India-Pakistan | |
May 11 poll defeat: ANP dissolves countrywide organisations | |
2013-09-02 | |
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Mr Asfandyar said the decision top dissolve all party organizations had been made in light of the recommendations of a committee, which was formed to look into the party's defeat in the May 11 general elections. He said the committee analysed the reasons and factors behind the party's election and found that there were two aspects of the defeat. "One aspect was the conspiracies hatched against ANP by elements afraid of its political stand in wake of the emerging regional political scenario, while the other aspect related to the party and its government's internal weaknesses, including weakness of policy, weakness of governance and weakness of organization," he said. The ANP chief said the fact-finding committee also criticised the mode of recruiting members into the party saying it lacked transparency and that the entire process of organization building based on it was flawed and unrepresentative. He said ANP would soon begin fresh membership campaign, which would last two months. He said a central election commission and five provincial election commissions would conduct the intra-party polls and Senator Haji Adeel had been made the chairman of the central election commission. | |
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India-Pakistan |
Kickbacks in arms inspection: army sacks four officers |
2012-12-03 |
![]() ... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central... government for the police in 2010. The sacked officers are alleged to have accepted Rs11 million from a contractor to give a clean bill of health to weapons, ammunition, bullet-proof jackets and bullet-proof helmets which were then supplied to the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa police department. The story emerged when the former officers -- Colonel Iftikhar Ahmed Malik, Major Awais Chaudhry, Major Tabassum Daud and Major Khurram Sheikh -- who were sacked by the army on Sept 24 this year, approached the court. The sacked officers were posted at the Inspectorate of Armament (I of A) of Rawalpindi in 2010 when they were asked to inspect the weapons, ammunition and other equipment sent by the KPK police department. The latter wanted the weapons tested before handing them over to the police force. The scandal was so big that it claimed a few scalps in the province also. Among them was then Inspector General of KPK police, Malik Naveed. He was, however, later released by a NAB (National Accountability Bureau) court in October last year. According to Senator Haji Adeel of the Awami National Party, which heads the coalition government in KPK, total cost of the weapons was around Rs7 billion. Armoured personnel carriers (APCs), vehicles and cycle of violences for the police force were a part of the armoury. "The contract for the supply of these weapons was awarded to a general order supplier who was earlier supplying stationery to the government offices." He alleged that senior bureaucrats were behind the deal. He said there was a provision for testing the equipment before it was handed to the police force and due to the deficiency of weapons testing centres in KPK, the consignment was sent to the Inspectorate of Armament (I of A). The senator added that Safwat Ghayur, the commandant of Frontier Corps who was killed in a terrorist attack, had already rejected the weapons because of their poor quality, but the contractors managed to get clearance from the army inspectorate. |
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India-Pakistan |
Nation to protect Malala's Pakistan, says Raja |
2012-10-14 |
[Dawn] Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf said on Friday the government was determined to root out extremism and militancy from the country. "We pledge that we will not allow the future of our children to be endangered by the thug mindset. "We pledge that enemies of Pakistain will never be allowed to succeed. We pledge that we will uproot this menace of extremism and militancy," the prime minister said in a brief statement to the media after visiting schoolgirl Malala Yousufzai who is fighting for her life at the Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology (AFIC). In a clear reference to the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistain (TTP), Prime Minister Ashraf said it was the same group which had assassinated Ms Benazir Bhutto ... 11th Prime Minister of Pakistain in two non-consecutive terms from 1988 until 1990 and 1993 until 1996. She was the daughter of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, founder of the Pakistain People's Party, who was murdered at the instigation of General Ayub Khan. She was murdered in her turn by person or persons unknown while campaigning in late 2007. Suspects include, to note just a few, Baitullah Mehsud, General Pervez Musharraf, the ISI, al-Qaeda in Pakistain, and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, who shows remarkably little curiosity about who done her in... and "we pledge that we will not surrender the soul of the nation to them". The terrorist attack on Malala appears to have galvanised both the military and civilian leadership into taking some bold decisions. In a forceful statement issued after the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee meeting held on Thursday, the military high-ups declared to render any sacrifice in the fight against terrorists. The prime minister called for unity against the threat from a bigoted and radicalised mindset, which wants to rob us of our cherished values of peace, pluralism, moderation, tolerance and passion for knowledge. The attack on Malala is not a crime against an individual but a crime against humanity and an attack on our core moral and social values". He said the nation stood united in condemning the brutality and degradation of those who perpetrated this heinous crime and the poisoned mindset which sought to destroy the country. Paying tribute to the young Malala who is still at death's door, Mr Ashraf said she had created a national level movement across the country and rightly turning out to be the torch-bearer for girls who wanted to follow in her footsteps. "The snuffies attacked Malala because they were scared of the power of her vision," said the prime minister. With the military and civilian leadership taking a hard line against Taliban, the question being asked is if the PPP government is ready to take the ownership of the military operation in North ![]() According to political insiders, exercise to create consensus on the political front similar to the one before the army went into Swat ...a valley and an administrative district in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province of Pakistain, located 99 mi from Islamabad. It is inhabited mostly by Pashto speakers. The place has gone steadily downhill since the days when Babe Ruth was the Sultan of Swat... valley against Taliban in 2009, was expected. At that time, the government got a unanimous resolution passed from two houses of parliament in favour of the operation which the military successfully carried out in the Malakand division. By taking leaders of allied parties to visit Malala, the prime minister indicated that an effort to this effect was already under way. He was accompanied by Farooq Sattar of MQM, Senator Haji Adeel of ANP, PML-Q Chief Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, PPP General Secretary Jahangir Badar, Federal Ministers Qamar Zaman Kaira, Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan, Sheikh Waqas Akram and former Jamat-e-Islami MNA from Islamabad Mian Mohammad Aslam. Punjab Chief Minster Shahbaz Sharif made a separate visit to the AFIC and inquired after the health of Malala. "At this point and time, neither the PPP nor the military leadership can afford to have a solo flight. They need to have an across-the-board political consensus for a military operation in North Waziristan," said a PPP politician close to the top leadership. And after the unprecedented national outrage against the Taliban for the attack on Malala, "I believe it's the right time to build momentum if the army is at all interested in launching a full-fledged operation in North Waziristan," the PPP leader said. Talking to Dawn, a PPP minister said "eventually a decision for the military operation in the North Waziristan will be taken at the level of Defence Committee of the Cabinet". ![]() Ten PercentZardari ... husband of the late Benazir Bhutto, who has been singularly lacking in curiosity about who done her in ... on Friday telephoned Ziauddin Yousufzai, the father of Malala. The president expressed grief and shock over the incident and strongly condemned the barbaric act of Taliban. He said that through such acts the beturbanned goons had shown their real face to the world. The president said that Taliban would never succeed in shaking the resolve of the people and the government to confront the menace head on. |
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India-Pakistan |
ANP, JUI-F for army operation in Karachi |
2010-08-07 |
The Pakistan People's Party-led government faces a tough situation in the near future, as two of its coalition partners, the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl and the Awami National Party, in Thursday's Senate session, demanded that Karachi be handed over to the army in order to resolve the law and order situation in the city. Members of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement staged a walkout from the proceedings, alleging that the federal and the Sindh government were not taking any measures to stop the bloodshed in the country's financial hub. In a charged atmosphere where members were demanding to be allowed to speak, acting chairman Jan Jamali rescued the government by abruptly reading the prorogation order to avoid a potential clash between component parties in the ruling coalition. The session is scheduled to continue until today (Friday). The leader of the House made an aborted attempt to cool down the situation by saying that it was the provincial government, which could request the army to take control of any troubled area and in case of Karachi, it was the Sindh government that can call the army if it felt like it. Participating in the debate, Senator Haji Adeel said that police, rangers and other law enforcement agencies, as well as the provincial government, had failed to stop target killing of Pakhtuns in Karachi. He urged the government to call the army in Karachi to restore peace in the city. Federal Minister for Science and Technology Azam Swati said the situation in Karachi was worsening by the day. "If you want to save Karachi, the face and index of Pakistan, then de-weaponies it. Police and rangers have failed to maintain peace in the city so the deployment of the armed forces is inevitable," he said. Leader of the House, Senator Nayyar Hussain Bukhari said that warfare in the city was the provincial government's subject, which could request the army to take control of any troubled area in the city. He said the country was faced with a critical situation and if it did not tackle the issue on time, future generations would never pardon the country's current leadership. "There should be ban on display of arms and only that can guarantee the restoration of peace in Karachi," he added. MQM member Tahir Mashhadi said the interior minister had sought 24 hours to restore peace in Karachi, but the situation was worsening day by day. He said the minister had informed the House about the involvement of Sipah-e-Sahaba in killing a party MPA, but so far no action has been taken against the perpetrators. Also, senators belonging to the MQM walked out of the proceeding in protest against target killings in Karachi. Muhammad Ali Durrani requested all political parties in Karachi to hold a peace march in the city to exhibit political unity, describing it as the only possible solution. |
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India-Pakistan |
NWFP officially renamed as Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
2010-04-16 |
[Dawn] Pakistan's North West Frontier Province was officially renamed as Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa on Thursday. After getting the National Assembly's nod of approval earlier this week, the bill has now been passed by the Senate. Eighty senators voted in favour of the new name, while just 12 opposed it. An amendment which had been moved by the PML-Q against the province's renaming was rejected by the upper house. Former NWFP interior minister Shahzada Gustasap said that the change in naming the province was already expected in the Senate. He thanked those who had voted against renaming the NWFP and said that the people of Hazara would continue to struggle for a separate province. The session had started off on a turbulent note with PML-Q and PML-N senators staging a walk out over remarks that had been made by ANP Senator Haji Adeel in a talk show. The Senator, Haji Adeel, had said that some PML leaders used to 'eat pork and drink whiskey' in the past but was quick to clarify that his statement was not directed at Quaid-e-Azam. Mr Bokhari, who represents Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in the Senate, noted that the present bill had come when Pakistan had an elected president who did not interfere with the parliamentary committee or parliament while the previous major Eighth and Seventeenth amendments were made under duress to distort the Constitution as desired by then military rulers. "The Eighteenth Amendment has thrown out that dirt and now you have a clean constitution ...," he said about the bill which also aimed to enhance provincial autonomy, repeal the 17th Amendment of 2003 that legitimised the decrees of then military president Pervez Musharraf, and provide for a parliamentary oversight of the appointment of judges of the superior courts. |
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India-Pakistan |
US screening plan 'genocide' of cultural values: Rabbani |
2010-01-14 |
[The News (Pak) Top Stories] Senators have demanded that the president and the prime minister should not undertake visits to the United States till the US government withdraws new screening guidelines for body search of Pakistani citizens. The Senate on Wednesday began discussion on an adjournment motion regarding issuance of new set of screening guidelines by the United States subjecting Pakistani passengers to special scrutiny. The motion was moved by Mian Raza Rabbani and Deputy Chairman Jan Muhammad Jamali. Leader of the Opposition Senator Wasim Sajjad demanded that the US should officially be conveyed that such a treatment of Pakistani passengers was not acceptable. He also proposed that the issue should be raised at the UN Human Rights Commission. He said the president and the prime minister should not visit the US till Washington withdraws such body search restrictions on Pakistanis. Wasim Sajjad also suggested that the foreign minister should visit the United States to convey concerns of the Pakistani nation and parliament over undignified behaviour with Pakistani citizens at American and European countries airports. Earlier, initiating the debate, Mian Raza Rabbani, who was one of the two co-movers, said these screening guidelines are sheer violation of the International Human Rights Charter and the government should raise the issue at global forums. He also demanded that a protest memorandum should be handed over to the US Embassy in Islamabad. Rabbani termed the new screening guidelines genocide of cultural values, saying the citizens of third world countries also enjoy the rights equal to those of developed countries. He said the US restrictions were also sheer violation of Article 1 and Article 2 of universal declaration of human rights. ANP's Senator Haji Adeel called for tit-for-tat response to the Americans. Jan Muhammad Jamali, the other mover, demanded that Americans should be subjected to the same screening guidelines on their arrival in Pakistan. |
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India-Pakistan |
Malakand commissioner replaced |
2009-04-26 |
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