district of Shangla are also under the control of the Swat Taliban. Mining is in progress in these mines and precious stones are auctioned in the premises of the Mingora mine every Sunday, where the dealers from all over Pakistan come for shopping. Federal and provincial governments have kept silent over this looting and plunder of State properties.

The Taliban are in league with the timber mafia. They are mercilessly cutting the forests of Malamjaba, Fatehpur, Miandam and Lalko. They also cut the fruit orchards of the landlord opponent to them. The fruit orchards in Barabandi, on the main road and near to army check post, have been cut down in broad daylight. Barabandi is some six kilometres from Mingora.

The Taliban have plundered the Training Institute for Hotel Management (Paitahm), a joint venture of Pakistan and Austria, and the Malam Jaba tourist resort. The Taliban have carried away its furniture, Computers and electric appliances, even its doors, windows and ventilators. They have established a warehouse in Barabandai where all these things are auctioned. The Taliban call it mal-e-ghanimat (war booty). This is another of the income-generation sources of the Taliban.

The Taliban militancy is spreading towards the lower part of Malakand. The Taliban have banned women from markets and bazaars in Batkhela and Thana towns in Malaknd. Thana's Mina Bazaar, a famous market popular with women, has been razed to the ground.

There are several new training camps in Swat where the Taliban train teenage boys for militancy. The boys belong to the schools that have been destroyed by the Taliban. Lack of occupation and the jihadi preaching of the Taliban turn Swat's young men to jihad. Their schools are destroyed.

The Taliban have banned TV and music and playing of cricket. The young men have no activity and the Taliban constantly invite them to jihad. Hundreds of boys have joined the training camps, most of them without the permission of their parents. According to the Taliban's version of jihad, parents' permission is not needed at all. The helpless parents have nobody to ask for help in order to stop their children from joining the Taliban. The Taliban threatens parents who stop their children from joining the so-called jihad.

Some months down the road Pakistani right-wingers and so-called liberal leftists obsessed with anti-Americanism will say that the Taliban are popular in Swat and the proof is that their ranks have grown. But today no one is paying attention to the plight of the helpless parents who earnestly wish to stop their children joining the ranks of the Taliban but have no one in the entire Pakistan to help them.

The Swat Taliban sent 350 fighters to strengthen the Dir Taliban. People in Dir have made a local people's army against the Taliban. To combat the local people's army the Dir Taliban sent an SOS call to the Swat Taliban, who sent armed Taliban to Dir to slaughter the people of Dir.

More than a hundred Taliban crossed from Swat into the adjacent district of Bunair on April 5. Arms clashes have been reported between the militants and the armed lashkar. The army has vacated many check posts on the demand of the militants in Swat. The Taliban are not allowing the army to enter the areas that they were occupying.

Commenting on this situation Afzal Khan Lala said: ‘The army will meet tough resistance and will suffer a great deal when retaking the area because the Taliban have strengthened their positions in Swat.’
The writer is a research fellow at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Gender Research, University of Oslo, and a member of Aryana Institute for Regional Research and Advocacy.

Read more...

Blog Recommendation: Taliban violence in Pakistan

Dear All

Rabia Shakoor (administrator of the Grand Trunk Road blog) has started a new blog http://talibanviolence.wordpress.com comprising of videos of the Taliban violence and just videos and pictures of Taliban activity in general. The idea behind the new blog is that people were so surprised by the Swat girl lashing video that they must really not have seen any more violent behaviour of the Taliban before that...
Please feel free to pass along any videos that you see to the new blog, so that the blog administrator can put them up on the site.

LUBP
Read more...

TTP Swat Threatens to Kill MPs Opposing their Brand of Shariah !!!

President Asif Ali Zardari on Sunday referred the draft Nizam-e-Adl Regulation, 2009 to Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, advising him to table it before parliament for debate prior to its implementation. Meanwhile both TTP & TNSM have said that MPs opposing to the so-called Nizam-e-Adl Regulation, 2009 would be declared "non-Muslims" !
Spokesman of TTP Swat even threatened to kill MPs opposing their brand of Shariah. He said "that any NA member opposing the regulation would contest the next election “if he remained alive” !!!!!






Maulana Sufi Muhammad founder and chief of TNSM.


Haji Muslim Khan spokesman of TTP Swat.

TNSM, Taliban warn MPs against opposing Nizam-e-Adl



MINGORA: The Tanzim Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) and the Swat Taliban on Sunday warned parliamentarians against opposing the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation in the National Assembly.
“Even holy prophets had no authority to make religious laws or amend them, then how can the National Assembly do it?” TNSM spokesman Amir Izzat Khan told The News.
“If members of the National Assembly opposed the judicial system of the Shariat-e-Muhammadi, they will enter the category of non-Muslims and Pakistan will become Darul Harb,” he warned.
Explaining Darul Harb, he said when the rulers of a country opposed the Shariah, they did not remain Muslims anymore. “So a country with non-Muslims as its rulers becomes Darul Harb,” he said and added that it made Jihad mandatory on rulers.
Muslim Khan, the spokesman for the Swat militants, warned that those opposing the Nizam-e-Adl would be declared Murtad or apostate. “Then, he or she should contest election on minority seat, if he or she remains alive,” he said.
He urged the government to enforce the Shariah as soon as possible and establish authorised Qazi courts. He claimed they were peaceful people and stood for calm and tranquillity.Amir Izzat said enforcement of the Nizam-e-Adl was their constitutional right. “This country was also acquired in the name of Islam, then why Islamic system should not be enforced here,” he questioned.
He urged members of the National Assembly to force President Zardari into signing the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation for the implementation of the Islamic system.



The News --- 13th April, 09


MPs apostate if oppose Adl: TTP



MINGORA: Any member of the National Assembly (NA) opposes the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation in the assembly will be an apostate and will be allowed to contest the next election from minority seats, the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Swat and the Tehreek Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) separately said on Sunday.



TTP Swat spokesman Muslim Khan told reporters that any NA member opposing the regulation would contest the next election “if he remained alive”.



TNSM spokesman Amir Izzat told reporters that any member of the NA opposing the regulation during the debate in the assembly would be declared non-Muslim.



Daily Times ---- 13th April, 09





===================================================================










Daily Express ---- 13th April, 09
Read more...

Wusatullah Khan: Nops ! Our Intelligence Agencies are Patriot & Can't be involved in Baloch Nationalist Leaders' Killings !!!!



! نا بابا نا




غلام محمد بلوچ ، شیر محمد بگتی اور لالہ منیر کو بلوچستان میں متحرک طالبان یا القاعدہ نے مارا ہے۔کیونکہ قوم

پرستی کی لہر عام بلوچوں میں امریکہ کے خلاف جذبہ جہاد پیدا کرنے میں سب سے بڑی رکاوٹ ہے۔یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارے کا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔
یا پھر ان تینوں قوم پرستوں کو انہی کے حریف بلوچ قوم پرستوں نے مارا ہے ۔یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارے کا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔
یا پھر یہ تینوں قبائیلی دشمنی کا نشانہ بنے ہیں۔یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارے کا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔
یا پھر انہیں را نے مارا ہے ۔تاکہ پاکستانی ریاست کے خلاف نفرت میں مزید اضافہ ہوجائے۔ یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارے کا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔
یا پھر انہیں ایران نے مروایا ہے تاکہ سرحد پار سے ہونے والی جنداللہ کارروائیوں کا انتقام لیا جاسکے۔ یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارے کا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔
یا پھر انہیں افغانستان نے مروایا ہے۔جو پاکستان کو کبھی بھی پرامن نہیں دیکھ سکتا۔ یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارے کا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔
یا پھر یہ جان سولیکی کے اغوا کا بدلہ لینے کی کارروائی ہوسکتی ہے۔ سی آئی اے نے اس کے لیے جان سولیکی کے رہا ہونے تک انتظار کیا۔ یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارے کا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔
یا پھر غلام محمد بلوچ ، شیر محمد بگتی اور لالہ منیر نے خود کو کوئٹہ میں کچکول علی ایڈوکیٹ کے دفتر سے اغوا کرنے کا ڈرامہ رچا کر مکران میں خودکشی کرلی۔تاکہ پاکستانی اداروں کو بدنام کیا جا سکے۔ یہ کسی محبِ وطن انٹیلیجنس ایجنسی یا ادارےکا کام نہیں ہوسکتا۔




!بلوچوں کو سمجھاؤ



چلیے مان لیا کہ بلوچستان میں جو بھی بدامنی ہے اس کے پیچھے بھارت کا اسلحہ، تربیت اور پیسہ ہے تا کہ کشمیر کا سکور برابر

کیا جاسکے اور پاکستان کو مشرق اور مغرب سے گھیرا جا سکے۔ اور یہ کہ اس منصوبے کو امریکہ اور بعض امریکہ نواز خلیجی ممالک کی بھی خاموش تائید حاصل ہے۔
اگر یہ بات پچاس فیصد بھی درست ہے تو بھی بڑی خطرناک بات ہے اور اس سے نمٹنے کے لیے کچھ فوری اقدامات کرنے کی اشد ضرورت ہے۔
یوں کریں کہ بلوچستان میں پچھلے آٹھ برس میں جتنے بھی زن و مرد غائب ہوئے ہیں انہیں تلاش کر کے کھلی عدالت میں مقدمہ چلایا جائے تاکہ سولہ کروڑ پاکستانیوں کی یہ دیکھ کر آنکھیں کھل جائیں کہ کیسے کیسے لوگ غیرملکی ایجنٹ بنے ہوئے تھے۔ اس سے ان عناصر کا منہ بھی بند ہوجائے گا جو آنکھ بند کر کے کہہ دیتے ہیں کہ لوگوں کو سرکاری ایجنسیاں غائب کررہی ہیں تاکہ بلوچستان کے وسائل پر قبضے کی مخالف آوازوں کو خاموش کیا جاسکے۔
اس سے پہلے کے غلام محمد بلوچ ، شیرمحمد بلوچ اور لالہ منیر کی لاشوں کو تربت کے ویرانوں میں پھینکنے والے پاکستان دشمن سرحد پار افغانستان یا بھارت فرار ہوجائیں انہیں پکڑنے کے لیے پوری طاقت لگا دی جائے تاکہ آئندہ ایسے کام کرنے والے غیرملکی ایجنٹ دس بار سوچیں۔

چونکہ بلوچستان کے وزیرِ اعلی اسلم رئیسانی اور وفاقی وزیر میر اسرار اللہ زہری نے بلوچستان میں غیرملکی اشاروں پر امن تباہ کرنے والوں سے اظہارِ یکجہتی کیا ہے اس لیے انہیں فوری طور پر برطرف کرکے محبِ وطن بلوچستانیوں کے دل جیتے جائیں۔ اسی طرح بلوچستان کے قوم پرست رہنماؤں اختر مینگل ، حاصل بلوچ اور سپریم کورٹ بار کونسل کے صدر علی احمد کرد پر بغاوت کا مقدمہ چلایا جائے کیونکہ ان تینوں نے قوم پرست رہنماؤں کے قتل کا الزام بلاتحقیق سرکاری ایجنسیوں پر عائد کیا ہے۔اور یوں یہ رہنما غیرملکی طاقتوں کے ہاتھوں میں کھیلے ہیں۔
وقت آگیا ہے کہ بلوچستان کی نئی نسل کو شرپسندوں کی برین واشنگ سے بچانے کے لیے تعلیمی نصاب اور سرکاری ذرائع ابلاغ کا بھرپور تعمیری استعمال کیا جائے۔ اس نسل پر یہ حقیقت واضح کی جائے کہ بلوچستان جو پاکستان بننے سے پہلے ریاست قلات تھی، اسے زبردستی فیڈریشن میں شامل ہونے پر مجبور نہیں کیا گیا تھا بلکہ سچ تو یہ ہے کہ خان آف قلات نے پاکستان میں شمولیت کے لیے روتے ہوئے گڑگڑا کر یہ کہتے ہوئے درخواست کی تھی کہ حضور اگر قلات پاکستان میں شامل نہیں ہوا تو ہم بلوچ کہیں کے نہیں رہیں گے۔
یہ حقیقت بھی نصاب کا حصہ بنائی جائے کہ ایوب خان نے باغی نواب نوروز خان اور ان کے ساتھیوں کو قران پر وعدہ کرنے کے باوجود پھانسی نہیں دی تھی بلکہ نواب نوروز خان اپنی بغاوت پر اتنے پشیمان تھے کہ انہوں نے مارے غیرت کے خود ہی اپنے گلے میں پھندا ڈال لیا۔

اور یہ بھی کہ وفاقی حکومت نے ماضی کی بے وفائیوں کو معاف کرتے ہوئے جب سن ستر کی دہائی میں بلوچ قوم پرستوں کو صوبے میں حکومت بنانے کا موقع دیا تو انہوں نے سوویت یونین اور بھارت سے مل کر علیحدگی کی سازش شروع کردی۔ لہذٰا بھٹو حکومت کو مجبوراً اس غداری کے خلاف پاکستان کے مفاد میں مسلح ایکشن لینا پڑ گیا اور عطا اللہ مینگل اور نواب خیر بخش مری جیسے عناصر کو سزا دینی پڑی۔
نئی نسل کو اس پروپیگنڈے سے بھی بچایا جائے کہ نواب اکبر بگٹی کو مشرف حکومت نے مارا تھا۔ حقیقت تو یہ ہے کہ مشرف حکومت نواب صاحب کو عزت و احترام سے ڈیرہ بگٹی لانا چاہتی تھی۔لیکن یہ نواب بگٹی تھے جنہوں نے خود پر پہاڑ گرا لیا۔تاکہ وہ مرتے مرتے بھی وفاق کے خلاف بغاوت کا الاؤ روشن کر جائیں۔
اگرچہ بلوچستان کے عوام کی اکثریت ہمیشہ سے مٹھی بھر شرپسندوں کے خلاف رہی ہے۔ لیکن وقت آگیا ہے کہ اب اس سوال پر صوبے میں ریفرینڈم کروایا جائے کہ کیا آپ بلوچستان کے لیے اب تک کیے گئے ترقی و فلاح و بہبود کے اقدامات سے خوش ہیں؟؟؟ امید ہے کہ اس ریفرینڈم کے نتائج سے شرپسندوں کا رہا سہا اخلاقی دیوالیہ بھی نکل جائے گا۔
اس سوال پر بھی تحقیق ہونی چاہیے کہ ایسا کیوں ہوا کہ مشرقی پاکستان کے ننانوے فیصد وفاق پرست عوام پر ایک فیصد پاکستان دشمن غالب آگئے حالانکہ پاکستان کی ہر حکومت نے مشرقی پاکستان کی ترقی اور فلاح و بہبود میں کبھی غفلت نہیں برتی۔
اس تحقیق کے نتائج کی روشنی میں وفاقی حکومت بلوچستان میں بھارتی اور امریکی سازشوں کا ڈٹ کر مقابلہ کرسکے گی۔ دیکھیے جلدی سے ان تجاویز پر عمل کرلیجئے کہیں یہ نہ ہو کہ
مہلت تھی جب تو دل کو تھا بے کاریوں سے شغلاب کام یاد آئے تو ، مہلت نہیں رہی

Read more...

Sunday, 12 April 2009

After Buner, what will be the next target of Talibans ??




Buner bagged --- Editorial: Daily The News---12th April, 09

Buner, with a population of slightly over half-a-million according to the 1998 census, has fallen without a fight. Another piece of Pakistan, 1865 square kilometres to be precise, has disappeared into the maw of the Taliban.


Local people, peaceful and no trouble to anybody, were unprepared for the influx of heavily armed men who came over the border from Swat. They put up what resistance they could but they were up against a battle-hardened and determined enemy, they had no support from the federal or provincial government and it was, in military terms, a walk-over for the Taliban. Instead of pulling out of Buner as they had announced on Thursday, the Taliban of Swat moved on Friday to consolidate their hold and took control of new areas, including the shrine of Sufi saint Pir Baba, which they are reported to have locked.


The security forces offered no resistance. The houses of tribal elders have been occupied, those who organised the lashkar to resist the invasion are being threatened and targeted; pictures, videos and music CD's have been looted from houses and burned and the road to the district HQ at Daggar is today controlled by the militants. There will be blustering denials to the contrary but the inescapable reality is that another domino has toppled and the Taliban are a step closer to Islamabad.

Maps are instructive. To the south-east of Buner is Haripur, to the east Mansehra and to the west Mardan. Haripur is the next obvious move for the Taliban once they have consolidated in Buner, perhaps via a 'peace agreement' that effectively cedes the territory to their control. Haripur may be a harder nut to crack, but this has not deterred them in the past and will not in the future. Mansehra and Mardan will be 'easy' but Abbottabad less so. They will then control the Karakoram Highway as far north as Chilas, one of our key strategic routes and the only route to China, one of our principal allies and trading partners. None of this is going to happen tomorrow and the process may take several months, but the Taliban have the upper hand and know it.

There are distinct similarities between the way in which the Taliban are nibbling away at Pakistan and the way in which the Vietcong eventually defeated the Americans. They are iconoclasts, driven by ideology and with effective charismatic leadership. They have considerable grassroots support enabling movement and concealment and are well equipped for asymmetric warfare. Powerful external backers ensure the flow of money and equipment. They are highly trained, willing to accept disproportionate casualties and have no problem of recruitment and retention. They are up against a weak and vacillating government, riddled with corruption, and bereft of the kind of vision that would countervail them physically or intellectually. The forces ranged against them are trained and equipped for the wrong war and have elements which are sympathetic to the opposition; rendering effective and consistent military operations at best weak and at worst, failing. The Americans lost in Vietnam because they consistently underestimated the Vietcong, were outfought on the battlefield and had lost the 'hearts and minds' fight before battle was even joined. They backed a corrupt and venal regime and eventually retreated, beaten by what they always saw as a raggle-taggle of gooks. The Taliban know what they want and how to get it. The fall of Buner may seem relatively inconsequential, but when the dots are joined up – and they are joining fast – the picture that emerges is of a state that has already surrendered.
Also Read:

Read more...

Saturday, 11 April 2009

Many Politicians have yet to publicly denounce the Taliban. And the army has yet to demonstrate that it is serious about fighting this war.




The high cost of surrender


By Irfan Hussain




IMAGINE that a neighbouring country had killed a leading Pakistani politician, blown up a popular hotel in the middle of Islamabad and killed thousands of security personnel and innocent civilians in a series of bombing raids. Imagine too that the enemy’s stated goal is nothing short of the capture of state power. Surely these acts would have constituted a declaration of war.



In this scenario, all political parties would have united to face this aggression. The media would have been full of patriotic songs and messages to urge the nation to support the government and the military in defending Pakistan. And above all, the armed forces would not have hesitated in playing their role.
Anybody suggesting a dialogue with the invader, or justifying the attack, would be denounced as a traitor and a defeatist.



So my question is why isn’t all this happening now? True, the aggressors are mostly home-grown terrorists, but the damage they have been inflicting is just as lethal as any bombs dropped from the skies. Their acts must, under any definition, count as an open declaration of civil war. And yet, wide sections of public opinion and the media are sitting on the fence.




Many leading politicians have yet to publicly denounce the Taliban as enemies of the state. And the army has yet to demonstrate that it is serious about fighting this war.



Talking about the situation in Lahore last week, Aitzaz Ahsan came up with a unique solution. He cited an incident from Mughal history where the emperor had his elephant tethered to the ground to send out a signal to his forces that he would not retreat. His wavering army rallied to protect him and won the day.



According to Aitzaz, this is what the president should do: instead of staying in his bunker in Islamabad, he should set up his office in Fata, as these are federally administered territories, and he is the symbol of the federation. Simultaneously, the chief minister of the NWFP should shift his office to Swat.
According to Aitzaz, the army would then be forced to protect them and move forces to the battle zone.



Aitzaz is an old friend, and I respect his intellect and his integrity. However, I pointed out a fatal flaw in his proposal: it presupposes that the army would want to take the fight to the Taliban and protect political leaders.




Thus far, our armed forces have not shown that they take the extremist threat seriously. According to a recent article in Der Spiegel, the respected German daily:
‘The (Pakistan) military avoids serious confrontation with the extremists. Many officers still do not see the Taliban as their enemy. Pakistan’s true enemy, in their view, is India… Quite a few officers say that the fight against terrorism in the north-western part of the country is being forced upon them by the Americans and that they are fighting the wrong war…. A Pakistani two-star general candidly explained the mindset of his fellow military commanders … noting that although the army is fighting the Taliban at the instructions of politicians, it also supports the militants….’



Given this ambiguity and duplicity, the success of Baitullah Mehsud and his fellow terrorists should come as no surprise. In fact, this military mindset mirrors what we see in the media, and reflects the confusion that has characterised and dogged our efforts to combat the extremist threat.




In this, Aitzaz Ahsan is right: our security forces have a bunker mentality that has them cowering in their barracks while the jihadis mount a series of attacks. If we are to save Pakistan, the army will have to take the fight to the Taliban, and not simply wait for the next attack.



So far, with the exception of the PPP and the MQM, most political parties have avoided taking a clear position. While they may occasionally condemn individual atrocities, they fall short of openly identifying the enemy.


One senior journalist in Islamabad told me that when reporters seek an interview with Nawaz Sharif, they must first agree not to ask any direct questions about the Taliban. If this is true, it shows that the PML-N leader does not want to either condemn or support the jihadis openly. Being a canny politician, he does not wish to alienate his core support among reactionary elements. Nor does he want to upset Washington. But wars are not won through such tactical hedging.



While this jockeying for advantage goes on among politicians, millions of Pakistanis are paying the price for this procrastination. Thousands have died in terrorist attacks because the state has failed in its duty to protect its citizens.




If somebody wants to know the cost of defeat, he has only to view the video of the 17-year old girl being flogged in Swat. Many have questioned the timing of the video’s release, claiming that it is an attempt to sabotage the ‘peace deal’ between the NWFP government and the Taliban. If it is, I would be happy to see this disgraceful instrument of surrender torn up.



One positive outcome of this atrocity coming to public knowledge is that it has opened many eyes to the reality of the Taliban, and what they represent. The flogging has ignited protests across the country.


I participated in one in Lahore last week. I was glad to see that apart from many old friends, a large number of young people and students also took part in the march. One popular slogan was: ‘Pakistan kay do shaitan: fauj aur uskay Taliban’ (‘Pakistan’s two demons: the army and its Taliban’). My favourite banner at the rally asked: ‘$12 billion in aid to fight terrorism. Where is it?’ Where indeed?



During Richard Holbrooke’s recent visit to Pakistan, our government responded to the new Obama plan to fight the Taliban with an ill-concealed resentment.



Clearly, the establishment is not enjoying having its reluctance to fight held up under a spotlight. As in the past, it wants the promised flow of dollars to remain unimpeded by any serious questions about its will to carry the fight to the Taliban. Our television warriors echo this sentiment, and demand that the country should not follow ‘American dictates’.
But as we are about to discover, there really is no such thing as a free lunch.




Source: Daily Dawn



Read more...

Army & Balochistan: Talat Hussain's Analysis On Current Balochistan Situation





Source: Daily Express --- 11th April, 09

Read more...

After Swat it's now Buner: Talibans continue their advance in Buner as Securiy Forces offered no resistance !

The shrine of Sufi Saint Pir Baba in Buner.

(Swat)Taliban move into new Buner areas


BUNER, April 10: Instead of pulling out of Buner as they had announced on Thursday, the Taliban of Swat moved on Friday to consolidate their hold and took control of new areas, including the shrine of Sufi saint Pir Baba.


Security forces offered no resistance. “They have taken control of vast areas in Buner. They are freely moving around while police and other law-enforcement personnel remain confined to their posts,” said a man who lives near the shrine of Pir Baba. He said that the militants had earlier announced that they would leave after holding a march in various areas.


Local people said that the militants, who occupied houses of influential people organising an anti-Taliban lashkar, were still patrolling the road leading to Daggar, the district headquarters. The tribal elderswhose houses have been occupied included Syed Ahmed Khan, his cousins Mah Muneer Khan and Afsar Khan, the nazim of the Gadezai union council.


Militants set on fire TV sets, pictures and paintings and audio and video cassettes before the Friday prayers. They locked the shrine, stopping followers of Pir Baba from visiting the place. They also delivered sermons in village mosques.


“We have been asked by our seniors not to interfere with the Taliban,” said an officer of the Pir Baba police station. He said that the Taliban had advanced weapons, some of which he had “never seen before”. He said that so far they had not harmed anyone. “Their prime targets have already fled.”


A spokesman for militants in Sultanwas announced that people who had fled the area should return to their homes, but said those who had taken up arms against them would not be spared.Local people said that the militants had met hundreds of local people, especially the youths, who remained with them the whole day. The Taliban were also seen patrolling areas near Bhai Killey and Ghazikhanay and were using vehicles they had captured.
An official at the commissioner’s office in Saidu Sharif said on late Thursday night after talks with a peace mission that Taliban had agreed to leave Buner. However, sources privy to the talks between the militants, administration officials and a local jirga headed by Maulana Waliullah Kalbalgrami, said that no agreement had been reached. He said they had been allowed to “go anywhere” in Buner they wanted to.He said that the militants controlling the Sultanwas village had been told to occupy residences of the people who were part of the anti-Taliban lashkar.

Read more...

Friday, 10 April 2009

Balochistan Burns !


Furore in Balochistan over killing of nationalist leaders


QUETTA, April 9: A police constable was killed and at least 12 other people were injured in firing on Thursday as Balochistan slid into violence after the bodies of three Baloch nationalist leaders were found in Turbat.
The decomposed bodies of Baloch National Movement (BNM) chairman Ghulam Mohammad Baloch, Lala Muneer Baloch and Sher Mohammad Baloch of the Baloch Republican Party (BRP) were found in Pedarak, near Turbat, late on Wednesday night.
Kachkol Ali, an advocate and former leader of the opposition in the Balochistan assembly, had alleged at a press conference four days back that the three leaders had been whisked away by security officials from his chamber on April 3. They had gone to the court to attend the hearing of a case against them.
Baloch political groups and bar associations gave a call for a general strike on Friday and Saturday and a wheel-jam strike on Sunday to condemn the killings. Lawyers will boycott courts till Saturday. Nationalist parties also announced seven-day mourning in Balochistan and other parts of the country.
Police took the bodies to Turbat after receiving information about them. “The bodies appear to be four to five days old,” a police official said. Political workers, students and supporters of nationalist parties took to the streets early in the morning in Quetta, Khuzdar, Kharan, Nushki, Turbat, Mand, Panjgur, Gwadar, Kalat, Mastung and Dera Murad Jamali. A complete strike was observed in the towns. The Balochistan University and all other educational institutions were closed till Sunday.
Protesters blocked the Sariab and Brewery roads in the provincial capital by setting tyres on fire and erecting barricades. They also pelted vehicles with stones and attacked several buildings. A pick-up of the United Nations was set on fire on Sariab Road, a bus of the Women’s University on Brewery Road and a car in front of the Civil Hospital. Students of the Balochistan University blocked a road and set afire a bus of a government department. Protesters also torched a branch of Askari Bank in Hazar Gangi and attacked other banks on Sariab Road. A mob smashed windowpanes of several buildings on Brewery Road. Police and Balochistan Constabulary personnel used tear gas to disperse the protesters. An exchange of fire between police and the protesters occurred near Sariab.Police arrested over a dozen people. Armed men attacked a police van with a hand grenade near a bypass in Quetta, injuring three policemen. A group of people broke window panes of an office of the Water and Power Development Authority in Sheikh Manda. A man was inured in a grenade attack on his house in Killi Bangulzai.
In Karachi, tension gripped the Baloch-dominated areas when demonstrators blocked traffic, resorted to firing into the air and burned tyres in protest against the killing. Condemning the killing, Karachi-based Baloch nationalist leaders called for shutterdown strikes in all Baloch-populated areas on April 10 and 11, and a wheeljam strike on April 12.
Baloch National Party-Mengal (BNP-M) leader Sardar Akhtar Mengal alleged at a press conference that intelligence agencies were responsible for the killing.
In Khuzdar, constable Ahmed Khan Zehri was shot dead in Civil Colony while he was going to a police station. Protesters clashed with police in different parts of the town and two people were reported to have been injured in an exchange of fire. A blast also rocked the town. The administration called out the Frontier Corps. “FC troops have been deployed at important buildings and places,” said Wahid Shahwani, a resident of Khuzdar.
The demonstrators blocked the highway linking Quetta with Karachi at different points in Khuzdar district, suspending traffic between Sindh and Balochistan. A doctor was shot in Ghazgi area of Mastung. In Mand, a mob set a police station on fire after ransacking it. Branches of several banks were also set ablaze and vehicles were pelted with stones. FC personnel were deployed in the town.
In Panjgur, a mob attacked offices of the Pakistan People’s Party and the Balochistan National Party-A and government buildings. The PPP office was destroyed. A mob damaged several shops in Gwadar Bazaar. Police foiled an attempt to set the shops on fire. Law enforcement personnel stopped a mob from entering the port.
In Hub, five people were injured in a grenade attack near a mosque. Police arrested over three dozen workers of the Baloch Students’ Organisation (BSO) and political parties during demonstrations. The BSO leaders said law enforcement agencies’ personnel baton-charged women of the Baloch Penal to stop them from taking out a procession. Shakar Bibi advocate, who was leading the procession, was injured. Police and FC contingents started patrolling Quetta and adjacent areas in the night. Ghulam Mohammad and Sher Mohammad were buried in their native town Mand and Lala Muneer in Chitkan village, near Panjgur.
Thousands of people attended the funerals. The bodies had been handed over to their relatives after legal formalities. According to sources, they bore torture marks and bullet wounds.
Source: Daily Dawn, 10th April, 09





Violence in Balochistan after 3 Baloch leaders killed


The mysterious killing of three leading Baloch nationalist leaders – who were allegedly arrested by intelligence agencies last Friday – have sparked a wave of massive protests and violence all over Balochistan that has so far killed one police official. Police found the decomposing bodies of the three Baloch leaders – veteran politician Ghulam Mohammad Baloch and Lala Munir of the Balochistan National Movement (BNM) and Sher Muhammad Baloch of the Baloch Republican Party (BRP) – in Pidrak area of Turbat district on Wednesday evening. The Baloch leaders were allegedly arrested last Friday by the state intelligence apparatus from the office of Kachkol Ali Baloch, a former leader of the opposition in the Balochistan Assembly. According to local sources, the Baloch leaders had been shot in the head, and their faces were hardly recognisable. The killing of the Baloch leaders has invited widespread condemnations – including by Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani, Senator Hasil Khan Bizanjo and Sanaullah Baloch. Baloch political parties have decided to observe a three-day mourning period, and the Baloch National Front has announced a strike on April 11 and 12. Violence and protests broke out across Balochistan soon after the news of the Bloch leaders’ killing broke out. Reuters reported that two people had been killed in the violence.
Source: Daily Times -- 10th April, 09








وفاق اور بلوچستان میں خلیج بڑھ سکتی ہے؟
اعجاز مہر
بی بی سی اردو ڈاٹ کام، اسلام آباد

پاکستان کے صوبہ بلوچستان میں تین قوم پرست رہنماؤں کے قتل سے جمہوری حکومت کی سیاسی مصالحت کی کوششوں کو جہاں بڑا دھچکہ پہنچا ہے وہیں یہ واقعہ مسلح مزاحمت کو مزید تقویت بخشنے کی وجہ بھی بن سکتا ہے۔
غلام محمد بلوچ، لالہ منیر اور شیر محمد بلوچ کو تربت کی ضلعی عدالتی احاطے سے سادہ کپڑوں میں ملبوس افراد نے گزشتہ جمعہ کو اغوا کیا اور بدھ کی شب ان کی مسخ شدہ لاشیں ملی ہیں۔
جمعرات اور جمعہ کو بلوچستان بھر میں ان ہلاکتوں کے خلاف ہنگامے ہوئے، سڑکیں اور بازار بند کروائے گئے اور توڑ پھوڑ کی گئی۔ تین رہنماؤں کے قتل پر بلوچستان کے علاوہ ملک کے سب سے بڑے شہر کراچی کے بلوچ آبادیوں والے علاقوں میں بھی احتجاج کا سلسلہ جاری ہے۔
بلوچستان کے ایک ماہر تعلیم اور دانشور ڈاکٹر نعمت اللہ گچکی کہتے ہیں کہ نواب اکبر بگٹی اور بالاچ خان مری کی ہلاکت کے بعد بھی صوبے بھر میں ہنگامے ہوئے لیکن اس بار اس سے بھی زیادہ شدت سے احتجاج ہو رہا ہے۔ پنجگور سے تعلق رکھنے والے ڈاکٹر نعمت اللہ نے بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ تینوں مقتول بلوچ رہنما نچلے متوسط طبقے سے تعلق رکھتے ہیں اور بلوچ نوجوانوں میں اپنے کردار کے حوالے سے بے حد مقبول تھے۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ بلوچستان میں جو آگ لگی ہوئی ہے وہ ان ہلاکتوں سے بھڑک اٹھے گی کیونکہ یہ واقعہ جلتی پر تیل کا کام کرے گا۔
ان کے مطابق ’ہمارے نوجوان اور ہم جیسے بزرگ جو جمہوریت کی بات کرتے ہیں، ان پر برہم ہیں اور انٹیلیجنس ایجنسیوں کے ہاتھوں اس طرح کے قتل سے علیحدگی کی سوچ پروان چڑھے گی۔ اور یہ واقعہ حکومت کی مصالحت کی کوششوں کو ناکام بنادے گا۔۔۔ مجھے ایسا لگتا ہے کہ پاکستان کی طاقتور قوتوں کو بلوچستان سے جان چھڑانے کی بڑی جلدی ہے۔‘

بلوچستان کے سیاسی رہنماؤں سینیٹر حاصل بزنجو اور سردار اختر مینگل سمیت اکثر نے تین بلوچ رہنماوں کے قتل کا الزام پاکستان کی انٹیلیجنس ایجنسیوں پر لگایا ہے لیکن فوج کے ترجمان میجر جنرل اطہر عباس نے ان ہلاکتوں پر افسوس ظاہر کرتے ہوئے کہا ہے کہ یہ ملک دشمن عناصر کی کارروائی ہے۔ انہوں نے یہ تسلیم کیا کہ قتل کے اس واقعہ سے حکومت کی مصالحتی کوششوں کو نقصان پہنچے گا۔ ان کے مطابق افواج پاکستان بلوچستان میں امن و امان کی کوششوں کی حمایت کرتی ہیں۔ ترجمان نے ان رہنماؤں کے ان بیانات پر افسوس ظاہر کیا جس میں بغیر حقائق جانے قتل کا الزام سیکورٹی ایجنسیز پر لگایا گیا ہے۔
فوجی ترجمان کے بیان پر بعض مبصرین کی رائے ہے کہ اس سے ایسا تاثر ملتا ہے کہ یہ پاکستان کے بیرونی دشمنوں کی سازش ہو سکتی ہے لیکن اس صورت میں یہ سوال اٹھتا ہے کہ یہ کیسے ممکن ہے کہ تربت کے شہر سے تین رہنماؤں کو غیر ملکی ایجنٹ دن دہاڑے اغوا کر لیں۔ ان کے مطابق اگر ایک لمحے کے لیے یہ فرض بھی کیا جائے تو پھر یہ تو پاکستان کی تمام سکیورٹی ایجنسیوں کی ناکامی ہے کہ ایک دشمن ملک کے کارندے ایسا کرلیں۔
بلوچستان کے ایک سینیئر صحافی اور تجزیہ کار صدیق بلوچ کہتے ہیں کہ ’تین نوجوانوں کو ریاستی تحویل میں قتل کیا گیا ہے اور ظاہر ہے کہ سویلین اداروں نے تو انہیں قتل نہیں کیا۔۔ بلوچستان کے گورنر خود کہتے ہیں کہ یہ دہشت گردی ہے‘۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ ’فوجی قیادت کا جو منتخب حکومت کے ساتھ ہنی مون تھا وہ ختم ہوتا نظر آرہا ہے اور اس سے حالات مزید خراب ہوں گے۔۔۔ یہ واقعہ بہت بڑی تبدیلی کا سبب بن سکتا ہے۔۔۔ وفاقی حکومت نے بھی ایک سال گزر گیا کچھ نہیں کیا۔۔۔ ایک دو سردار اور ان کے بچوں کو چھوڑ دیا لیکن سینکڑوں غریب گمشدہ بلوچوں کے لیے کچھ نہیں کیا‘۔ یاد رہے کہ بلوچستان میں سنہ دو ہزار سے ملٹری انٹیلیجنس پر مبینہ طور پر بلوچ نوجوانوں کو اغوا اور قتل کرنے کے الزامات لگتے رہے ہیں۔
تین بلوچ رہنماؤں کے قتل سے بظاہر لگتا ہے کہ بلوچستان میں جاری سیاسی تحریک اور مسلح مزاحمت کو مزید تقویت ملے گی اور ان لوگوں کی سوچ کو فروغ مل سکتا ہے جو سمجھتے ہیں کہ پارلیمانی سیاست سے حقوق حاصل نہیں ہو سکتے۔
ڈاکٹر نعمت اللہ کہتے ہیں ’ہم جب جمہوریت کی بات کرتے ہیں تو نوجوان پہلے ہی ہم پر ناراض ہوتے تھے اور اب اس طرح کے واقعات سے ہم جیسے لوگوں کی کوئی نہیں سنے گا اور بات دوسری طرف نکل جائے گی۔‘
کچھ مبصرین کی رائے ہے کہ صوبے کے قدرتی وسائل پر بلوچستان کا حقِ مالکیت تسلیم کرانے کی خاطر سرگرمِ عمل بعض بلوچ قومپرست رہنما جس طرح اپنے تین ساتھیوں کے قتل کا الزام ریاستی اداروں پر لگا رہے
ہیں اس سے وفاق اور بلوچستان میں پہلے سے موجود اختلافات کی خلیج بھی بڑھ سکتی ہے۔

Read more...

Does Pakistani State Really Control FATA, which is under CIA's drones' attack ?


According to Wikipedia -----"Sovereignty is the right to exercise, within a territory, the functions of a state, exclusive of any other state, and subject to no other authority."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovereignty
Keeping aforementioned definition in mind, are we really justified to term drones' attacks on terrorists' targets in FATA as a violation of Pakisan's sovereignty ??
Every sane citizen of Pakistan knows very well that writ of Pakistani state has completely been eroded by Taliban and Al-Qaeda Terrorists in FATA, its adjoining areas and in Swat.
So, in my humble opinion Pakistani nation must come out of state of denial and should recognise the mortal threat posed by growing Talibanisation, which is now creeping in settled areas of NWFP, South Punjab, Pushtoon Belt of Baluchistan, and even in cities of interior Sindh !

Analysing drone attacks —Najmuddin A Shaikh


Increasing discontent in Pakistan over the purport of President Obama’s AfPak policy has many elements.


Let’s begin with the reiteration of an old Obama position: “And we will insist that action be taken — one way or another — when we have intelligence about high-level terrorist targets”.


This has been correctly interpreted as meaning that drone attacks in the tribal areas would continue despite Islamabad’s position that they violate Pakistani sovereignty and are counter-productive. Pakistan has consistently argued that the collateral damage makes this war an even harder sell for any government in Pakistan, causes further alienation and increases support for the common enemies of Pakistan and the United States.


Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi’s statement at the joint press conference with Richard Holbrooke and Admiral Mike Mullen that Pakistan would neither accept nor offer blank cheques has been widely welcomed as is his assertion that there is a gap between the Pakistani and American positions on the drone attacks and that Pakistan would continue to get the Americans to see the light. Pakistan, it is being said, is now behaving like a self-respecting nation that would not yield to the bullying of a superpower.


And yet, what is the truth about the drone attacks? That such attacks violate Pakistan’s sovereignty is unquestionable. No nation has the right to enter our territory or air space, let alone carry out aerial operations without our permission. But do we control this territory? Do we really know how much collateral damage is caused and how counter-productive it is?


For many months I have read carefully every account that has appeared about the drone attacks in our newspapers. Invariably we are told that the “local Taliban” surround the area of the incident, remove the bodies for burial and take the injured to hospitals of their choice and then let the press know what the collateral damage has been.


Independent corroboration, clearly, is not possible since there is no local authority present, no reporter has access to the area and the local populace is too cowed to offer an account of the incident that differs from what the Taliban have said. We have to fall back on damage assessments offered by the Americans.


We claim that for every innocent civilian killed in these attacks ten new Taliban recruits are created and our effort at dialogue is frustrated. And yet have we asked ourselves the question why among these very people ten new anti-Taliban fighters have not emerged for each of the hundreds perhaps thousands of tribal Maliks and elders that the Taliban and their foreign cohorts have slaughtered even more mercilessly than the drones.


The truth is that the government and our security forces have not been able to reassure the people of the region that they would protect them against the Taliban if they stood up to offer resistance and the local populations, like the people of Swat after an initial period of resistance, have decided that they do not have the means to prevent the small but well-armed Taliban and Al Qaeda groups from exercising control and imposing their reign of terror in the region.


Where army operations have been successful, and Bajaur is a prime example, the collateral damage in terms of displacement of the population has been terribly high. More than half a million people from Bajaur have left their homes and have received little assistance in the settled districts to which they have fled. The army has reached a truce with the Taliban in the area on terms that seem to suggest a Taliban acceptance of the State’s right to impose its writ. But even this has not been enough to convince the Bajaur people to return to their homes; nor, as far as one can tell, has this led to the return of the local administrators and the commencement of development work.


Why did the Bajaur displacement occur?


I think it would be fair to say that the area had to be softened up by ground artillery and aerial bombardment before troops could move in. The collateral damage was high because Pakistan has precious little by way of precision guided munitions in its arsenal and ordinary bombs and shells kill many more than the people they are aimed at. Perhaps as we acquire more sophisticated equipment and training we will be better able to avoid such collateral damage in our bid to reassert the government’s writ.


But how do you, in the meanwhile, avoid a Bajaur situation and still disrupt Taliban and Al Qaeda dominance of the area.
Let us think at least that the drones may be one way of doing so and rather than the current emphasis on protecting Pakistan’s sovereignty the government should be explaining that this is what the drones are seeking to achieve and that we are trying to acquire the know-how and equipment to do this ourselves.


This is what our conversations with the Americans on this subject should also focus on. Better intelligence sharing, better equipment for and training of our forces and such better coordination as would put us in the driver’s seat with regard to choice of targets and drone targeting. By this I mean that we should be able to target those who are specifically carrying out operations against Pakistani security forces as also those who are attacking NATO forces in Afghanistan.


There has been a great deal of talk about the expanding drone attacks to Balochistan where the Americans believe the leadership of the Afghan Taliban have found safe haven and from where they are said to plan operations in Afghanistan. Balochistan is not the badlands of the Tribal areas and the highly urbanised areas there cannot be treated as such.


I think this is a redline that the Pakistan government has drawn and which the Americans will not cross. I believe that all this talk has been generated to suggest that the Pakistan authorities need to be more aware of American and Afghan concerns on this account and to use their own means to tackle this problem.


While advising the government one would also like to suggest that its spokespersons must also lead the way in convincing the people that Baitullah Mehsud’s claims notwithstanding his suicide bomber attacks in Pakistan are not just retaliation for drone attacks but part of a wider plan to create the sort of instability which allows obscurantist forces to make a bid for power or cause Pakistan to fall apart. One hopes that that in doing so the government will take account of what has been happening under its nose.


There are disquieting reports about the growing influence of extremist forces in parts of the country that should theoretically have the greatest revulsion towards extremism. In Sindh, where the Sufi interpretation of Islam — love and tolerance — has been dominant there has been graffiti according to press reports in which satellite dishes, cable TV and VCRs are described as “three signs of the approaching doomsday”.


A TV channel was forced to cancel a musical show in Nawabshah after the local court issued a restraining order at the behest of a religious party. More recently, with the approval of the local police, a musical dance event was cancelled in Shahdadkot district again at the instance of a religious party. The PPP, a strongly secular party is in power in Sindh; its ally the MQM is even more determinedly secular and yet this happens.


Why is the police acting in this fashion and why is the government not defending freedom of expression in the courts?Up North it is now almost commonplace to see reports such as the one from Mansehra two days ago about the killing of three female workers of the National Rural Support Programme presumably by militants and presumably because they were like other NGO representatives spreading vulgarity by having males and females working together. No reports have yet surfaced about any arrest in connection with the killing of three people last year when militants stormed the office of an NGO in that area. Is this what we will see coming to the rest of the country?


Our free media makes these facts public and, in the absence of a clearly enunciated and forcefully implemented policy of nipping such ominous trends in the bud, civil society remains largely quiescent. What then should the rest of the world think about the direction in which events are moving in Pakistan and what then is likely to happen? Food for thought!


The writer is a former foreign secretary.


SOURCE: DAILY TIMES, 10th April, 09




Read more...

Thursday, 9 April 2009

Path to Paradise through Barrel of Gun ! An analysis by Tanveer Qaisar Shahid


Source: Daily Express, 9th April, 09
Read more...

B'coz Qazi is going !!!!!


'کیونکہ ظالمو۔۔۔۔ قاضی جا رہا ہے۔'
محمد حنیف


سوات میں لڑکی کو کوڑے مارنے کی ویڈیو کے بارے میں زیادہ تر تو یہ کہا گیا کہ یہ اسلام کو بدنام کرنے کی سازش تھی لیکن کئی اور نے بھی ہاتھ اٹھایا اور کہا کہ یہ سازش اصل میں ہمارے خلاف تھی۔ جیالوں نے کہا کہ یہ چار اپریل کو بھٹو کی برسی سے توجہ ہٹانے کی سازش تھی۔ اے این پی کی حکومت نہ کہا کہ یہ سوات امن معاہدہ کے خلاف سازش تھی، طالبان نے پہلے کہا کہ کوڑے لگانے میں کیا برائی ہے پھر انہوں نے سازش سازش کا شور سنا اور کہ دیا کہ یہ ان کے خلاف سازش تھی۔ لگتا ہے جس کو کوڑے لگے اسکے علاوہ سب اس سازش کے متاثرین ہیں۔ لیکن میری ادنیٰ رائے میں اس سازش کا براہ راست نشانہ قاضی حسین احمد بنے ہیں۔
بیس سال سے زائد عرصے تک جماعت اسلامی کے امیر رہنے کے بعد وہ گذشتہ ہفتے جب اپنا منصب سید منور حسن کو سونپ رہے تھے تو یہ ویڈیو جاری کردی گئی اور میڈیا میں ایسا ہلڑ اٹھا کہ کوئی اینکر پرسن، کوئی کالم نگار قاضی صاحب کے 20 سال کے کارناموں کو یاد نہ رکھ سکا۔ کسی کو یہ یاد نہ آیا کہ کیسے قاضی صاحب نے 'ظالمو قاضی آرہا ہے' کا نعرہ لگا کر جماعت کو عوامی رنگ دینے کی کوشش کی۔ پاسبان اور شباب ملی نامی تنظیمیں شروع کرکے قوم کے گمراہ نوجوانوں کو راہ راست پر لائے اور ان کے ہاتھوں میں ڈنڈے پکڑائے۔ عمران خان سے کئی دیگر دلچسپیاں چھڑوا کر اسے ایمان کے نشے سے سرشار کیا۔ قوم و ملت کے اعلیٰ تر مفاد کے لیے مشرف تک کی حمایت کر ڈالی۔ اور یہ تو شاید انہیں خود بھی یاد نہ ہو کہ انہوں نے کتنی دفعہ لانگ مارچ اور دھرنوں کی دھمکی دی اور کتنی دفعہ واپس لی۔
قاضی حسین احمد نے جب جماعت اسلامی کی قیادت سنبھالنے کے بعد عوامی سٹائل اختیار کیا تو ان سے جلنے والوں نے کہا کہ وہ سلطان راہی کی کاپی کر رہے ہیں۔ اب زمانہ چونکہ آگے جا چکا ہے اسلیے سید منور حسن کو شان کا انداز اپنانا ہوگا۔ سلطان راہی گنڈاسے سے انصاف دلاتا تھا اور جاگیرداروں کو للکارتا تھا لیکن شان کلاشنکوف کی زبان میں بات کرتا ہے اور خودکش بمباروں کے حق میں ڈائیلاگ بولتا ہے۔ سنا ہے انگریزی اور اردو دونوں سلطان راہی سے بہتر ہے۔ سید منور حسن بھی دونوں زبانیں بہت روانی اور فراوانی سے بولتے ہیں اور آنے والے دنوں میں ہمیں انکے خیالات عالیہ سننے کو ملتے رہیں گے۔ بلکہ انہوں نے آغاز ہی کھڑاک سے کیا ہے اور کہا کہ سوات کی لڑکی کا ماتم کرنے والے ڈاکٹر عافیہ کی بات کیوں نہیں کرتے۔ شان کی فلموں میں مکالمے کا وقت نہیں ہوتا ورنہ اعداد و شمار سے یقیناً ثابت کیا جاسکتا ہے کہ گذشتہ دو سال میں بے نظیر بھٹو کے بعد سب سے زیادہ میڈیا کوریج اگر کسی خاتون کو ملی ہے تو وہ ڈاکٹر عافیہ ہیں۔
لیکن میڈیا کو اس وقت ایسی فضول بحث میں نہیں پڑنا چاہئیے اور اسلام کے خلاف ہونے والی سازشوں کا پول کھولنے کے درمیان ایک بریک لے کر قاضی صاحب کی خدمات کا اعتراف کرنا چاہئیے کیونکہ ظالمو۔۔۔۔ قاضی

جا رہا ہے۔



Read more...

After India, Afghanistan, & Iran it's now China which wants Pakistan to take action against militants !!! Isn't it time to wake up ???








China Leans on Pakistan to Deal With Militants


Washington is not the only ally calling on Islamabad to take action against militants based in its tribal areas along the Afghan border. Now, according to a prominent Pakistani politician, Beijing is calling on the Pakistani government to deal with militants based there and allegedly plotting attacks in China later this year.


In two separate meetings in the past two months, senior Chinese officials have warned President Asif Ali Zardari that the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a group with roots in Xinjiang province, has established its "military headquarters" in Pakistani territory. Xinjiang is China's largest province and the homeland of a large Muslim minority, the Uighur. Uighur separatists allegedly attacked Chinese transportation in the period leading up to the Beijing Olympics.

The details of the meetings were revealed by Chinese officials to Mushahid Hussain, a close ally of former President General Pervez Musharraf and the most visible supporter of Islamabad's alliance with Beijing, during recent meetings in central Asia. "They told me that the ETIM has its military headquarters in [Pakistan's tribal areas] and is planning to attack China on the 60th anniversary celebration of the communist revolution," says Hussain. The ETIM has been designated a terrorist organization by both the United States and China.

The issue was first raised during Zardari's recent visit to China in February. The President was making his second trip in four months to what is considered Pakistan's principal ally in the region. He was visiting Hubei and Shanghai to observe China's progress in agriculture, hydroelectric power and the financial sector. There had been no plan to meet with the Chinese leadership. But according to Hussain, Meng Jianzhu, the Chinese Minister for Public Security flew from Beijing to discuss the ETIM threat. "The minister met with him for 90 minutes," says Hussain. Before leaving Shanghai, Zardari praised his country's alliance with China and told reporters: "We are not threatened by nations, but by non-state actors."

In March, Beijing followed up by dispatching a "special envoy" to Islamabad with the sole brief of discussing ETIM, according to Hussain. A spokesperson for Zardari denied knowledge of the meetings. "We know that China is extremely concerned about terrorism in the region, but we are unaware of any such meeting having taken place," the spokesman said.

The ETIM and other Chinese separatist militants have maintained a long but murky presence in Pakistan's tribal areas for a number of years. In 2003, Hasan Mahsoum, the group's founder, was killed by the Pakistan army. The Chinese government has claimed in the past that Mahsoum established links with Osama bin Laden as early as 1999. In 2005, the State Department described the group as being "linked to al-Qaeda and the international jihadist movement", and had been provided with "training and financial assistance" from al-Qaeda.

"The security threat from these groups is one of the top priorities for the Chinese government," says Yiyu Lu, a China expert at London's Royal Institute of International Affairs. "China has accused the ETIM of being a terrorist organization. It has asked the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to help it fight separatism and fundamentalism. There is a history of militants from Xinjiang going abroad, some were picked up in Afghanistan, others went to central Asia and Pakistan." Several ethnic Uighurs were held at the U.S. base in Guantanamo, Cuba; many have since been released or relocated.

Source: TIME






Source: Daily Express: 11th April, 09




China asked Zardari to act against ETIM?




Daily Times MonitorLONDON: China has called on Islamabad to take action against the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), which it says may be plotting attacks into China from the Tribal Areas.



In two meetings over recent months, senior Chinese officials have warned the Pakistani government about the threat. Chinese officials revealed details of the meetings to Mushahid Hussain, a former minister, during a visit to Central Asia. “They told me that the ETIM has its military headquarters in [the Tribal Areas] and is planning to attack China on the 60th anniversary celebration of the communist revolution in October,” said Mushahid. He said in February Meng Jianzhu, China’s minister for public security, flew from Beijing to Shanghai to discuss the threat with Zardari during his visit to China. “The minister met with him for 90 minutes to discuss this issue.” In March, said Mushahid, Beijing dispatched a special envoy to Islamabad to discuss the alleged threat posed by the ETIM.






Source: Daily Times--- 9th April, 09

Read more...

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

How possibly could a party such as the secular ANP get into such a low deal with those of the Taliban’s ilk?



Barbarians at the gate

By Kamran Shafi

SORRY for the trite title, but its blood-chillingly true, isn’t it? As my readers well know, I am quite quickly moved to tears: films like Il Postino and East is East and books like Chronicle of a Death Foretold can set me off like a little baby.

Even the logo on the tail of a PIA airliner taking flight makes me weep happy and bitter and heartbreaking tears as I pray to God our country could also one day lift its head and reach for the stars.

But the horrific pictures that beamed out of my television set this past week showing a young Swati woman — how does it matter whether she was 17 or 34 years old, dammit — being held down hand and foot and mercilessly lashed on her buttocks and thighs by a bearded Yahoo in public, 37 times, only made me furious; absolutely incandescent with rage.

Far more than being livid at the Taliban Yahoos, I raged at those representing the ANP so-called ‘government’ of the Frontier. Even there whilst I could understand the likes of Senator Zahid Khan and Law Minister Arshad Abdullah and someone called Pervez Khan try so futilely and so foolishly to defend their government and the Taliban, whilst I could understand Muslim Khan try to defend the Taliban, I just could not get myself to give any let to Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain.

Iftikhar Hussain whom I have met and appreciated (kindly note the past tense) as a secular and well-read man, actually had the gall to accuse Samar Minallah who has done so much good (and courageous) work for the cause of the dispossessed, specially faceless women and innocent children, of being part of a conspiracy to derail the ‘peace deal’ with the Taliban in Swat. What in God’s name has the person of Ms Minallah got to do with the Taliban publicly lashing a woman in public? Why did he name her? Does Mian Sahib not know that Samar is not an unknown; that she is the much-respected Nasruminallah Khan’s daughter? That she does not hide behind pseudonyms and innuendo, and says what she says in your face?
He then has the impudence to say that the lashing ‘took place on Jan 3 while the peace agreement with the TNSM was signed on Feb 16’. Well, doesn’t that in itself make your deal with such barbarians doubly disgraceful, Mian Sahib? How possibly could a party such as the secular ANP get into such a low deal with those of the Taliban’s ilk? Is this ANP, the successor to the National Awami Party of Bacha Khan?

Let me go back in time for the younger of my readers who may not know the tortured political history of our poor country. No matter which political party one came from, no matter which political thought one was enamoured of, no matter what the establishment said about the NAP one always admired it for the fact that it was solidly secular, and always stood by its principles. Is this present ANP even a shadow of the NAP of Mir Ghous Bakhsh Bizenjo?

What ‘peace deal’ do you talk about, Mian Sahib? Is cravenly throwing down your weapons before a cruel and monstrous enemy who has wrought so much pain and misery in your home a ‘peace deal’? An enemy that your own and federal forces outnumbered 30 to 1? An enemy, moreover, who was far poorly equipped than your own forces? What ‘peace deal’ do you speak about, sir?

Which reminds me. Against my own better judgment, I went to see President Zardari along with about 40 or 50 other TV anchors/journalists a week or so ago. I had been to the presidency in days gone by but had forgotten the opulence and the sheer massiveness of the place. Which, be as it may, the man was completely out of his depth, his grip on reality tenuous — being completely satisfied with the way the army conducted itself in Swat(!), and talked as if he knew everything about everything under the sun.
Unforgivably, he was snide about the judiciary — when asked to ensure the safety of working journalists he said, ‘Why don’t you go to the restored Supreme Court which you said will fix everything?’ Tragically, he did not even know that Nawabzada Balaach Marri, son of Nawab Khair Bukhsh Marri, was dead, murdered allegedly by the Pakistan Army in Afghanistan in November 2007. And this despite Benazir herself visiting the old nawab to condole his son’s death, to the utter chagrin of the Commando.

But nothing lasts forever, particularly in this case, for his buddies Salmaan Taseer and Rehman Malik have grievously wounded and weakened him by the needless and mad adventure mounted in Punjab. It defies description, though, how the three can so brazenly carry on as if nothing happened at all. The sad part is that the shenanigans of these three have greatly hurt the Pakistan People’s Party, a national asset that the country can’t afford to lose, just as it cannot afford to lose other political forces that represent the people.

But back to the matter of the increasingly successful assault on Pakistan by the Taliban. What gives? We will know all if a few very basic questions are answered. One, how come the Pakistan Army, the ISI, the Intelligence Bureau, Military Intelligence and the Frequency Allocation Board could not find Mullah Radio’s FM station in six years?
Two, ditto. Three, ditto. Four, ditto. Ninety-nine, ditto. Just who is preventing all these when-they-want-to-be most oppressively efficient organisations from finding the clandestine broadcaster that is the foundation upon which Mullah Fazlullah has built his dreadful empire of death and destruction?

To the government I say this: If it is true that the cake and pastry and tikka-selling, property-dealing industrial and banking conglomerate, the Pakistan Army, has failed to tactically defeat (I did not say bomb and shell and strafe, sirs) a ragtag militia, then demob large parts of it and distribute its weapons and equipment among the populace. We well know how to defend our hearths and homes, and wives and daughters and sisters and mothers; and neighbours, against the advancing barbarians.

To our visiting paymasters who are presently in the Citadel of Islam, I say this: if the choice is between having a strategic and a transactional relationship with this regime when it comes to doling out money please do yourselves, and us, a favour. Please opt for the transactional, COD (cash on delivery) as they say in business. Only then does this country have a chance of survival. Otherwise it is dead in the water.

Witness Chakwal. It broke my heart to hear friend Ayaz Amir, MNA, say, ‘I never thought Chakwal would become a target, sir’ when I called him on Sunday afternoon to condole the wanton death and destruction spread in his city by the self-same barbarians.

He was at the hospital at the time and the screams of pain in the background made me invoke the Almighty’s curse on those that kill and maim innocents.

Daily Dawn --- 8th April, 09

Read more...

"Talibans would take their war to Islamabad and the day is not far when the capital will be in the hands of Talibans"-- Claims Mullah Nazeer



Pakistani Taliban said moving closer to capital


MINGORA: Pakistani Taliban are moving into a new area in northern Pakistan, clashing with villagers and police in a mountain valley, police and district officials said on Wednesday.
Separately, a Pakistani Taliban commander said the Pakistani military and the United States were colluding in US drone aircraft attacks and the militants would take their war to the capital, Islamabad, in response.


Surging militant violence across Pakistan is reviving western concerns about the stability of its nuclear-armed ally.Pakistan is crucial to US efforts to stabilise Afghanistan.
US envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke, and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, were in Pakistan for talks on security strategy this week.


In a development that will deepen the west's concerns, scores of Taliban have moved into Buner district, 100 km northwest of Islamabad, from the Swat valley where authorities struck a peace pact in February aimed at ending violence.
‘About 20 vehicles carrying Taliban entered Buner on Monday and started moving around the bazaar and streets,’ said senior police officer Israr Bacha.
Villagers formed a militia, known as a lashkar, to confront the Taliban and eight of the insurgents were killed in a clash on Tuesday, police said. Two villagers and three policemen were also killed. ‘People don't like the Taliban,’ Ghulam Mustafa, deputy chief of Buner, told Reuters by telephone.
Muslim Khan, a Taliban spokesman in Swat, was defiant. ‘What law stops us going there?’ Khan said. ‘Our people will go there and stay there as long as they want.’



MISLEADING


Authorities agreed in February to impose Islamic law in Swat to end more than a year of fighting.
Critics said appeasement would only embolden the militants to take over other areas.
Pakistan's western allies fear such pacts create safe havens for Taliban and al Qaeda fighters.

Pakistani Taliban commander Mullah Nazeer Ahmed said in an interview with al Qaeda's media arm, Al-Sahab, that Pakistan was behind US drone attacks on militants.Authorities were misleading the public by saying it was the United States carrying out the strikes, he said, and it was the Pakistani army that sent spies to facilitate them.
‘All these attacks that have happened and are still happening are the work of Pakistan,’ Ahmed said, according to a transcript of the interview posted on Al-Sahab's website.
Alarmed by deteriorating security in Afghanistan, the United States has since last year stepped up drone strikes in Pakistan.
Pakistan objects to the strikes, calling them a violation of its sovereignty that complicates its effort to fight militancy.
Other Taliban commanders said recent violence in Pakistan has been in retaliation for the drone attacks and threatened more.
Ahmed said Pakistani Taliban factions had united and would take their war to the capital: ‘The day is not far when Islamabad will be in the hands of the mujahideen.’
Ahmed also blamed the Pakistani military's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency for sowing divisions between factions, saying the ISI was the Taliban's main enemy.
Some US officials have said recently the ISI maintained contacts with militants and there were indications ISI elements even provided support to the Taliban or al Qaeda militants.
Such accusations have angered Pakistan, although a military spokesman denied reports that ISI chief Lieutenant-General Ahmed Shujaa Pasha had snubbed Holbrooke and Mullen by refusing to meet them on Tuesday.



Source: Daily Dawn



http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/pakistan/pakistani-taliban-said-moving-closer-to-capital--qs





===================================================================



Taliban will soon capture Islamabad, says Mullah Nazeer


MINGORA: Pakistani Taliban commander Mullah Nazeer Ahmed said in an interview with Al Qaeda’s media arm, Al-Sahab, that the Taliban would soon capture Islamabad.Pakistani Taliban factions had united and would take their war to the capital, he said.“The day is not far when Islamabad will be in the hands of the mujahideen.”He accused the Pakistan Army of sending spies to facilitate US drone strikes against Al Qaeda and Taliban, and said Pakistani authorities were misleading the public by saying it was the United States carrying out the attacks.“All these attacks that have happened and are still happening are the work of Pakistan,” he said, according to a transcript of the interview posted on Al-Sahab’s website.Alarmed by deteriorating security in Afghanistan, the United States has since last year stepped up drone strikes in Pakistan. Pakistan objects to the strikes, calling them a violation of its sovereignty.Mullah Nazeer Ahmed also blamed the Pakistani military’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency for sowing divisions between factions, saying the ISI was the Taliban’s main enemy.


Daily Times: 9th April, 09


http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\04\09\story_9-4-2009_pg1_8



===================================================================




طالبان کا بونیر خالی کرنے سے انکار
عبدالحئی کاکڑ
بی بی سی اردو ڈاٹ کام، پشاور


صوبہ سرحد کےضلع بونیر میں ایک طالبان پولیس اہلکار کی لاش کے قریب کھڑا ہے

صوبہ سرحد کے ضلع بونیر میں مقامی لشکر اور سوات کے طالبان کے درمیان مذاکرت کا ایک اور دور شروع ہو گیا ہے۔
طالبان کے ترجمان مسلم خان نے کہا ہے کہ طالبان بونیر سے نہیں جائیں گے اور کوئی انہیں وہاں سے نکال نہیں سکتا۔ حاجی مسلم خان نے کہا ’ ہم پاکستان کے کسی علاقے میں بھی جا سکتے ہیں۔‘
پولیس کا کہنا ہے کہ پیر کے روز سوات سے آئے ہوئے طالبان اور مقامی لشکر کے درمیان ہونے والی جھڑپ کے بعد پیر اور منگل کو فریقین کے درمیان مذاکرات میں کسی قسم کی کوئی پیشرفت نہیں ہوسکی ہے۔ ان کے بقول مذاکرات میں سوات کے طالبان کے نمائندوں نے واپس جانے سے انکار کردیا ہے۔
ان کے بقول ان کا کہنا ہے کہ وہ ضلع بونیر میں قاضی عدالتوں کے قیام اور نگرانی کرنے کے لیے آئے ہیں جبکہ مقامی لوگوں کا مؤقف ہے کہ یہ کام حکومت خود کرسکتی ہے جس سے ان کی حمایت بھی حاصل ہوگی۔
حکام کا کہنا ہے کہ طالبان نے تین پولیس اہلکاروں اور دو رضا کاروں کی لاشیں دو دن کے بعد بدھ کو حوالے کردی ہیں۔ ان کے مطابق طالبان نے شرط عائد کردی تھی کہ لاشوں کو وصول کرنے کے لیےصرف ایک گاڑی بھیجی جائے جس میں صرف ڈرائیور سوار ہو۔
مقامی لوگوں کا کہنا ہے کہ سوات کے طالبان اور مقامی لشکر کےدرمیان کشیدگی بدستور برقرار ہے۔ طالبان نے سوات اور بونیر کو ملانے والے پہاڑی سلسلے کے کئی مقامات پر مورچے سنبھالے ہوئے ہیں جبکہ مقامی لشکر کے درجنوں مسلح رضا کار نیچے اپنے اپنے گاؤں میں پہرے دینے میں مصروف ہیں۔
فریقین کے درمیان مذاکرات کے پہلے دور کی ناکامی کے بعد شانگلہ سے ایک مشہور عالم دین مولوی کابل گرامہ بونیر پہنچ چکے ہیں جو بات چیت کو کامیاب بنانے کی کوشش کریں گے۔
یاد رہے کہ بونیر کے عوام اور سوات کے طالبان کے درمیان پہلے سے ہی اختلافات چلے آ رہے ہیں اور فریقین کے درمیان کئی مسلح جھڑپیں ہوئی ہیں۔ پچھلےسال بونیر میں قومی اسمبلی کے ضمنی انتخابات کے موقع پرطالبان نےشل بانڈئی میں پولنگ اسٹیشن پر مبینہ خودکش حملہ کیا جس میں تقریباً چالیس سے زائد افراد ہلاک ہوئے تھے۔
سوات میں امن معاہدے کے بعد یہ پہلی مرتبہ ہے کہ سوات کے طالبان مسلح صورت میں کسی دوسرے ضلع میں داخل ہوئے ہیں۔ مبصرین کا کہنا ہے کہ اس سے بعض حلقوں کے یہ خدشات تقریباً درست ثابت ہو رہے ہیں کہ امن معاہدے کے بعد طالبان دوبارہ منظم ہوکر دیگر علاقوں میں پھیل سکتے ہیں۔

http://www.bbc.co.uk/urdu/pakistan/2009/04/090408_bunair_taliban_rh.shtml


Read more...

Should we hold Rehman Malik responsible for all suicide and other terrorists' attacks ?


By Latif Chaudhry
Daily Express --- 8th April, 09
Read more...

Architect of infamous “Operation Midnight Jackal” Major Amir joins PPP ???

Return of the ‘Midnight Jackal’?
By Shahzad Raza
Wednesday, 08 Apr, 2009


ISLAMABAD, April 7: Major Amir, who allegedly conspired and collaborated with others to topple the first Benazir Bhutto government, is said to have developed close relations with the Pakistan People’s Party top leadership.Party sources told Dawn that Major Amir, a former Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) operative, had held a few meetings with President Asif Ali Zardari. However, what was discussed in the meetings remains unclear.
The sources said that Major Amir was part of the president’s entourage that accompanied him on his visit to Saudi Arabia in November 2008.They added that some PPP leaders were quite surprised to see him around.
Major Amir confirmed the recent thaw in relationship between himself and the PPP top leadership.“Let it be no surprise that I have had a cordial relationship with the PPP leadership for the past few years,” he asserted.Asked what he discussed during his meetings with the president, he said, obliquely, that they had exchanged views on the issues of mutual interest.However, the presidential spokesman, Farhatullah Babar, denied reports of meetings between Major Amir and President Zardari.“I have never seen Major Amir in the Presidency during my stay. Moreover, I have not seen his name in any of the scheduled meetings of the president,” he said. But Mr Babar could not explain why Major Amir had been included in President Zardari’s entourage to Saudi Arabia.
Major Amir and Brigadier Imtiaz were the two main characters of “Operation Midnight Jackal” that was reportedly launched to topple the first Benazir Bhutto government in 1989.The ISI had reportedly launched the operation to make Pakistan People’s Party MNAs support a no-confidence motion against their own prime minister.According to the then director-general of the Intelligence Bureau, Masood Sharif Khattak, Major Amir and Brigadier Imtiaz were caught on video and audiotapes influencing some PPP parliamentarians.
But in an earlier interview with DawnNews, Major Amir and Brig Imtiaz had contradicted the reports of their involvement in the conspiracy.Major Amir claimed he was acting on the specific directives of the then ISI director-general, Shamsur Rehman Kallue, who was an appointee of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto.He claimed that he was acting to identify the black sheep within the ranks of the PPP. He offered the same version of events to the board in the GHQ which heard his case during court martial proceedings. The former ISI operative conceded that he kept a watchful eye on the treasury MNAs who were expected to support the no-confidence motion against the then prime minister, Benazir Bhutto.
Sources said Major Amir would never have been able to find a place close to Benazir Bhutto. They added that some close aides of President Zardari helped Major Amir make his acquaintance.The former ISI operative used to be a special adviser to former NWFP chief minister Sardar Mehtab Abbasi, a close aide of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif. By then, Major Amir was said to be in the good books of the PML-N top leader. But this is not what the PML-N spokesman thought.“He was just an adviser to Sardar Mehtab. But he did not have any close contact with Mian Nawaz Sharif,” PML-N spokesman Siddiqul Farooq claimed.
A political pundit, who has access to some important drawing rooms in Islamabad, did not rule out the possibility of the former ISI operative being given an important political assignment to deal with right-wing media or fundos or both.

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/the-newspaper/front-page/return-of-the-midnight-jackal

===================================================================




Major Amir liked Nawaz Sharif as Political Leader and was part of his Political Camp !!

Daily Times' report of 22nd April, 2007


Establishment doesn’t like public-backed leaders’

Daily Times MonitorLAHORE:

Major Amir, the alleged architect of the notorious Operation Midnight Jackal, says Pakistani establishment likes the leaders who are not backed by the public.In an interview with the Geo television on Saturday, Amir said the establishment was against every leader who had people’s mandate behind them. “Pakistani establishment likes leaders like Malik Maraj Khalid, Moeen Qureshi, Sardar Balakh Sher Mazari and current Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz,” he said.
Amir said he liked Sharif as a political leader and was a part of his political camp. He said Sharif was more acceptable to the army than Benazir Bhutto.
The former Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) officer said the ISI principally acted on the orders of the prime minister. But, he said, in case of lack of coordination between the prime minister and the army chief the agency preferred to seek directives from the army chief. Amir said he acted on the orders of the then ISI chief in the Operation Midnight Jackal, adding that the objective behind this operation was not to remove the Bhutto’s government. “I was court-martialled and removed from the army even though I proved my innocence before the inquiry committee,” he said.He said Jonejo’s government was removed because the US was against it. “The US thought that Jonejo had failed to deliver on Iran,” he said, adding that Mullah Omar was loyal to Pakistan compared to Hamid Karzai.

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007%5C04%5C22%5Cstory_22-4-2007_pg7_19

===============================================================


How the ISI Subverts the Political System

The Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989 marked the beginning ofa new period of intense political activity for the Pakistani intelligence agencies.Both the MI and the ISI worked hard to implement the military’s political agenda, and they have played an active role in every general election since. They have been used to support, oppose, or eventually suppress particular political groups and to aid domestic adversaries of civilian governments with which the military had grown dissatisfied.
Intelligence quickly became and remains central for senior commanders pursuing behind-the-scenes political interventions.The army chief brings information collected by the agencies to the president and the prime minister in a discretionary manner. The president has in the past relied on political intelligence gathered by the agenciesto formulate the charges against governments he wanted to dismiss.
The army chief therefore controls a very powerful instrument—an instrument that can be used indirectly through the president when civilians are in power, or directly when the military is in power.
The latter was the case under Musharraf, to whom the army chief reported.

Funding political parties.

The military ultimately managed to have Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto dismissed in 1990, and the ISI again became active in the general elections, during which it supported a number of her political opponents. Allegations of the ISI’s interference in domestic politics went public on March 24, 1994, when Mehran Bank president Yunus Habib was arrestedfor siphoning money from the bank. On April 20, the issue was brought tothe floor of the National Assembly by Interior Minister Nasrullah Babar.

In 1997, retired air marshal Asghar Khan, former chief of the Pakistan AirForce, filed a Supreme Court petition challenging the legality of a “donation”by the Mehran Bank, a nationalized institution, of some approximately $6.5 million to the then-COAS, General Mirza Aslam Beg, in 1990. The chief justice, Sajjad Ali Shah, called a hearing on ISI’s role in domestic politics. General Aslam Beg, who admitted he had put the money at the disposal of the ISI and MI through a secret service account, had earlier declared that “it was a practice with the ISI to support candidates during the elections under the direction of the chief executive.” The money was then used by the MI and ISI for “duly authorized purposes.” It was used in particular to fund the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI), which received a little less than half the total sum. Beneficiaries also included the future prime minister, Nawaz Sharif. A substantial part of the money was also used as “special funds,” destined to finance covert operations.

The 1990 election was not the first instance of ISI involvement in Pakistani politics. Manipulation of elections has been the norm since the creation of the country, particularly under military regimes trying to compensate for their lack of legitimacy. Millions of rupees were embezzled from secret funds for that purpose in 1970 by General Umar, a close associateof Ayub Khan, and N. A. Rizvi, who directed the IB at that time.

Besides the PPP, the only victim of the scandal was the banker, YunusHabib, who was arrested and jailed. The COAS suffered no judicial consequencesand went on the offensive, demanding that legal action be takenagainst the former chief of the Pakistan Air Force and General NasrullahBabar for violating the provision of the Official Secrets Act and bringing thearmed forces into disrepute.

Although technically still pending before the Supreme Court, the case was de facto suspended by the October 1999 coup d’état of PervezMusharraf. Almost eight years later, in February 2007, Asghar Khan, one of the main protagonists of the scandal, was still asking the SupremeCourt to “determine the role of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in national politics.”

Support for particular political groups or parties is not primarily the result of ideological sympathies. Like all individuals, intelligence agents have their own ideological inclinations and political preferences, but these pale in comparison with the military’s institutional interest in its own domination of the political landscape. Therefore, support or opposition to any given organization varies over time, the latter being eventually as viciousas the former can be generous.

Setting up alliances.

In 1988, the ISI, led by Lieutenant General HamidGul, set up the IJI, an alliance of right-wing and religious political parties,to prevent Benazir Bhutto’s PPP from sweeping the polls. The ISI arranged the reunification of Pakistan’s two Pakistan Muslim League factions, which were then joined by smaller organizations, and helped them campaign against the PPP.
Imtiaz Ahmed, who was then additional director general of national security at the ISI and as such was involved in all ISI political dealings, launched a campaign to discredit Benazir Bhutto for allegedly working against Punjabi interests. The military opposition failed to prevent a PPP victory in the elections, but ISI manipulations led to greater electoral success for the religious parties, which obtained, collectively,12 percent of the vote in the 1988 national election, a score they never again reached, including in 2002.
The military high command did not even bother denying its own involvement,nor that of the intelligence agencies, in the process, cynically describing it as “helping to restore democracy.” When asked what would have happened if Benazir Bhutto had won the 1988 elections with a greater majority, former COAS General Aslam Beg declared:[T]he army perhaps would not have allowed the transfer of power to Benazir Bhutto. There is a strong feeling in the army that Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was responsible for the East Pakistan debacle and that he maligned the army.... So, to ensure that power was smoothly transferred to Benazir Bhutto and democracy restored, the IJI was formed by the ISI.This was done with the clear knowledge that that it would not stop thePPP from forming the government.... I set up a fake competition by creating the IJI to ensure that a democratic government would be formed....Let me categorically state that the decision to hold on to or relinquish power rests squarely with the army."
Nonetheless, after the PPP’s victory, the ISI never ceased trying to unseat Benazir Bhutto. In October 1989, at the instigation of Hamid Guland in an operation named Midnight Jackals, the ISI tried to sway PPP members of the National Assembly to back a no-confidence vote against Bhutto and managed to convince the Mohajir Quami Movement (MQM; itsname was changed later to Muttahida Quami Movement) to switch its supportfrom the PPP to the opposition.

Source: Reforming theIntelligence Agencies in Pakistan’s Transitional Democracy
By: Frédéric Grare
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/files/pakistan_intelligence_transitional_democracy.pdf
Read more...

Tuesday, 7 April 2009

Who rules Bajaur ???? Talibans or Govt. of Pakistan ???




Bajaur TTP declares amnesty for anti-Taliban elders !!!


Suicide attacks to continue : Maulvi Umer



KHAR: The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in Bajaur Agency on Monday declared amnesty for all anti-Taliban tribal elders and appealed to internally displaced persons (IDPs) living in refugee camps to return to the tribal region.


The TTP said political parties were creating hurdles in the return of IDPs. In a telephonic conversation with reporters, TTP central spokesman Maulvi Umer said the Taliban remained committed to a ceasefire they had declared in February 2009 to improve law and order in the agency. Umer said some political parties were inciting the IDPs to demand enforcement of sharia in Bajaur after Swat and were using them for vested interests. He said the TTP would take action against such political parties.


Maulvi Umer said the Taliban took up arms to defend themselves, adding that the TTP had decided to unconditionally release the arrested security forces’ personnel “on humanitarian grounds”. He said the US decision to send more troops to Afghanistan would worsen law and order in Afghanistan, adding that additional troops could not discourage the Taliban. Umer said suicide attacks would continue in all cities of the country until drone attacks stopped. He said the TTP was not behind the suicide attack in Chakwal.




Source: Daily Times -- 7th April, 09

Read more...

Mullahs blame Ahmadis for terrorist activities. Ahmadis also termed as traitors !


Contrary to facts some Deobandi and Wahabi mullahs have blamed Ahmadi community for the terrorists' activities !!!
The mullahs also called for Ahmadis' boycot and demanded that Ahmadis be expelled from intelligence agencies ! List of speakers of Khatam-e-Nabowat Conference also includes name of Mullah Allah Wasaaya of banned Sipah-e-Sahaba. I'm wondering where were our intelligence agencies sleeping when the mullahs delivered hate speeches in Faisalabad !!!


Source: Daily Express, 7th April, 09
Read more...

70% of religious seminaries (medressahs) in Pakistan belong to Deoband school of thought: Report





According to a report appeared in today's Daily Express more than 1.9 million students are enrolled in 17000 religious seminaries (madrassahs) of which around 70% i.e. 12000 belong to Deoband school of thought, around 20% i.e. 3500 belong to Barelvi school of thought, around 2.2 % i.e. 380 belong to Ahl-e-Hadith, 2.3% i.e. 390 belong to Shias, and 2.38% i.e. 405 belong to Jamaat-i-Islami.

This report quoting some authentic sources from federal interior ministry claims that 90% madrassahs' students arrested so far for their involvement in terrorists activities belong to a particular sect (which I believe is Deoband).







Source: Daily Express 7th April, 09
Read more...

Monday, 6 April 2009

A wake up call: Is Talibanisation now creeping in cities of Sindh --- The land of Sachal and Lal Shahbaz Qalandar ??

File photo of famous Lal Mosque Brigade




Extremists disrupt dance programme




LARKANA, April 4: Unidentified men forced the cancellation of a spring fair near Larkana on Friday after they objected to the presence of dancing girls. According to organisers, the “hoodlums belonged to the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam. However a JUI leader, Abdul Razzak Abid Lakho, disowned the assailants, saying that “we had merely requested the organisers to stop the dance. We have nothing to do with the disruption.” Sources in Waggan town said a group of JUI workers pulled up at the exhibition ground after Friday prayers and told the organisers to cancel the “vulgar dance” and expel the 12 dancers. “Otherwise you will be responsible for the consequences”. The men had brought with them a number of veils in order to shame the authorities. The terrorised dancers left the scene immediately and the organizers had no option but to cancel the programme.




Source: Daily Dawn, 5th April, 09


===================================================================



پنجاب کی رقاصائیں سندھ بدر
نثار کھوکھر
بی بی سی اردو ڈاٹ کام، لاڑکانہ


سندھ کے ضلع قمبر شہداد کوٹ میں جاری بسنت میلے میں فن کا مظاہرہ کرنے والی رقاصاؤں نے جمعیت علمائے اسلام فضل الرحمان کے ایک مقامی راہنما اور کارکنوں کے کہنے پر علاقہ چھوڑ دیا ہے۔ انہیں پردے کے لیے اجرک تحفہ پیش کرتے ہوئے دو گھنٹے کے اندر علاقے سے نکل جانے کو کہا گیا تھا۔
جمعیت علمائے اسلام فضل الرحمان گروپ کے صوبائی سیکرٹری اطلاعات مولانا عبدالرزاق عابد لاکھو نے بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ انہوں نے انڈس ہائی وی پر اپنے علاقے وگن میں جاری بسنت میلے کی شکایت ضلعی پولیس انتظامیہ سے کی تھی اور ان کے تعاون سے رقاصاؤں کو علاقہ چھوڑدینے کو کہا تھا۔
جے یو آئی کے ترجمان کےمطابق ان کے چھ راہنماؤں پر مشتمل وفد مقامی پولیس افسر کے ہمراہ رقاصاؤں کے پاس پہنچا اور انہیں رقص بند کرنے کو کہا۔ مولوی لاکھو کےمطابق انہوں نے رقاصاؤں کی دو سربراہ خواتین کو پردے کے طور پر اجرک کا ’تحفہ‘ پیش کیا اور انہیں فوری طور پر علاقہ چھوڑ دینے کو کہا۔
بسنت میلے میں اٹھارہ رقاصائیں اپنا فن پیش کر رہی تھیں جو مذہبی تنظیم کے وفد کی آمد کے بعد ایک گھنٹے کے اندر علاقہ چھوڑ گئی ہیں۔ وگن میں بسنت میلہ دس روز کے لیے لگایا گیا تھا مگر منتظمین کے مطابق مذہبی تنظیم کی شکایت کے باعث انہوں نے تین دن میں بسنت میلے کا اختتام کردیا ہے۔
سندھ کو عام طور پر صوفیا کی سرزمین کہا جاتا ہے اور صوفیانہ کلام عوام کی اکثریت میں مقبول ہے مگر گزشتہ چند ماہ سے جمعیت علمائے اسلام فضل الرحمان گروپ کے کارکن محفل ِموسیقی کے خلاف اپنے اکثریتی علاقوں میں اعتراض کرتے رہے ہیں۔
تین ماہ پہلے نوابشاہ میں مقامی ٹی وی نیٹ ورک سندھ ٹی وی کی طرف سے نوابشاہ میں منعقد ہونے والے میوزک شو کو بھی جمعیت علماء اسلام کے اعتراض کے بعد عدالتی حکم پر بند کیا گیا تھا۔ جمعیت علمائے اسلام نوابشاہ کے راہنماؤں نے سندہ ٹی وی کے میوزک شو کے خلاف مقامی عدالت میں کیس فائل کیا تھا اور عدالتی حکم کے بعد ٹی وی کے میوزک شو کو بند کر دیا گیا تھا۔
جے یو آئی کے کارکنان نے سندھ کے تمام چھوٹے بڑے شہروں میں ٹی وی، ڈش اور کیبل کے خلاف وال چاکنگ بھی کی ہے۔ جس میں لکھا گیا ہے کہ قیامت کے تین آثار ڈش، کیبل اور وی سی آر ہیں۔
جماعت کے صوبائی سیکرٹری اطلاعات کا کہنا ہے کہ وہ عدم تشدد کے حامی ہیں لیکن سندہ میں جہاں کہیں ان کی جماعت کی اکثریت ہوگی وہ محفل موسیقی پر قانونی طریقے سے پابندی کےلیے کوششیں کرتے رہیں گے کیونکہ بقول ان کے موسیقی شریعت میں حرام ہے اور ان کا پیغام ہے کہ موسیقی نہیں قرآن سنو۔
انہوں نے ایک سوال کے جواب میں کہا ہے کہ سندہ کے صوفی بزرگوں کے کلام پر انہیں اعتراض نہیں اور اسی لیے انہوں نے کبھی عابدہ پروین یا علن فقیر کی محفل پر اعتراض نہیں کیا ہے مگر وہ فحاشی اور عریانی کی اجازت نہیں دیں گے اور بقول ان کے ’پنجاب کی رقاصاؤں کو اجازت نہیں دیں گے کہ وہ سندہ کی سادہ لوح عوام کی جیبیں لوٹ لیں۔

Read more...

Sunday, 5 April 2009

Mission Islamisation: Gen. Zia’s dream has been fulfilled as teen-aged girl flogged publicly in Swat !!!


THE OTHER COLUMN: Up shitcreek —Ejaz Haider

Apropos the faith -reviving video from Swat: let me congratulate, not necessarily in the same order, various people — Mr Imran Khan, the Jama’at-e Islami leadership, Lt-Gen Hameed Napoleon Gul, the ANP government in the NWFP, the majority of Urdu-language columnists, some English ones who write poetic prose, and yes, tv anchors and my fellow Pakistanis.Finally, we have something to emulate, straight from the pure times of the rightly-guided caliphs. Islam, ladies and gentlemen, is here. General Zia’s dream has been fulfilled. Allah be praised.Since yesterday I have this strange sensation coursing through my veins, the feeling one gets after reading about the brave Muslims of yore in a Naseem Hijazi novel. I can’t forget the sight of three specimens of Islam’s purity, two of them pinning down a fallen young woman and one flogging her backside for having allegedly committed zina while the girl, may she be damned, cried and repented.This is Islamic justice at its most effective. It is simple, straight, speedy, effective, earthy and devoid of the meanderings and trappings of modern existence, historical accretions and bid’a-infested innovations. That’s the stuff the satanic West is made of.Okay, sure. I am bullshitting. But really? How far from the truth am I? Let me recount.Columnist upon columnist has been writing about the brave Taliban in Afghanistan; how Taliban rule had recreated khilafat-e rashida; how there was peace in that country; how everyone was secure and so on.Mr Khan has been hell-bent on reversing all his great contributions to this country, both as a scintillating cricketer and a remarkable philanthropist, by misguiding this nation on issues of politics and inter-state relations — about which his knowledge rivals only that of a kindergarten student. He has been talking incessantly about ghairat, how this is not our war and how our sovereignty is under attack from outside etc etc.The Napoleon, Lt-Gen Gul — or shall I say Hans Guderian, since Gen Gul is an armoured corps officer and not a gunner — has been mouthing his conceptions of grand strategies even as he carries the weight on his shoulders of the shameful defeat in Jalababad, a veritable fiasco.The religious parties, especially JI, have been fudging issues and telling lies about everything under the sun.C’mon folks. Go back and focus on the discourse in this country. From news anchors and tv hosts to columnists and experts and politicians. Revisit the days of the extraction operation against Lal Masjid and how we dealt with that. Recall how we have done everything possible to pull down the state in our enthusiasm to voice dissent on the basis of democracy which, incidentally, will be the first concept to lick the dust when the warriors come knocking on the doors.I had a hard time deciding how to deal with this issue of the flogging of a girl in Swat: express my deep resentment at the obscenity I saw or congratulate fellow Pakistanis for having successfully brought the state to this. Listen carefully to what people say on tv; deconstruct the discourse; discover the lies; the dissembling; the fudging and you would know why the flogging happened in Swat.I carried an article some weeks ago in these pages by Nasir Abbas Mirza (“How we lost Swat”, Daily Times, March 9). Go and reread it to see how and why Swat has been lost and how and why we are likely to lose the rest of Pakistan. I see outrage now. Why? Was everyone sleeping?The Urdu-language tv channels, for the most part, should be ashamed of the role they have played in giving airtime to the likes of Mr Khan, our various Napoleons and moronic politicians; for asking leading questions; for allowing them the opportunity to mouth crap; for supporting extremists in the name of jihad; for giving these thugs an aura of respectability and acceptability.So what the hell are we shocked about? Sow the wind and reap the whirlwind. It’s as simple as that. We are still unclear and confused about the threat. Every outrage begets a standard response: “Muslims can’t do this; this is a conspiracy”. In which case, we deserve what happened in Swat; in fact, far from expressing any outrage, we should celebrate the incident.The truth, however, is that Muslims can do this and more. They are doing it and will continue to do it. Listen to Haji Muslim Khan on tv channels. What kind of system and society would have him, with his pathetic knowledge of almost everything, including Islam for which he supposedly stands up, as a public figure?Listen to his fudging and his threats. Listen to what ANP minister Zahid Khan had to say about this being the tip of the iceberg. The question is not about when this incident was filmed but the fact that it did happen; also, that the Taliban, according to their admission, have been giving these punishments and will continue to do so since this is what shariat calls for.Well, how about telling them to stuff it; that we do not accept such barbaric and medieval practices in today’s world; that Pakistani society is sophisticated enough to reject, in categorical terms, the obscenity the Taliban stand for.Are we prepared to do it; or will we remain confused about the nature, direction and extent of this threat?Finally, hello Pakistan Army. Are you guys there? I remember the in-camera briefing given to a select group of analysts back in November 2007. We were told that come March 2008, Swat would be reclaimed. Whatever the hell happened to that? Would someone tell me?But before I sign off, let me make a confession. Insert in all spaces whatever expletives you can think of because they are all there. That’s the kind of column I wanted to write. Who gives a f*** about niceties, intellectual and of other varieties, in the face of an existential threat that a collection of people has brought upon itself simply because they have some morbid notion of religion coursing through the body politic. I don’t.So, fellow Pakistanis, here you are: up shitcreek without a paddle. Enjoy!
(Daily Times)

Read more...

Divided or weak political will is the main reason for the inability of the Pakistani state and society to cope with terrorism.


Counter-terrorism confusion —Dr Hasan-Askari Rizvi


The terrorist attack on the Police Training Centre in Manawan on March 30 underlined the mounting challenge terrorism poses to Pakistan. A small group of well-trained and ideologically motivated attackers carried out the assault in a coordinated manner. Though the attackers were neutralised in eight hours by the Elite Force, Pakistan Rangers and the Army, the attack displayed the confidence these groups have gained to undertake a second high-profile raid in Lahore in March.Pakistan is under siege by religious extremists and hard-line groups that are using violence in an indiscriminate manner to create fear among the people and threaten the Pakistani state in pursuit of their narrow, intolerant and bigoted socio-political agenda in the name of Islam.The menace of extremism and terrorism has now become the major internal threat to Pakistan. The recent attacks in Lahore and suicide bombings elsewhere, coupled with increased religious-sectarian killings, aim at discrediting the state and causing insecurity among the people. They expose the inadequacies of Pakistani state institutions to protect the lives and property of its citizens.If such groups continue to carry out attacks at the times and places of their choosing, the state cannot sustain its primacy. Such attacks also aim at undermining Pakistan’s reputation at the international level and isolating it from the rest of the world. If Pakistan is isolated internationally, terrorist groups will find it easy to paralyse the state and establish their authority in mainland Pakistan.This growing threat has not produced a broad consensus in political circles about terrorism and how the state and society should cope with it. The overall disposition of official and non-official circles towards terrorism is generally ambiguous, and they lack the much-needed unity of mind on who is to blame and how this problem should be handled. This confusion runs deep in society as well as government, as well as the military and intelligence agencies. Divided or weak political will is the main reason for the inability of the Pakistani state and society to cope with terrorism.The media and political leaders described the March 30 terrorist attack as ‘an act to destabilise Pakistan’, a ‘conspiracy against the people of Pakistan’, and termed the terrorists ‘enemies of Pakistan’. However, the shared perspective falters when it comes to who did it and what should be done to cope with the growing menace of religious extremism and terrorism.Only three political parties take a clear and categorical position on the issue, and they openly identify the groups involved — the PPP, the ANP and the MQM. Most other parties maintain varying degrees of vagueness on the issue, at times avoiding blaming a group and instead holding the government responsible for not providing security to the people.The PMLN is indecisive on three key issues: religious extremism and terrorism; who should be blamed; and how Pakistan should deal with it. Nawaz Sharif shies away from taking a categorical position on this matter. However, some of his close associates, including Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, have declared that the war on terrorism is not Pakistan’s war and that Pakistan is serving the interests of others.Commenting on the Manawan attack, Sharif said that “no Muslim or Pakistani can engage in bloodshed of his brothers.” It is interesting to note that when a terrorist was arrested outside the police training centre, the first thing he said to the security forces was that he was a Muslim. Most of the people engaged in such activities view themselves as genuine Muslims and are convinced that those who do not subscribe to their religio-political worldview are bad or misguided Muslims.Another popular theme with the PMLN regarding the two terrorist attacks in Lahore is that the security arrangements were weakened in Lahore due to the removal of Shahbaz Sharif’s provincial government, the imposition of Governor’s Rule, and the resulting transfers of a number of bureaucrats and police officials.Islamist political parties often act as the political front of the militants, defending their activities with one explanation or another. At times, political parties and various people condemn terrorism and suicide attacks in principle. However, when it comes to the involvement of the Taliban or mainland-based groups, they either avoid comment or give obscure explanations.Some such explanations are: these attacks are sponsored by the adversaries of Pakistan like India, Afghanistan and Israel to destabilise Pakistan; the US wants to destabilise and divide Pakistan in order to justify taking control of its nuclear programme; Pakistan’s participation in the global war on terrorism alienates the Taliban and other militant groups who retaliate in different ways; if Pakistan stops playing the American game in the region, the Taliban and other militant groups would again become Pakistan’s friends as they have nothing against Pakistan; terrorist activities are a reaction to injustice faced by the Muslims in Palestine, Kashmir and elsewhere.These explanations do not focus on the ideological and power ambitions of militant groups; they want to establish their territorial domain at the expense of the Pakistani state for advancing their ideological agenda in Pakistan and abroad. These explanations also shift the blame of violence in Pakistan to ‘foreign devils’ and their ‘anti-Islam’ policies. The argument is that others have wronged Pakistan, Afghanistan and other Muslims; that needs to be rectified if terrorism is to be stopped.Such a mindset developed gradually because of the carefully orchestrated policies and administrative strategies of the military government of General Zia-ul Haq and the army and intelligence agencies from the mid-1980s. The army/intelligence agencies continued to pursue these policies even after the restoration of civilian government in 1988.A generation has been socialised into religious orthodoxy and militancy, which continues to sympathise with the Taliban and Al Qaeda. A half-hearted attempt was made in 2002-2003 to pull back from open support for militancy, but the Musharraf government could not pursue this to its logical conclusion because it needed to woo the MMA to hold on to power.This pro-militancy mindset consciously cultivated by the Pakistani establishment has resulted in divided thinking on terrorism in non-official and official circles, including the security and intelligence apparatus. The argument that terrorism is a threat to Pakistan does not necessarily mean that they think Pakistan’s counter-terrorism is justified or that militant groups are responsible for Pakistan’s predicament.The opposition parties view the government’s counter-terrorism policy from their partisan interests. They are not willing to help the government overcome the problems caused by intellectual disarray on terrorism in society and state institutions. It seems that the government will continue to find it difficult to pursue a coherent and sustained counter-terrorism policy. (Daily Times)

Read more...

We should support military operation against Talibans OR we should be ready to accept their shariah which allows women's public flogging: Abbas Ather




Source: Daily Express, 5th April, 09

Read more...

Saturday, 4 April 2009

Irfan Husain: Living with Bhutto’s ghost


Saturday, 04 Apr, 2009

Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and his family pose for a photograph - AP/File photo.
EXACTLY 30 years ago today, I was driving back with friends from a weeklong fishing trip in Azad Kashmir.

We did not have much luck with the fish: locals told us army officers had decimated entire streams by using explosives to stun all aquatic life, and scooping up the fish that floated to the top. But we had a lot of fun exploring the upper reaches of Neelum Valley with its fast-flowing river, and its snow-covered peaks.

That afternoon, we stopped for lunch at a roadside restaurant and learned that Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, ex-prime minister of Pakistan, had been hanged in the dead of night by Gen Zia and his henchmen. A pall of gloom descended on our small party, and the drive back to Lahore was very subdued. The next morning, I was back at work, and was appalled and furious when a colleague offered me mithai to celebrate Bhutto’s judicial murder. In my anger, I almost bit his head off.

Looking back, I can see that many others shared, and continue to share, his hatred of Bhutto. Indeed, the degree of personal antipathy towards the dead politician can be directly correlated to a person’s wealth: the rich can be heard running Bhutto down for his real and perceived flaws three decades after his death. But for millions of poor Pakistanis, his name still evokes hope, and above all, an abiding devotion.

The Urdu word ‘jiyala’ does not translate easily into English. It has connotations of spiritual ecstasy and passion bordering on madness. Ever since its foundation in 1969, the term has come to be applied to younger members of the Pakistan People’s Party. In particular, it applies to the followers of the Bhuttos, the founders and hereditary leaders of the party. These jiyalas tend to be youthful, enthusiastic and totally committed. Mostly they live in the villages and slums of Sindh and southern Punjab, and look to the PPP to lift them out of their poverty and give them some self-respect. This is the party’s core constituency and the vote-bank the Bhuttos have relied on to bring them to power.

When Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was elected in a landslide on a socialist manifesto in 1970, he ushered in a wave of nationalisation that transformed Pakistan’s economic scenario overnight. Scores of factories and banks were taken over and many powerful business families found themselves suddenly marginalised. A succession of pro-worker laws empowered and emboldened industrial labour and peasant farmers, leading to a series of strikes and lockouts. Simultaneously, Bhutto fired hundreds of civil servants on charges of corruption and inefficiency.

Opposition politicians and journalists were often targets of his ire, and he soon became a hate figure for large swathes of Pakistani society. Accused of employing fascistic methods, Bhutto made many enemies during his term, especially among the well-to-do. But the poor of Pakistan revered him for his employment-generation projects and his pro-labour policies and rhetoric.

When he was toppled in an army coup in July 1977, thousands of rich and middle-class Pakistanis cheered, and many were delighted when he was hanged after a farcical murder trial in 1979. Over the next decade, the army and bureaucracy proceeded to erase all vestiges of his legacy.

Strikes were brutally put down and the PPP’s progressive policies rolled back. A secular curriculum was replaced with an Islamic one. The army, earlier chastened by its defeat at India’s hands in 1971, now blamed Bhutto for its humiliation, even though Gen Yahya Khan was president then, and the country was under martial law. Two generations of students and military cadets have grown up on this self-serving myth.

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had infuriated his class because he threatened to make a fundamental change in the status quo. By weakening the business and bureaucratic elites and empowering workers and peasants, it seemed he might overturn the natural order of things, leading Pakistan to a social revolution. And nobody can be as ferocious as a bourgeois whose sense of privilege and position in society is imperilled. Members of the social elite closed ranks against Bhutto and made common cause with the army. Opposition politicians begged the generals to take over. Finally, Bhutto was brought down and killed.

There are today in Pakistan a large number of educated, middle-class people who support the status quo and are comfortable with their privileged place in society. They educate their children privately in Pakistan and abroad, receive medical attention in excellent private hospitals and own generators to be independent of a ramshackle public power grid.

For these people, life is good, and they do not want their comfortable boat to be rocked. But for the vast majority of Pakistanis, life is hard and getting harder all the time. The state educational system is terrible and millions of children are denied a meaningful education. Most people do not have access to clean drinking water, electricity and paved roads. Government hospitals are grossly under-funded, and medical care is a privilege few can afford.

This is the Pakistan Bhutto wanted to transform. And while most Pakistani politicians talk of wanting change, they are basically conservatives who want to improve the economy without wishing to transform society. For them, the role model is Saudi Arabia, a rich country where an anachronistic social order is still in place. Bhutto, on the other hand, stood for fundamental social change based on secularism and equality. This was — and is — anathema to the establishment, as well as to much of the rising middle class. And to prevent such a social order from coming into being, they are prepared to go to any length.

Who today remembers Shaukat Aziz, our prime minister only two years ago? Bhutto was in power for just over five years three decades ago. Yet his name continues to resonate in Pakistan’s collective memory. A hate figure for the elite, he has entered popular folklore as a symbol of hope. Long after lesser figures who followed him have been consigned to the dustbin of history, Bhutto will continue to define the battle lines between the haves and the have-nots. (Dawn)
Read more...

The Bhutto Archive: The day Bhutto was hanged.

On this day: Bhutto Hanged

Saturday, 04 Apr, 2009

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.-Whitestar
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.-Whitestar
Ex-PM buried in family graveyard of Nau Dero

Four others await decision on mercy petitions

RAWALPINDI, April 4, 1979: Mr Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was hanged to death at two o clock this morning in the Rawalpindi district jail.

An official handout released nine hours later in the day said his ‘dead foody was flown in a special aircraft from Rawalpindi and handed over to the elders of his family who buried him, after Namaz-i-Janaza in the ancestral graveyard at Garhi Khuda Bakhsh near Nau Dero, Larkana, at 10.30 a.m. in accordance with the wishes of the family.

The funeral was attended by relatives, including his two uncles, Nawab Nabi Bakhsh Bhutto and Sanlar Peer Bakhsh Bhutto, his first wife Shirin Ameer Begum, friends and residents of the area’.

Begum Nusrat Bhutto and their daughter Miss Benazir, who are detained at Sihala, about 16 miles from Rawalpindi, had been informed that all the mercy petitions, which had been made to President Genera) Mohammad Zia-ul-Han, had been rejected. They had a three-hour meeting with him yesterday in jail.

Mian Monanimad Abbas and three other federal security force officials, who were also

awarded death sentence in the Nawab Mohammad Ahmed Khan murder case, are still awaiting decision on their mercy petitions.

Mr Mumtaz Bhutto, Mr Z.A. Bhjutto's cousin, told newsmen this morning that he met him last on April 1, Mr Bhutto was sure a that a decision to hang him had been taken. He told him he knew that his life was going to be over but be did not know what awaited the people of Pakistan. He did not want the people to come out on the streets and litter them with their blood.

He asked Mumtaz not to give a call to the people because that would ‘reopen River Indus’. He said he was ready to die but wished that the people should live.

According to one of the officials, who was present at the hanging, Mr Bhutto was approached in his cell about an hour before the execution and told to prepare for the final act. He was told to have a bath if he wished. He replied in the negative and said that he had already had bath during the day.

However, he wanted to shave his face. Permission was granted and he shaved his face by himself.

Then he was told to recite some Quranic verses. The Superintendent, and Deputy

Superintendent of Jail came to his cell where the Superintendent read out to him his death warrant.

A senior Army officer and Magistrate were also present on the occasion. Thereafter the Superintendent went away to supervise the gallows while the Deputy Superintendent stayed on to see his two hands tied together at his back.

He was then told that his cell was about a furlong and half from he gallows, a distance which may be difficult for him to walk, and he should, therefore, lie down in a waiting stretcher to be carried by the jail warders. He protested and said that he would like to walk the distance himself. But he was made to lie down on the stretcher and carried to the gallows by the warders.

Mr Bhutto was unloaded from the stretcher and he climbed up the stairs himself.

Several prisoners were reciting Quran in their cell.

No Written Will

Earlier in the evening he was contacted by a jail official with a query if he wanted to make a will. He said that he would like to write it down. Writing material was supplied to him and he busied himself in writing. But later before the hanging when a magistrate came and asked him to hand over his will so that it could be counter-signed by the Magistrate, Mr Bhutto said he had no will in writing and that he had already conveyed his wish to his wife.

Perhaps he had destroyed the will that he had been writing in the evening.

Before being taken to the gallows he had a 'Tasbih' in his hand and he was turning its beads reciting something quietly. The Tasbih had not been seen with him before. It was either hidden in his luggage or handed over to him by Begum Nusrat Bhutto yesterday.

When contacted by the jail authorities he still had the Tasbih in his hand. He was completely calm and quiet thereafter.

He did not misbehave or talk loudly till the end. He placed his Tasbih round his neck when his hands were tied at his back.

The Superintendent of Jail, a Magistrate and Medical Officers were present near the gallow. The Superintendent registered his formal recognition of Mr Bhutto and then Mr Bhutto was handed over to the hangman who tied his legs with a cord, placed the traditional veil on his face and fixed the hanging cord round his neck. His body remained hanging for half an hour.

Before it was removed the Medical Officer checked it and certified that it was lifeless.

One of the jail officials contacted this correspondent; later in the day and said Begum Nusrat Bhutto and Miss Benazir were informed of the rejection of the mercy petitions when they came to meet Mr .Bhutto at 11 in the morning yesterday. A Jail official, who accompanied them to Mr Bhutto's cell was asked by Mr Bhutto what was being done to him. Mr Bhutto was told that the mercy petitions had been rejected.

Hs asked when the hanging was planned. He was informed that it would take place on Wednesday morning. Thereupon, he said he would like to get longer time than the usual half an hour with his wife and daughter which was allowed.

Then they remained together upto 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Since last evening the jail was heavily guarded on all sides by armed police which continued to be on duty today also. Parties of police were also guarding vantage points in the city.

The news of the hanging spread the city like wild fire early in the morning. People switched on their radios. The Voice of America was the first to broadcast it.

The BBC had nothing in its morning Urdu bulletin or in the 7 o'clock English broadcast. Radio Pakistan came out with the news in the city like wild fire early in that time two local Urdu dailies had already sold thousands of their special supplements.

Begum Nusrat Bhutto and Miss Benazir were the last to see Mr Bhuttp among his family members or friends. Mr Mumtaz Bhutto was called by him through the jail authorities yesterday but the meeting could not take place.

Mumtaz Bhutto and Abdul Hafeek Pirzada left for the airport to catch the morning flight for Karachi after hearing the news. Before the flight they were told that instructions had been received not to let them leave.

They came back to the Paracha House in Islamabad — the bungalow where Begum Nusrat Bhutto and Benazir were detained before being shifted to Sihala and where Pirzada has been staying since his arrival here last week.

Foreign diplomatic circles were taken by surprise. Many of them had believed that some last minute development would save Mr Bhutto's life. The British Prime Minister's third appeal for mercy which was relayed by the BBC in its Urdu broadcast in the morning and the official spokesman's statement last evening that the mercy petitions were

still under consideration did not make them feel that the hanging had already been scheduled for this morning.

However, several local newsmen got, the clue later in the night, three pf them who got too near the jail to see the atmosphere were caught by the guards and detained for the night.

Later in the day about 40 persons gathered in the house of ‘Dr Niazi, family friend of Bhutto, and offered Namaa-i-Janaza, They included Abdul Hafeez Pirzada and Mumtaz Bhutto.

Larkana Burial

Our Correspondent adds from