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India-Pakistan
Generals face harsh criticism as NA passes defence budget
2011-06-19
[Dawn] The opposition PML-N raised on Saturday sharp questions about the performance of Pakistain's military in recent years, with one senior politician calling it confidence-shaking, before the National Assembly approved the defence budget of over Rs505 billion.

It was during debates on more than 200 opposition cut motions on demands for grants for two federal ministries and two divisions that the military role came under what was probably the severest criticism during a budget discussion in the country's parliamentary history.

This is because "Pakistain's people are now compelled (to ask questions)", the PML-N's main speaker on the subject and former Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central...
chief minister, Sardar Mehtab Ahmed Khan, said in a pointed speech before another prominent party figure and former minister, Ahsan Iqbal, and a couple of back-benchers also came hard on the role of generals for involvement in politics since first military ruler Field Marshal Ayub Khan seized power in 1958.

"Pakistain's defence failures for some years have shaken the people of Pakistain," Sardar Mehtab said as he accused the General Headquarters of imposing its will on domestic and foreign policy issues. "In the past few years, particularly in the past one year, people's confidence has been badly affected," he added.

This was the latest of a series of attacks on the military leadership in the lower house from the country's largest opposition party since the presentation of the budget for fiscal 2011-12 early this month.

Leader of opposition Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan's was only a subdued criticism when he opened the general debate on the budget on June 6, but two other senior PML-N members, Khwaja Mohammad Asif and Ms Tehmina Daultana, came out with strident attacks in their speeches afterwards in what seemed to be a party policy, which attracted the charge, in a statement of a June 9 corps commanders' conference, of a showing "conceptual biases" to run down the armed forces.

Defence Minister Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar came out with only a brief ridicule of what he called Sardar Mehtab's "drum-beat" and politicisation of the situation and, while declining to go into politics, said the government would make every effort to strengthen the country's defence, before the house rejected all 34 cut motions and approved the defence ministry's demands, including the largest of Rs495 billion for defence services.
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India-Pakistan
Grab the reins of power
2011-05-07
[Dawn] "All praise is for the Almighty who bestowed sovereignty upon the army, then made the people subservient to the army and the army subservient to its own interests" -- Justice M R Kayani

Here we are today, at the lowest point in our recent history. Found not in a cave of Tora Bora or in the ragged mountains of Wazoo but in the serenity of Abbottabad, living within a mile of the famous parade ground of PMA Kakul, next door neighbour to an Army Major and in the city that hosts three regimental centres, the late Osama bin Laden
He's dead, Jim!
, in our very own country. Many had feared that this day would come, but never imagined he would be living in such a suspiciously well protected manner.

By this time, I can assume with a high confidence that opinions and columns in the hundreds, if not thousands, have been written on what was Pakistain's role in the raid, how Pakistain could have missed the most wanted man on Earth, what it means for Pakistain and how to move on. But, in the midst of all, we are losing a battle that we, the 'bloody civilians', have been eager to fight for too long.

Imagine this. The hurriedly called morning meeting at the roundtable in GHQ on May 2. Major and Lieutenant Generals tense and nervous, not knowing what to say. The General, K, possibly broke the ice by asking everyone about their last evening's score on the 9-holes at the state subsidised Rawalpindi Golf Club. It was a birdie on the difficult 6th, he said. Oh, and he allegedly met the Chief Minister of Punjab too for some unknown reason.

What goes on in the corridors of military power is a mystery to us. What guides their actions remains a complex web of calculations, strategic they say, often immoral, disgusting, irrational and suicidal in our eyes. They value their assets, they hedge their bets and they play both sides of the game and try to bluff the single most powerful country in the world, to which they have played as a near mercenary force for a fair time ("Our Army can be Your Army" said Field Marshal Ayub Khan, the darling of the khaki apologists).

What we know today is that this is possibly the biggest embarrassment the military has faced in a long, long time. Forget 1971, it was far more morally disastrous but it had its jingoistic and racist supporters, but even in the eyes of the khaki-apologist, today the military is naked and deserving of criticism. The khaki apologist who becomes a constitutionalist when it comes to the failings of the army (the politicians are the constitutional power holders, they guided the actions, they "sold the country", not the Army -- is the usual defence) and are cognizant of the military's powers only when it is on the good side of things, is angry today too. There are too many questions.

Did we protect him? Did we give him refuge? Why would we do that? If not, did we ignore his presence? Are we this incompetent? Did the Field Intelligence Unit (FIU) never ask a question about a mysterious seven kanal house with a three-story building, built by settlers known from being Waziristan? Is the holy mother of all agencies so inept and useless that in the sweeps done around areas visited regularly by the Army Chief and the upper hierarchy, they never got suspicious of the house and its residents? How did bin Laden come to Abbottabad in the first place? Did he take a Rs. 70, 13-seater Hiace ride from Mansehra and stop off at the Baloch Regimental Center?

If not, then why did they allow a foreign power to come in and hunt him down? Did our forces coordinate and collaborate with the US on the raid? Why are they not speaking? It is not as if they would not want to take credit for it. The logic of avoiding the local terrorists' wrath is just too pathetic, they already target us. Mullah Omar's, Hekmatyar's and Haqqani's anger be damned, this is their protector we are talking about. It is stupid, nay unimaginable, that our forces collaborated extensively and do not want to take credit for it. They would not risk inviting the wrath of the international media that they have called upon themselves today.

And then there is the ultimate nightmare. If they did not know about the operation, then really, like the Foreign Office in its poorly worded, shamefully funny press statement says, we failed to respond in time to nothing less than an invasion? At cruise speed, terrain hugging and avoiding radars, a UH-60 "Blackhawk" (or even the secretive stealth helicopter that are rumoured to have been used, although non-stealth Chinooks are alleged to have provided support too) would have easily spent more than 30 minutes inside Pak territory before the soldiers roped down into the compound. A 40-minute operation and then the return ride. In all, the US team spent at least an hour-and-a-half inside Pakistain and we failed to respond? Were our radars jammed completely? Did we even fail to respond to visual sighting of a bunch of helicopters? Is our response time so slow? With three regimental centres in a highly militarised town, no one was able to answer to a 40-minute ground operation by foreign forces? Are our defenses so inept and weak? Did we scramble jets? When did we, if, realise that it was a friendly country conducting an anti-terrorism raid and not "the enemy"? What is the purpose of keeping the armed forces if they consume such a large chunk of our budget and fail to respond to nothing less than an invasion that lasted for 90 full minutes?

I am, for not a single moment, arguing we should have shot down the Americans. I for one believe they did the right thing. For all we know, it was the nightmare we have, that some sympathetic group in our very forces protected the most wanted man on Earth. The questions I pose are the multitude that people from various facets of life and inclinations ask. They ask what would happen if India were to carry out the "surgical strike" that their jingoists threaten of? They ask, yes India is not the United States, but how could our air defense systems be so easily jammed and fooled and tricked? They ask, what is the response time to an invasion? What is the purpose of an Army that let's others not just operate in its territory, but come in, operate and go back?

So, today, we are at a point where the Army's defenses are weak. It is being criticised by the international community and ever so slightly, by locals too. But the criticism is weak and non-existent in comparison to what it should be. This is the time when the Army is rightfully exposed to the most criticism. If you ever held any views on civil-military balance that did not hold civilians in contempt, right now is the time to shout and be heard.

If there's anything that can be guaranteed, it is that the military will remain the most dominant player in the echelons of power for the times to come. And because that will happen, we will continue to fight for "strategic depth" in Afghanistan, we will continue to hold India as the mortal enemy, we will continue to amass even more nuclear weapons, procure even more fighter jets and buy another air refueler and what not. We will remain an impoverished, militarised, third world country. And as long as we remain militarised, and existing only to fight against the mythical enemy, the schools will remain dysfunctional, the hospitals non-existent and the people, poor, hungry and malnutritioned.

Barely 40 hours before the United States Naval Special Warfare Development Group, or SEAL Team Six, fast roped down into the compound of Osama bin Laden, our Army Chief told a ceremony at the annual 'Youm-e-Shuhuda' (Day of the Martyrs) that prosperity must not come at the cost of honour and dignity. Where was the honour and dignity when, like the Foreign Office says, soldiers from another country basically invaded ours, operated and went back, without even so much as a bird being swatted in response?

The political process is an evolutionary one. Slowly, and slowly, we are moving towards a functional democracy. A Public Accounts Committee functions well today, maybe another institution of accountability and justice and public service will improve tomorrow. The politics of urbanisation is here. But amongst all this evolutionary change, unless the fish with the small legs comes out of the water, the process of evolution will face the ultimate barrier -- the military.

I do not aim to demonise the military here. Our soldiers have laid down immense sacrifices for the protection of our boundaries. They have protected us from threats, both internal and external. Even today, make no mistake, we are at a state of war for such a large active deployment of soldiers is nothing short of a full-fledged war, and they are the constant targets of the forces of evil and enemies of humanity. But it is the higher direction of war that is misguided and irrational. We wanted to liberate Kashmire in 1965 and we failed. It only resulted in a large loss of life, loss of sympathy for the Kashmire cause and a permanent setback to the economy. We sent soldiers to die on the peaks of Kargil
... three months of unprovoked Pak aggression, over 4000 dead Paks, another victory for India ...
, fooling a Prime Minister and a nation and thinking that the world would accept that those were "non-state actors" and not our own soldiers. We abandoned our own uniformed men to die on the peaks when we could not even supply them with the basic food supplies for our war was adventurous and the shenanigans of a would-be autocrat. We have lost too many soldiers to the misguided policies of our higher brass. The soldier is just a pawn in the games of the powerful, for his life is a small price in the game of chess they play.

For all their failings, the politicians we have are ones we elected. Incompetent, greedy and often despicable as they are (supporting rapists and honour killers), they represent the collective will of the people in a system marred by inefficiencies and problems. Today is the time for them to come into action. It is not the time to be busy installing gas pipes in UC-84 of Muzaffargarh or to be making sure that their brothers and cousins got the 10 kilometre road construction contract. Today is the time to hold the military accountable for their failures and their actions and bring some direction to the state of affairs.

If there was a time for all facets of society to collectively bargain for change and demand action, this is the time. Come what may, a loosely tied group of non-elected, unelectable, "civil society activists" cannot bring change. Change has to come from the political class. Only they have the tools and the platform to do it. It is directly affected by the media and the perceived voice of the public. The fire breathing demagogues of television ape each other. Kharbooza kharboozey ko dekh kar rang pakarta hai. One of them rips apart a poetic self-righteous line on illusory sovereignty and others feel the need to do so. Imagine that if we can collectively raise hue and cry, how the politicians cannot become sensible and secure enough to take action and hold the military accountable. While it would be commendable if they could resign for their failures, but they get extensions, it is upto the public to demand accountability. Intelligence failures in 1965 were never addressed, the concerned officer was promoted(!). In 1999, the adventurer toppled the government. Isn't it time we demanded accountability of the powerful and unaccountable?

The Kargil Review Committee Report, commonly called the Subrahmanyam Report, was just a small step in the evolution of India's civil-military balance. The politicians held their military accountable for the failures of Kargil. We never did that. Today is the most opportune time to do that. Constitute a Parliamentary Commission, for we do not have a Subrahmanyam, nor should we rely on ex-bureaucrats to do that. Select a few hawks, a Tehmina Daultana and a Khawaja Asif. Select a few mild, calculated and efficient politicians, a Raza Rabbani and SherryRehman. Do not put dubiously pro-military politicians like Chaudhry Nisar or ex-generals like Jehangir Ashraf Qazi on it. Summon the DG ISI, DG MI, DG IB. Summon the Army Chief. Summon the bureaucrats. Summon the experts. Summon everybody. Make them testify. Ask them the tough questions. Make the report, if not the proceedings, public.

What should they ask them? I cannot imagine that anybody would even want to ask the unimaginable (did we protect him?). It can only be an intelligence failure inquiry. The good that can come out of this exercise is enormous. A much needed and necessary reform in the intelligence community, a reform in the civil-military balance and a reform in the culture that defines the rules of Islamabad. For once, we could even bring the ISI under civilian control and make it focus on intelligence and counter-terrorism not chasing journalists on CD-70s. For once, we could, just maybe, begin to redress the civilian-military [im]balance in the favour of the civilians. Define the policy, make the policy and own it. Do not let the Generals do it for you anymore. We can, for the first time ever, dream of a national security and foreign policy dictated not by Rawalpindi and Aabpara, but one where civilians make competent decisions, impose their supervision and enable the military to competently implement it.

The op-ed writers, the TV anchors and the pundits are busy answering the questions that either the west has or the old, aged line around the smokescreen of illusory sovereignty. They are missing the point. There is good that holds for us in this.

In the wake of 1971, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto passed gagging orders to prevent the media from criticising the military. The soldiers who returned later were protected by the state and no one was allowed to criticise their actions. Their honour was literally restored by Bhutto. And they sent him to the gallows.

We must not put a shroud on the failures of the military anymore. We have embarrassed our country a lot already. Today is the time for reform, redress and for us to start a new beginning.The military must face music for its actions and failures. Civilian power must be recognised. Strike while the iron is hot.
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India-Pakistan
Javed Hashmi, Hafiz Hussain, Mian Aslam sent to Adiala Jail
2007-09-23
Police launched a massive crackdown on All Parties Democratic Movement (APDM) leaders and workers in Rawalpindi and Islamabad early on Sunday and arrested Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Acting President Javed Hashmi, Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) leader Hafiz Hussain Ahmed and the MMA’s parliamentarian Mian Muhammad Aslam under Section 3 of the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance. The raids were made to stop the movement from demonstrating outside the Supreme Court on Monday and Tuesday and then outside the Election Commission on September 29 when the nomination papers of the presidential candidates would be scrutinised.

A list given to the police by the government also includes the names of anti-government religious leaders. “The list also includes the names of those who are dead or are outside Pakistan,” a police officer said, adding that orders were also issued for the arrest of PML-N Chairman Raja Zafarul Haq, Information Secretary Ahsan Iqbal and Ch Nisar Ali Khan.

Hashmi and Hafiz Hussain Ahmed were arrested from parliament lodges, while Mian Aslam was arrested from his residence in F-8 and sent to Adiala Jail for 30 days under Section 3 of the MPO.

Raids for arrest of Qazi, Asfandyar, Imran: Raids were also made for the arrest of MMA President Qazi Hussain Ahmed, Awami National Party chief Asfandyar Wali Khan and Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan. Police also searched the rooms of MMA leader Liaquat Baloch and PML-N leader Tehmina Daultana. They both were not present there.
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India-Pakistan
Dr AQ Khan being poisoned: Opp
2006-08-24
The opposition in the National Assembly on Wednesday alleged that Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan was being "slowly poisoned" and demanded the government allow a delegation of parliamentary leaders to visit the scientist. Dr Khan has been diagnosed with prostrate cacer the government said on Tuesday.

Speaking on points of order, MNAs of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz and Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal expressed reservations over the government's claims that Dr Khan was getting the proper treatment. "We fear that Dr AQ Khan is being poisoned. I want to bring our apprehensions on the record," Sahibzda Fazal Karim of the PML-N said. Tehmina Daultana said Dr Khan was being murdered and asked the government to let the nuclear scientist receive treatment at Shaukat Khanum Cancer Hospital.

Alternate Universe: Islamabad, 24 August (AKI/DAWN) - Two ruling party figures told the Pakistani National Assembly that they found detained nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan "merry and hearty" when they visited him on Wednesday. The government on Tuesday announced that Khan - under virtual house arrest since last year over accusations of running a rogue nuclear trafficking ring - was suffering from prostate cancer. However some opposition members voiced concern about the condition of the man considered the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb.

Pakistan Muslim League (PML) president Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain said he and Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani had a one-hour meeting with Dr Khan at his home earlier Wednesday. “He appeared to be ‘hashash, bashash’ (merry and hearty),” the PML chief said about the scientist who, he added, “came up to our car to see us off”.

His comment came after Tehmina Daultana of the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) said she feared the scientist was “being killed slowly” and Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA) president Qazi Hussain Ahmed said he was prevented from meeting the “national hero”. The MMA president said the whole nation was concerned about Dr Khan’s health, and called for removal of restrictions. He said Dr Khan was also his personal friend with whom had could not even contact on telephone for a year.

A government statement on Tuesday said results of recent tests and diagnoses had indicated that Dr Khan, 71, was suffering from prostrate cancer and that further investigations were being conducted by a board of doctors. Information Minister Durrani said Dr Khan’s health was “all right” and he was looked after by a team of doctors. He advised the opposition not to politicise the matter.

Additional: ISLAMABAD - After more than two and a half years of virtual seclusion for his role in a nuclear proliferation scandal, Pakistan’s ailing “atom bomb father” AQ Khan Thursday appeared on the state-run station PTV, chatting with ex-prime minister Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain. Hussain visited Khan, who was visibly frail, late Wednesday, after officials had reported a day earlier that he had been diagnosed with adino carcinoma (cancer) of the prostate.
He's 71 and has a history of heart problems. If they didn't catch it early, it may have spread to other organs.
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India-Pakistan
‘Clerics should unite to foil anti-Islamic propaganda’
2006-05-22
There should be unity among Muslim clerics and a true democratic system should be implemented to counter challenges of the new American world order, and foil European countries’ ‘negative propaganda’ against Islamic states, said Federal Religious Affairs Minister Ejazul Haq, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chief Imran Khan, Jamaatud Dawa Ameer Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz Vice President Begum Tehmina Daultana, Palestinian leader Samama Hamdan, Hamas leader Dr Khalid Mehmood, Punjab Special Education Minister Qudsia Lodhi, Pakistan People’s Party leader Qayyum Nizami, Senator Dr Khalid Ranjha and former Nazim Karachi Naymatullah Khan, at a roundtable press conference on Sunday. The Pakistan Institute of National Affairs (PINA) arranged the conference on the topic ‘Muslim World and American Attitude’.

Participants stressed the need to strengthen the Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC) to develop a mechanism for exchanging technology in science and education. They said that European countries were strengthening their economy and introducing changes to lives of their citizens, because of research in science and technology.

Ejazul Haq said apprehensions among Islamic countries were increasing because of American policies against the Muslim world. He said that America should reconsider its policies to have good relations with Islamic countries, and restore peace in the world. He said the Pakistani government could not survive if it broke relations with the developed democracies, especially America. The minister said that Pakistan could not compete even with its neighbours without improving education, science and technology, health and engineering.
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India-Pakistan
Anti-caricature protests turning anti-Musharraf
2006-03-07
MULTAN: The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), Jamaat Ahl-e-Sunnat and Tehreek-e-Insaf staged demonstrations to protest against the caricatures of the Holy Prophet (ptui pbuh) in European newspapers. The PML-N organised a big rally in Vehari, 100 kilometre south-east of Multan. More than 1,000 activists of the PML and the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal chanted slogans against the US, Israel and Denmark. The protesters torched the effigy of US President George Bush and flags of Israel, Denmark and the US.

Addressing the rally, MNA Tehmina Daultana called the removal of rulers “imperative” because of increasing lawlessness, inflation and the flawed foreign policy. She said any US attack on Iran would be an attack on the Muslim world and that such a move would be resisted. She said that “grave situation” in Balochistan and Waziristan was a conspiracy to divide the country to facilitate Washington. She said the “troika of the US-India-Israel was a move against China, Iran and Pakistan. The PML-N leader claimed that days of President Pervez Musharraf were numbered. Haji Tufail Waraich of the MMA said that by holding 100 percent strike on March 3, the people of Pakistan had demonstrated against the policies of George Bush and President Pervez Musharraf.
By striking 100% of Outer Waziristan, Musharraf has demonstrated he's not quite ready to leave office yet, Haji. Heh.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Nawaz convenes party meeting in Jeddah
2005-06-03
Former prime minister Mian Nawaz Sharif has convened a meeting of party leaders in Jeddah in the third week of June to discuss the party's internal affairs, Daily Times learnt on Thursday.
Last time I looked, Jeddah's in Soddy Arabia, not Pakistan. Why do they call it the Pakistan Mooselimb League and not the Soddy Mooselimb League?
Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leaders Raja Zaffarul Haq, Iqbal Zaffar Jhagra, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, Memoona Hashmi, Mamnoon Hussain, Pir Sabir Shah, Mushahidullah Khan, Sir Anjam Khan, Chaudhry Jaffar Iqbal, Tehmina Daultana, Sardar Zulfiqar Ali Khan Khosa, Khawaja Saad Rafique, Imdad Chandio and Sardar Yaqoob Nasir have been directed to reach Jeddah soon after the National Assembly's budget session. The meeting will decide about the PML-N's provincial office-bearers. Sources said that except the PML-N Balochistan, all three provincial chapters had differences over the appointments of provincial chiefs and general secretaries. Mian Nawaz Sharif had forwarded a list of the provincial office-bearers to party chairman Raja Zaffarul Haq a week ago, but the announcement was not made due to the adverse reaction from of senior party leaders.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
ARD demands independent inquiry into Dera Bugti killings
2005-05-07
The Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy (ARD) on Friday demanded an independent inquiry into the March 17 clashes in Dera Bugti where many people were killed, saying the alliance would soon meet to plan and adopt a joint strategy.

The ARD delegation, consisting of Makhdoom Amin Fahim, Iqbal Zafar Jhagra, Tehmina Daultana, Nawabzada Mansoor and others, visited Dera Bugti where they met Nawab Akbar Bugti and discussed several issues. They also visited the area where Frontier Corp (FC) personnel and Bugti tribesmen clashed on March 17. They expressed their sorrow over the destruction, especially in the Hindu Mohalla where a large number of men, women and children were killed.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
ARD lashes out at military's role
2005-01-03
Leaders of the Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy have reiterated their commitment to end the role of armed forces in politics which, they said, had been harming the country since its inception. Speaking at a public meeting here on Sunday, they said three rivers of the country was handed over to India occurred during the army rule in 1958, the 1969 martial law resulted in dismemberment of the country and the heroin and Kalashnikov culture was introduced by Gen Zia-ul-Haq's regime. They said that history would reveal the losses the country had been suffering, and would suffer, during the rule of President Gen Pervez Musharraf. ARD Chairman Makhdoom Amin Fahim said army's role was clearly defined in the Constitution, which was to protect the country's borders.
Which hasn't been a problem lately, so the army has had lots of time to do ... other stuff.
He said that genuine national leadership of the country namely them should be allowed to return to the country. The ARD movement, he added, would continue till the restoration of true democracy. Mr Fahim further said the ARD would not accept Gen Musharraf as president even if he left the army. He termed the 17th Amendment unconstitutional. The ARD chief said despite the government's claim of about $12 billion foreign exchange reserves, people were facing starvation due to price-hike. Opposing the construction of Kalabagh dam, he said it would mainly irrigate the lands of army generals. Only those dams should be built where there was a consensus among the four provinces.
Cheez, these guys sound like a bunch of whiny Dems.
Technically, I wouldn't be surprized if the new dams irrigated Pak Army generals' fields. Retiring in one piece from the Pak officer corps is rumored to be highly profitable.
ARD Secretary General Iqbal Zafar Jhagra said the struggle was aimed at revival of the 1973 Constitution. Welcoming the participation of the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal leaders, Hafiz Hussain Ahmad, MNA Asadullah Bhutto and Dr Khalid Mehmood Soomro, in the ARD public meeting, he said the MMA supported the ARD stand on the 17th Amendment. He said the combined opposition's struggle would continue till the end of Gen Musharraf's rule. The National Security Council, he said, was a contravention of the constitution and undermined the supremacy of parliament. He regretted that the state institutions had been made subservient to Gen Musharraf. Mr Jhagra said that after coming into power the ARD would do away with the supra-constitutional NSC. MNA Tehmina Daultana said that Gen Musharraf's wrong policies had brought disrepute for the armed forces. The top brass of the army, she alleged, was engaged in minting money and acquiring plots, instead of performing its duty.
Which is so different from all the other Muslim and third-world countries.
She said the president was afraid of the genuine leadership because after their return he would find no place for himself. MMA leader Asadullah Bhutto alleged the president was using state resources for strengthening his rule. He said the MMA and the ARD would jointly struggle for the repeal of the 17th Amendment and to bring an end to army's role in politics.
This sounds like the airhead division of Pakiwaki politics.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
30 Suharwardy supporters held in Karachi
2004-06-20
Police arrested 30 supporters of the slain Pakistan People’s Party Parliamentarian (PPPP) leader Munawar Suharwardy in Karachi on Saturday for disturbing the peace in the city, an official said.
"Disturbing the peace" in Karachi? The mind boggles...
About 50 supporters of the late Suharwardy protested in front of the provincial legislature, chanting slogans against the government and demanding the arrest of his killers. Police arrested 30 of the opposition members and booked them for disturbing public peace, said police official Abdul Majid Dasti, adding that they could be detained for up to one month.
"Thirty days or thirty dollars! Next case!"
Parliamentarians hailing from opposition benches in the National Assembly and Senate on Saturday peacefully marched to the Parliament House to protest the killing of PPPP leader Munawar Suharwardy. The protest march was led by PPPP President Makhdoom Amin Fahim, Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal central leaders Liaquat Baloch and Hafiz Hussain Ahmad and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz leader Tehmina Daultana. The lawmakers chanted slogans against the government for its failure to maintain law and order in Karachi. They were holding placards inscribed with slogans like “Arrest the murderers of Shaheed Suharwardy”, “Restore peace and security in Karachi” and “Nation wants halt to Wana operation”.
... which aren't taking place in Karachi, are they?
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India-Pakistan
PAK: MMA rages at possible Pakistani deployment to Iraq
2003-06-28
Powerful Islamic parties voiced fury on Friday at President Pervez Musharraf’s conditional pledge to send Pakistani troops to Iraq on the request of the United States, adding to opposition from lawyers and secular parties.
But then, they're usually voicing fury over something, so what else is new?
Gen Musharraf, during this week’s visit to the US, reiterated that he supported “in principle” sending Pakistani troops to join a post-war peacekeeping force, provided it was under the auspices of the United Nations, the Organisation of Islamic Conference or the Gulf Cooperation Council.
"We lack the sufficient number and size of testicles to support Our Friend and Ally™ on our own..."
President George W Bush had personally conveyed the request to his Pakistani counterpart during their talks at his private Camp David retreat on Tuesday, Mr Musharraf told America’s ABC television channel. “This is an alarming situation,” Prof Khurshid Ahmad, a federal Senator from the Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) party, said. “It seems that America is trying to press Pakistan to send its forces to Iraq,” he said in a statement.
I think we just did that to get a rise out of the JI turbans...
The JI’s Ahmad accused the US and Britain, whose forces are suffering almost daily fatal attacks in the post-war Iraq, of “trying to draw in other countries to face the consequences of their illegal occupation... America has not brought freedom or security to Iraq. It is [a] simple occupation and Pakistan cannot and must not be a party to it.” Political commentators and other opposition parties were scathing of the potential deployment to Iraq, saying they would be equal to “mercenaries” cleaning up after the US. “We will not allow the Pakistani army to become mercenaries. We oppose the idea of sending army troops to Iraq,” Tehmina Daultana of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz told a press conference.
Good. We wouldn't want an army we might have to fight someday to actually have any combat experience...
Analyst Muhammad Afzal Niazi said Pakistan was being “sucked into the quagmires of both Afghanistan and Iraq... From a national army, the Pakistan army is to become a US-surrogate mercenary force.”
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India-Pakistan
MPs suspect foul play by US in Fokker crash
2003-02-27
The death of Pakistan's air force chief in a Fokker plane crash last week reverberated in Parliament yesterday as opposition MPs voiced suspicions of a U.S. hand in the incident. But Prime Minister Zafarullah Khan Jamali rejected the apprehensions as an attempt at "playing to the gallery".
"It's gotta be some sort of infidels plot..."
Liaqat Baloch, leader of Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), said the timing of the February 20 crash "gives enough reason to be suspicious as there is disturbance on Afghan borders and there is a tremendous pressure on Pakistan due to Iraq crisis. On Afghan issue after 9/11 Air Chief Mushaf Ali Mir had refused to give bases to the United States. There are reports in international media that the United States is testing aircraft jamming technology in the region as part of its preparations to attack Iraq," Baloch said.
You knew this was coming, didn't you?
Yeah. If I was gonna test aircraft jamming technology, I'd go to the Pak-Afghan border area. (I'm not sure why...)
He said a military plane crashed in Iran and then there was the Fokker incident in Pakistan and subsequent crash of a Cessna plane in which Afghan minister Mohammed Jumma Mohammadi was killed. "If it is true that the United States is testing this weapon, then it is a crime against humanity," Baloch said.
Our secret electronic weapons at work.
If the U.S. isn't testing weapons in the area, and all three crashes are a result of crummy maintenance, as I suspect they are, then I'd say that's a crime against humanity. A little less reading the Koran, a little more reading the manuals, okay?
"The air marshal had the guts to say what others cannot say," said MP Tehmina Daultana from Pakistan Muslim League party of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif. She added that the Fokker was a safe plane and asked, "How could it crash like that?"
I dunno. Maybe Mahmoud left a wrench in one of the air intakes? Or maybe Lashkar e-Jhangvi decided they were all infidels and apostates and such...
MMA member Hafiz Hussain Ahmed demanded that a parliamentary committee should probe the crash and present a report. "The nation is still in the dark about the C-130 military aircraft crash in August 1988 that killed then president General Mohammed Ziaul Haq," Ahmed said.
You really want to dig into that one, Ahmed? Be careful, you might find something.
Makhdoom Amin Fahim, parliamentary leader of Pakistan People's Party of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, said a timeframe should be fixed for the official investigation. Defence Minister Rao Sikander Iqbal told the National Assembly that a high-level inquiry team comprising air force officers, technical and medical experts was looking into "all aspects" of the Fokker crash. "Whether it was human error, technical fault, bad weather or sabotage, any speculation is premature," Iqbal said. "On receipt of the inquiry report, the public will be informed about it," the minister said. "It is unjust to speculate as a team of very experienced experts is conducting investigations," Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said.
I guess offering the help of the NTSB is out of the question?
Prime Minister Jamali, dismissing the opposition suspicions, criticised the tendency to draw "political mileage" from the incident. "The investigation committee is doing its work and there is no need to be touchy and itchy about the matter," Jamali said.
Now that's a slap! Way to go, Jamali!
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