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India-Pakistan
Pakistan, UK partners in fight against terrorism: Gilani
2012-05-10
[Dawn] Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani
... Pakistain's erstwhile current prime minister, whose occasional feats of mental gymnastics can be awe-inspiring ...
on Wednesday said Pakistain and the United Kingdom were partners in the fight against terrorism and extremism and his country remains committed to fight the scourge till its elimination.

Addressing a reception here at the House of Commons to meet with British Parliamentarians, on the invitation of High Commissioner Wajid Shamsul Hasan, Gilani said the democratic government has created national ownership to the campaign against terrorism and has brought all stakeholders on board.

Gilani said the Parliament has recently reaffirmed Pakistain's commitment to the elimination of terrorism and was combating extremism in pursuance of Pakistain's national interest.

"We have also repeatedly said that we would not allow our territory to be used for any kind of attacks on other countries
Then his lips fell off.
and we expect that the soil of other countries would not be used against Pakistain," said the premier.
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India-Pakistan
Nuggets from the Urdu press
2012-02-12
These nuggets are culled from the Urdu press. They are summarised here without comment. Absurd or ridiculous, tft takes no responsibility for them

Sudan goes crazy over nikah?
Reported in Mashriq a Sudanese scholar had rashly announced that a Moslem woman could become a witness in the solemnisation of nikah in her own right. He also decreed that women could take part in funeral prayers or janaza. He also added that women lining up behind a ma holy man during namaz was also a mere custom and not according to Islam. Truly Islamic Pakistain does none of these things.
 
Wajid Shamsul Hasan a burden on exchequer
Daily Mashriq reported that Pakistain's High Commissioner in London who is a PPP appointee, Wajid Shamsul Hasan had become a terrible burden on the national exchequer of a poverty-stricken Pakistain as he was living in a luxurious rented residence for which 25 lakh pounds were being paid. He was also constantly ill for which the charges were being defrayed by Pakistain.
 
Bashir Riaz on secret agencies
Writing in Jang Hamid Mir commented that Bashir Riaz had revealed facts about Pak agencies who stalk politicians all over the world but are found sleeping when the Americans violating our air space come in helicopters to invade Abbottabad
... A pleasant city located only 30 convenient miles from Islamabad. The city is noted for its nice weather and good schools. It is the site of Pakistain's military academy, which was within comfortable walking distance of the residence of the late Osama bin Laden....
 Prime Minister breaks loose?
Writing in Jang Saleem Safi stated that Prime Minister Gilani did not consult with President Zardari before dismissing the Defence Secretary, General Lodhi from his job. This was apparent because the president was himself shocked that the PM did this, which also proved that he was merely acting when meeting with the Army chief together with the president. It was learned that wrong kind of people had joined the PM's camp and were advising him to take on the Army.
 
Freebies in the Cricket Board
Daily Jinnah reported that a number of people were doing nothing at the Cricket Board of Pakistain but drawing big salaries. Among those who were drawing several lakh rupees per month were: Shafqat Rana, Waseem Bari, Abdul Qadir and Javed Miandad.
Rename the bloody thing the Locust Board and be done.
Benazir and her spying servants
Hamid Mir revealed in Jang that According to Bashir Riaz while Benazir was living in Dubai she was so suspicious of local servants that she imported specially loyal ones from Larkana but soon enough they were taking money in their special accounts and passing on all information to the agencies. They were found to be receiving up to 10,000 dirhams for this snooping.
 
'Supreme Court wrong on NRO'
Daily Mashriq reported lawyer leader Asma Jahangir as saying that she did not like the NRO but was convinced that the Supreme Court's view of the NRO was wrong. She said the Court should not have moved against lawyer Babar Awan but let the Bar Association take action against him. Now the Court was scared after suspending his licence.
 
A 'doctor' TV anchor traps Benazir
Further revealing facts in Jang Hamid Mir stated that Bashir Riaz memoir talked of a Dr Something TV anchor who arrived in Dubai and tried to show Benazir sitting at a table while a wine bottle sat next to her. Benazir was not aware what the Doctor Anchor was up to till a dancing girl also swung into view, after which she angrily walked out of the interview which the anchor was relaying to his spy masters on cell phone. She told him she knew who he was and for whom he was working. Later Zardari gave a lucrative job to the Doctor Anchor at PTV after the death of Benazir.
 
PPP tells PMLN elections in October
Reported in Nawa-e-Waqt PP government had told PMLN leader Ch Nisar Ali Khan that it was ready to hold elections in Sept-Oct 2012 which meant that Senate election will proceed in early March and the budget for 2012-13 would be presented by the PPP government before elections.
 
Musharraf acts like a dictator!
Right hand man of Pervez Perv Musharraf
... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ...
, Fawwad Chaudhry told Nawa-e-Waqt that his leader Pervez Musharraf while abroad was acting like a dictator within his party All Pakistain Moslem League and therefore he was thinking of quitting it. He said Musharraf's close adviser Dr Mujtaba was involved in sectarian conflict and was making Musharraf ignore other party members. Daily Express reported that Ch Fawwad might join Tehrik Insaf.
 
The sacred ring of the Prophet PBUH
Famous columnist Haroon Rasheed wrote in Jang that the ring (khatam) of the Holy Prophet PTUI!)'>(PTUI!) was a kind of stamp which was lost after his demise because it fell into a well during the rule of Hazrat Usman the Pious Caliph. Despite much effort at filtering water and sand, it could not be found.
 
Benazir prayed for Zardari
According to Jang in Hamid Mir column Benazir was in the habit of ringing Zardari and praying over the phone and then breathing the prayer into the phone to bless Zardari and save him from all adverse happenings. This showed how loyal she was to him and appreciated him as her companion.
It could possibly be that she was religious. I'm not sure how high a probability to assign it, though.
Pakistan falls in 'democracy index'
Daily Jang reported that Pakistain had fallen from 114th position to 115th in the world democracy rating while India had climbed from 40th to 39th position. This was published by the Economist Intelligence Unit.
 
Goodbye, Nawaz Sharif and Zardari!
Writing in Jang Haroon Rasheed stated that the truth was that Pakistain Army was the target of America and that generals Kayani
... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI...
and Pasha were in the firing line of Washington but no one was sincere in standing with them. Nawaz Sharif
... served two non-consecutive terms as prime minister, heads the Pakistain Moslem League (Nawaz). Noted for his spectacular corruption, the 1998 Pak nuclear test, border war with India, and for being tossed by General Musharraf...
was not honest in his claims and had been disloyal to the nation. Now three people have to leave (rukhsat): Gilani, Zardari and Nawaz Sharif.
 
Imran needs six months more of PPP
Daily Express reported Imran Khan
... aka Taliban Khan, who ain't the sharpest bulb on the national tree...
as saying if the PPP government stayed in power for another six months it would be good for his party. He said if the elections were held before September his party can face problems. He needed more time to consolidate his position while his relations were good (maaqul) with the Army and the game of the PPP government was up (khail khatam).
 
Commission advises disciplining of ISI
Columnist Dr Tauseef Ahmad Khan wrote in Express that the Saleem Shahzad Commission had examined the evidence brought before it and had opined that Saleem Shahzad may have been the victim of his relations with the terrorist including Ilyas Kashmiri. The Commission had taken note of the evidence against the ISI and had recommended that it be made better answerable and brought under better discipline.
 
Saudi pupils convert American teacher
Jihadi publication al Qalam reported that in Soddy Arabia a class of Moslem pupils learning from an American teacher had persuaded him to change his religion to Islam. He found the pupils so sincere in their presentation of Islam that he quit Christianity and embraced Islam.
 But will he remain Muslim once he returns home?
Bashir Riaz a PPP loyalist
Columnist Hamid Mir wrote in Jang that Bashir Riaz was such a loyalist of the PPP that Benazir in her last testament asked Zardari to look after the man who was her front man since 1987 and was the organiser of the event of her wedding with Zardari. After her death however he was looked after by Zardari but he chose to return to his home in Lahore and write his memoirs of the Benazir legacy.
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India-Pakistan
No choice but to support Iran if Israel attacks: Wajid
2012-02-09
[Dawn] Pakistain's High Commissioner to Britannia Wajid Shamsul Hasan said that Pakistain would be left with no option but to support Iran if Israel attacks it.
Looking forward to takin' on dem Jooze...
In an interview to a British newspaper The Sun published Wednesday, Hasan expressed his concerns over the United States' "Drone Wars" that have taken the lives of hundreds of innocent civilians in Pakistain.

"We know the damage -- destroyed schools, communities, hospitals. They are civilians -- children, women, families. Our losses are enormous," the newspaper quoted him as saying.

"I think time is running out until the Pakistain government can take a stand. They will have to at some stage take punitive actions to stop them. They have got means to take such actions to defend their own frontier and territories," Hasan further added.

Hasan urged British Prime Minister David Cameron
... has stated that he is certainly a big Thatcher fan, but I don't know whether that makes me a Thatcherite, which means he's not. Since he is not deeply ideological he lacks core principles and is easily led. He has been described as certainly not a Pitt, Elder or Younger, but he does wear a nice suit so maybe he's Beau Brummel ...
to convince the US that the drone attacks were counter-productive, making the American "the most hated people in the minds of the people in Pakistain."

Talking about Iran, he said: "We wouldn't like to be seen as part of Israel's campaign against any country. If Israel attacks Iran, it will have an impact on Pakistain as well."

"We will have to safeguard our own interests. We also have a Shia population in Pakistain who will not take it lying down."
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India-Pakistan
Nuggets from the Urdu press
2012-01-08
Punjab divorce rate rises
According to Nawa-e-Waqt divorce applications have arisen to an all time high at 45,500 at the rate of 15 percent annually. Ninety percent of these applications result in divorces while only five percent cases are resolved through reconciliation. Most of the cases arise because of violence and the gradual breakup of the family system in urbanised Punjab.
 
Bilours in rebellious mood
Reported in daily Pakistan Ghulam Ahmad Bilour central leader of ANP in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and federal railways minister said that his brother Bashir Bilour deserved to be chief minister of K-P but President Zardari was opposed to it because he knew that Bashir would have boosted ANP at the expense of the PPP in the province. He said his family of three brothers enjoyed good contacts with PMLN.
 
Veena Malik unlucky in love
Daily Jinnah reported that Pakistani filmstar working in India disappeared for days and was found without any untoward incident but she explained that she was depressed after she lost her latest boyfriend Ashmeet, an Indian actor. She was actually living with Ashmeet when the break happened after which she became depressed because according to her she suffered two broken engagements and two broken friendships based on love.
 
Chacha Cricket 'in trubbel'
Daily Jinnah reported that the famous bearded clerical looking cricket fan who appeared in all international cricket matches backing the national team had fallen on bad times as his expectations that he would make some money by becoming an attraction during the matches had not fructified. He was once doing fine at Rs 60,000 salary in Abu Dhabi but decided to earn more as a cricket fan. Because of bad times he has had to sell his house but pins hopes on Imran Khan coming to power and paying him to appear at the matches again.
 
Wajid Shamsul Hasan defends himself
Daily Mashriq reported that Pak high commissioner to the UK Wajid Shamsul Hasan denied that he had said that the American US raid in Abbottabad to kill Osama was known beforehand to President Zardari. He said what he said originally that it was possible that the top leaders of Pakistan should have been taken into confidence before the operation to kill Osama.
 
Chief editor to the rescue!
*musical sigh in close harmony* Our hero!
Reported in Jinnah Chief Editor of the paper Khushnood Ali Khan reached Sheikhupura to ask after two sisters who were made naked by three youths and thereafter dragged through the streets of the city without anyone stopping them. The youths were incensed after a quarrel among children and the two sisters were treated badly because they came from a poor family and could not defend themselves. Khushnood Ali Khan went to the home of the girls and gave them a cheque. The crowd gathered there clapped in appreciation.
The Muslim St. Nicholas, that man.
Mansoor Ijaz agent of RAW and Mossad
`Daily Mashriq quoted veteran politician from Mianwali Dr Sher Afgan as saying that Mansoor Ijaz was an agent of RAW and Mossad and was trying to destroy Pakistan. Also it quoted Maulana Samiul Haq as saying that Taliban did not trust Pakistan therefore the US must talk to the Taliban directly. It quoted Maulana Fazlur Rehman as saying that Pakistan must force Americans out of the Gazi Barotha base too.
 Amazing. This, my dears, is the logic that would impose Islam upon the world.
Imran for Khilafat Rashida
Quoted in Express Imran Khan said in Gujranwala that if he got elected as prime minister he would spread the system of pure Islam or Khilafat-e-Rashida so that the people got the same kind of justice as under the most respected Khilafat of the truly Guided companions.

Punjabi Taliban attacked Mehran Base
Daily Mashriq reported that a woman terrorist named Sabiha caught by the police in Karachi stated that it was her group of Punjabi Taliban who had attack the Karachi Mehran naval base and Abdullah Ghazi tomb on behalf of Al Qaeda. She said she had herself observed the Mehran Base site before getting her male terrorist companions to go in and attack. She confessed that her group had also blown up the Karachi house of SSP Ch Aslam. Jamaat Islami chief Munawwar Hasan said that Mehran Base was attacked by America.
 
Army and free plots of land
Columnist Hamid Mir wrote in Jang stated that all general-rulers of Pakistan made the same mistake, as pointed out in Hamoodur Rehman Report after General Yahya. All generals down to Musharraf allowed army officers to buy precious cantonments lands and build multiple houses there after indulging in plot sales. All army officers at the upper level owned many houses but were not able to defend Pakistan properly. When in East Pakistan fighting local uprising, the army looted banks and lost territory to India in West Pakistan.
 
Imran Khan's wealth
Daily Jinnah reported that Imran Khan owned hundreds of kanals of land plus elegant houses in Islamabad, Lahore and Mianwali. He also ran three foreign currency accounts. He owned 438 kanals in Bhakkar and 78 kanals in Sheikhupura. He owned land and apartment in Islamabad valued at Rs 11 lakh. He owned 300 kanals in Bani Gala, Mohra Nur. He got over 300 kanals as gift valued at Rs 2.5 billion. Total value of assets was declared at Rs 2 crore.
 
Asange condemns Mansoor Ijaz
Daily Pakistan reported Wikileaks leader Julian Asange as saying that the memo sent to Adm Mullen was fake as also the cellphone record sent by Mansoor Ijaz later was concocted because Ijaz was the owner of a communications company who could cook up the data. In the company owned by Mansoor Ijaz there is a director who was once a CIA agent.
 
Raw will destroy churches during Christmas
Daily Jinnah reported in advance that RAW had planned to attack Pakistan during Christmas to destroy churches and schools owned by the Christian missionary so that the world could blame Pakistan Army and the Taliban for killing Christians. For this purpose India had infiltrated Raw agents into Pakistan.
How is it that each step they take lands upon the ground just like our feet? 
PPP suspects Nawaz of complicity with Army 
Writing in Jang Hamid Mir stated that some PPP circles were very upset at Nawaz Sharif for approaching the army top brass for support in getting rid of the PPP government. They said they were greatly upset also with the army top brass for betraying them although the president and the PM had supported the Army. It was after the Abbottabad attack that the Army felt itself vulnerable and became hostile, proving that the extensions given by the PPP government to Kayani and Pasha were wrong.
 
Pakistan guzzling CNG 
According to Jang Pakistan was using more CNG in vehicles than Pakistan if one looks at the percentage according to population. In fact Pakistan was wasting gas by using it in vehicles six times more than India. In all, 3 million vehicles were being run on CNG while 300,000 were equipped with illegal and defective CNG kits.

'Supreme Court shouldn't cross limits!'
Daily Express reported lawyer Asma Jahangir as saying that the Supreme Court should not cross limits otherwise the masses will cry out against it. She said that after 2 May 2011 incident ISI chief General Pasha should have resigned. She was referring to the killing of Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad.
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Home Front: WoT
Obama accused of exaggerating terror threat for political gain
2010-10-08
Nah, that would require us to question the timing of the president, and no one would ever do that ...
A US terror alert issued this week about al-Qaida plots to attack targets in western Europe was politically motivated and not based on credible new information, senior Pakistani diplomats and European intelligence officials have told the Guardian.

The non-specific US warning, which despite its vagueness led Britain, France and other countries to raise their overseas terror alert levels, was an attempt to justify a recent escalation in US drone and helicopter attacks inside Pakistan that have "set the country on fire", said Wajid Shamsul Hasan, the high commissioner to Britain.
If we wanted to set your country on fire, pal ...
Hasan, a veteran diplomat who is close to Pakistan's president, suggested the Obama administration was playing politics with the terror threat before next month's mid-term congressional elections, in which the Republicans are expected to make big gains.
That wouldn't do any good since the mid-terms aren't being driven by foreign policy or terrorism. In fact this is the first national election we've had since 2001 in which terrorism hasn't been discussed.
He also claimed President Obama was reacting to pressure to demonstrate that his Afghan war strategy and this year's troop surge, which are unpopular with the American public, were necessary.

"I will not deny the fact that there may be internal political dynamics, including the forthcoming mid-term American elections. If the Americans have definite information about terrorists and al-Qaida people, we should be provided [with] that and we could go after them ourselves," Hasan said.
Except that they have, and you haven't.
And we're not inclined to do so in the future, since not only does the ISI not 'go after' the thugs, they protect them and put them up at the Peshawar Hilton. It's easier to launch a drone zap ...
"Such reports are a mixture of frustrations, ineptitude and lack of appreciation of ground realities. Any attempt to infringe the sovereignty of Pakistan would not bring about stability in Afghanistan, which is presumably the primary objective of the American and Nato forces."
Clearly the Paks understand us as well as we understand them ...
Dismissing claims of a developed, co-ordinated plot aimed at Britain, France and Germany, European intelligence officials also pointed the finger at the US, and specifically at the White House. "To stitch together [the terror plot claims] in a seamless narrative is nonsensical," said one well-placed official.

While Abdul Jabbar, a Briton,
British, is he? I would never have guessed. Thought for a moment that his name was really 'Nigel' ...
and others killed by an American drone strike on 8 September in North Waziristan, in Pakistan's tribal areas, were heard discussing co-ordinated plots, including possible "commando-style" attacks on prominent buildings and tourist sites in European capitals, security and intelligence officials said the plots were nowhere near fruition.

The officials did not deny the men, and other foreign-born jihadi recruits who travel to the tribal areas for indoctrination and training, represented a potentially serious threat. "You have discussions about all sorts of things -- that does not necessarily mean there is anything concrete. It is not easy to set up groups," said one counter-terrorism official.
It's not impossibly hard, either. I recall a group of young men in Hamburg in 2001 ...
Pooh. They recruit them at the madrassahs, like college football players.
By making it clear that the US drone strikes were pre-emptive, and were not in any way combating an imminent threat, European officials raised fresh questions -- this time directly involving a British national -- about the legality of the attacks, which could be viewed as assassinations.
Yep, sure could be. We don't have a problem with that, even though the invertebrate Euros do. This just sounds like the bleating the Euros have to do to maintain their 'distance' from the US ...
They said Washington was the "driver" behind claims about a series of "commando-style" plots and that the CIA -- perhaps because it was worried about provoking unwelcome attention to its drone strikes -- was also extremely annoyed by the publicity given to them.

The plot claims, which western intelligence agencies were aware of for months, were leaked last week to the American media. They were followed by a spate of what security and intelligence officials said were exaggerated claims in the British media, a US state department warning to American citizens to be vigilant when visiting Britain, France, and Germany, a "tit for tat" warning by France to its citizens visiting the UK, and alerts issued by the Swedish and Japanese governments.

Thomas de Maizière, Germany's interior minister, publicly expressed his scepticism about the US terror warning, saying he saw no sign of an imminent attack on Germany. He described the danger to Germany as "hypothetical".
"Tut-tut. And tut!"
The sharp rise in US unmanned drone attacks in Pakistan's tribal areas, coupled with several cross-border raids by American helicopter gunships that culminated in the killing of two Frontier Corps soldiers last week, was destabilising Pakistan, Hasan said.
How could anyone tell that Pakistain was unstable?
"Why are they putting so much pressure on us? It is a threat to the democratic system ... But people in Pakistan feel Washington does not care." American actions were "obviously" linked to Obama's decision to set a timetable for leaving Afghanistan. The US leader had "jumped the gun" and now "the Americans are in a hurry".

He said fears were growing in Pakistan that the US was planning a bombing campaign using fixed-wing aircraft as well as drones in North Waziristan.
Fixed-wing, as in B52s? Someone at the Burg may finally get his wish ...
Hasan said Washington politicians failed to understand how much the US needed Pakistan in the "war on terror".
Indeed. Were it not for Pakistan, there would be no war on terror, remembering f'r instance that it was the Taliban, trained pets of Pakistan's ISI, that sheltered Al Qaeda before and after 9/11. Without Pakistan, how much longer would it have been until it was incontrovertibly brought to our attention that we were actually at war?
Nor did they realise that public anger over repeated US infringements of Pakistani sovereignty could boil over into attacks on American personnel and interests that the government might not be able to control.

"The government does not want to go down this road," he said. "But people feel abused. If they [the Americans] kill someone again, they will react. There is a figure that there are 3,000 American personnel in Pakistan. They would be very easy targets."
Ooooh, that sounds like a threat. We Americans really like being threatened. Ask us ...
Hasan said American personnel stationed at the Pakistani air force base at Jacobabad, on the border between Sindh and Baluchistan provinces, could be vulnerable if the situation deteriorated further. The US requested the use of Jacobabad, and other bases at Dalbandin and Pasni, after the 9/11 attacks, and has maintained a military presence there ever since.
The vaunted army of Pakistan, buttoned up in its cantonments, is incapable of standing off what would literally be an untrained mob? And he admits it?? How utterly mortifying for the troops and their officers.
Another Pakistani diplomat said Jacobabad was the main centre of operations for CIA and US army drones, which are ultimately controlled from America. "They have hangars there. That's where they fly from and that's where they return."
Time for us to get some carrier-based drones ...
The drone operations began in June 2004 with the tacit, reluctant agreement and involvement of the Pakistani authorities but were now in effect running beyond Pakistan's control, the diplomat suggested. "We have always denied it in the past. But everybody knows this is happening. We need to wake up," the official said.

A US official said: "Our allies have been briefed on the nature of the threat and the intelligence that led to the travel alert and everyone understands this cannot be taken lightly. To try to ascribe any political motivation is misguided and irresponsible."
Not that it stopped the liberal progressives a few years ago from saying exactly that ...
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan moved extra troops to India border: Wajid
2010-03-27
[Geo News] Pakistan has deployed more troops on the eastern border with India, saying the heightened tension with the neighbouring country has affected its efforts against the Taliban and other extremist organisations on the western border.

Confirming the report about reinforcement of troops on the Indian border, Pakistan's High Commissioner to Britain, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, said that India had increased pressure on the border by building several new military cantonments close to the sensitive frontier, and Islamabad can not remain subservient to the move.

"The government has had to send some troops down there because we don''t want to leave ourselves exposed. This is taking away from our defence capabilities on the Afghan border. We really wish the international community would intervene, but nobody has said anything to the Indians," a British newspaper quoted Hasan, as saying.

Experts and diplomats, however, have described the troops reinforcement as more of a political and diplomatic move rather than a strategic one.
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India-Pakistan
Mysterious shifting of Swiss case documents
2009-12-02
[Geo News] Pakistani High Commissioner in Britain Wajid Shamsul Hasan headed a secret operation in Geneva and received at least 12 cartons comprising the original documents and evidences against some Pakistani high-ups in Swiss money laundering case, Geo News reported Tuesday.

According to Geo News correspondent, the Prosecutor General of Pakistan in Geneva deposited these cartons in the era of former President Pervez Musharraf.

The sources said the secret operation was carried out at the bidding of a top personality of Pakistan, as these evidences could be used if Swiss Money Laundering case is reopened after the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) terms comes to an end.

The sources at Pakistan embassy said if the concerned officials or the courts do not interfere by taking the evidences back from Wajid, then these documents would be wasted for good.

The secret operation begins at 9am on Monday when Wajid arrived in Pak High Commission's car along with NAB's senior official Danishwar Malik at the office of Prosecutor General in Geneva.

According to sources, the Prosecutor General kept refusing to give the documents for some hours, as nobody from Pakistan embassy was formally receiving them.

It should be mentioned here that after the NRO, these cases were closed. However now that the term of NRO is over, it was all the more likely that these cases could be re-opened and these evidences could be employed against Pakistan's high personality.

Geo News team secretly filmed the whole episode from an undisclosed location after receiving tip-off from reliable sources.

The sources in Geneva told Geo News that Wajid Shamsul Hasan is arriving in Geneva from London, so that these documents could be destroyed or shifted to some safer place.

The Pak embassy in Geneva was kept aloof from the operation.

Geo News correspondent Javed Kanwal approached Wajid and Danishwar, as both of them appeared from the office. Both of them looked perturbed at the presence of Geo News reporter there.

When approached for comment, Presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar said he is absolutely unaware of any such operation; however, he would assert a portion of media is victimizing President Asif Ali Zardari with its heinous campaign.

The high-ups in Interior Ministry also said they are not abreast of any such report, adding the matter relates the NAB and Law Ministry.
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India-Pakistan
Taliban are threat to mankind-Wajid Shamsul Hasan
2009-05-07
[Associated Press of Pakistan] Pakistan High Commissioner to the UK Wajid Shamsul Hasan has described Taliban as threat not only to his country but to mankind as well and said they need to be eliminated.
He was speaking at a discussion organised by the member of British Parliament Lord Nazir Ahmed in the Houses of Parliament on Tuesday on the situation in Pakistan, the Sharia law, the Taliban and terrorism.

The High Commissioner said that in view of the dangers facing Pakistan, every citizen of the country must rise to the occasion and challenge this scourge of Taliban.

He said there was a need to distinguish between Taliban and Islam, and Taliban do not deserve to call themselves Muslims as they are killing the members of their own religion.

He paid tributes to Pakistan Army in its endeavour to establish the writ of the government in the troubled areas of Swat, Buner and Lower Dir and said the country has suffered immensely in terms of men and material in this conflict.

The High Commissioner called for inquiry by the UN into the funding of the Taliban, acquisition of sophisticated weapons and heavy duty vehicles.

Noted British journalist and member of the Respect Party Yvonne Ridley said the West must stop demonising Pakistan whose people are moderate and peace loving.

Pakistan Deputy High Commissioner Asif Durrani stressed on solving the Middle East issue as Al-Qaeda's global threat was related to that region. He brushed aside claims that Taliban pose danger to Islamabad.

Lord Ahmed spoke of the historical links between Pakistan and Britain and the said British Pakistani Diaspora has the moral responsibility to assist their land of origin in its hour of need.

A number of councillors of Pakistani origin including Mushtaq Lasharie, Hamza Malik, Riaz Mirza, Pervez Chaudhry and Sikander Lodhi also spoke on the occasion and called for removing the misperception about Pakistan while making efforts to promote and strengthen democracy.

The meeting also passed a resolution calling on Maulana Sufi Mohammad, Maulana Fazalullah, HajI Muslim and other leaders of the Tehrik-e-Taliban to lay down their arms and co-operate with the State authorities to provide good governance, justice and development in the region.

The British elected councillors of Pakistani origin also called upon the NGOs to help rebuild villages that have been destroyed in the drone attacks and by the Taliban.

The resolution called on the British Government to exercise influence on American government to stop drone attacks on Pakistan and the Tribal leaders in the FATA region to drive out foreign fighters who are using Pakistani soil to launch attacks inside Afghanistan.

The document further called on Pakistan Government to establish a national peace, dialogue and reconciliation centre in Islamabad and in FATA and Baluchistan to promote peace and harmony.

The resolution urged the British Pakistani and Kashmiri communities to help in rebuilding peace and stability in Baluchistan, FATA and Malakand regions by providing financial and logistic support.

It requested all the political leaders to unite for the supreme national cause of unity in Pakistan and refrain from playing politics at this critical juncture.

The British councillors strongly condemned the attacks on women and girls in schools by extremists as well as those on the police, law enforcing agencies while recognising the suffering of the civilians in FATA areas.

The UN was urged to address the issue of three million Afghan refugees in Pakistan and assist their return home.
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India-Pakistan
President, ISI chief leave for US
2009-05-05
President Asif Ali Zardari left on Monday for the US for his first ever meeting with US President Barack Obama on bilateral matters and other issues common to the two countries.

The president, who flew by a commercial flight, was seen off at Heathrow Airport by Pakistan High Commissioner to the UK Wajid Shamsul Hasan and other senior officials. Federal Interior Minister Senator Rehman Malik also accompanied the president.

President Zardari had earlier arrived in the British capital on Saturday evening at the conclusion of his three-day visit to Libya.

On Sunday, Muttahida Qaumi Movement leader Altaf Hussein met the president.

Also on Monday, ISI chief Lt Gen Shuja Pasha and chief of military operations Maj Gen Javid Iqbal left for Washington to attend the US-backed trilateral security talks, a private TV channel reported.

According to the channel, the trilateral talks on the regional security would begin on Wednesday. President Zardari and his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai would also be in Washington to take part in the meeting.

Military sources said Pakistan would raise the issue of drone attacks with the US administration and would press Washington to halt them. Pakistan has long been protesting that the drone attacks are proving counter productive and damaging the military's efforts to fight the war against terrorism.
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Britain
UK 'ignored' warning on bogus students
2009-04-27
British High Commission officials in Pakistan have been accused of failing to investigate bogus students entering the UK. Dr David Gosling, the UK-born head of Edwardes College, Peshawar, told the Observer newspaper that officials had ignored specific evidence that students were entering Britain on false papers.

Ten of the 12 men arrested in the UK this month for allegedly plotting bomb attacks were Pakistanis who entered Britain on student visas. They were released without charge but now await deportation.

Immediately after the arrests, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown had said Pakistan "has to do more to root out terrorist elements in its country". Wajid Shamsul Hasan, the Pakistani high commissioner in London, had retaliated by saying that the problem was "at your end".

Dr Gosling said in December last year he sent details of students who had obtained bogus visas to the British High Commission in Islamabad but was still waiting for a response. "The high commission is either turning a blind eye or just cannot cope with violations of visa protocol by local students. They do not appear to have taken my complaints seriously and have not responded to my specific requests to investigate these students since last December."

"When officials in Islamabad realise that something has gone wrong they try to cover up for the sake of the people involved. But the system appears to be a mess."

Gosling last autumn interviewed a student who admitted that he and a friend had gone to Britain under false pretences. He asked the high commission to investigate their cases.

Gosling said he knew many of the people at the high commission and believed that it was no longer functioning properly. "There do seem to be major problems in Islamabad. Many of the staff are now working in Abu Dhabi because of the regularity of bomb threats. We have bomb threats at our college as well, but we ignore them," he said. "I am concerned about these few fraudulent cases because I want to see the good students going to Britain and the bad ones held back."

He said he had decided to speak out because the Pakistan high commissioner was roundly condemned by ministers last week for pointing the finger at the British High Commission.

In a statement to the House of Commons, Jacqui Smith, the British home secretary, admitted that the students from Pakistan had been interviewed only by telephone by officials based in Abu Dhabi. One of those entered with forms that were not properly filled out.

Chris Grayling, the shadow home secretary, told Observer that Pakistan and other countries from which potential terrorists regularly try to enter Britain would be placed on an international blacklist.

But Dr Brian Iddon, vice-chairman of the parliamentary all-party group on Pakistan, warned: "I don't want knee-jerk reactions. America tightened its controls and the academic institutions regretted it. I don't think we should tighten it up to the point where they start going to other countries. ... There are future benefits in terms of trade and the economy. We have to be very careful we are not over the top."
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Britain
UK police release all Pakistani terrorism suspects
2009-04-23
[Al Arabiya Latest] British police said on Wednesday they would bring no charges against 12 men seized in raids to foil a suspected al-Qaeda plot that were brought forward due to a security breach. The men, 11 Pakistanis and one Briton, were arrested around northwest England on April 8 as part of a counterterrorism operation.

Police said all the suspects, aged between 22 and 38, had been released although 11 had been handed over to immigration officials and face deportation on national security grounds. Prosecutors said there was insufficient evidence to justify holding them any longer or bringing charges, police said.

"As there are ongoing issues of matters of national security around this investigation, it does limit what we are able to say," said Chief Constable Peter Fahy. "We had a duty to act to protect the public and a subsequent duty to investigate what lay before us. We don't take these decisions lightly and only carry out this kind of action if it is wholly justified."

Media reports at the time of the arrests said police believed a large attack in Britain was in its final stages. An unnamed source close to the investigation was quoted by the BBC as saying it was a "very, very big attack."

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said at the time the operation involved a "major terrorist plot," which briefing documents said was linked to al-Qaeda.

A Border Agency spokeswoman said: "The government's highest priority is to protect public safety. Where a foreign national poses a threat to this country we will seek to exclude or to deport, where this is appropriate."

The government has come under pressure to strengthen its visa rules after it emerged that 10 of the Pakistani men were in Britain on student visas.

Relatives of the suspects in Pakistan had pleaded their innocence and demanded access to them, saying neither the British nor the Pakistan government had provided them with information on their detention.

"Protecting the public is the main focus of the police. These arrests were carried out after a number of U.K. agencies gathered information that indicated a potential risk to public safety," the police spokeswoman said Tuesday. "Officers are continuing to review a large amount of information gathered as part of this investigation. Investigations of this nature are extremely complex."

Brown angered Pakistani officials after the April 8 arrests by calling on Pakistan to do more to "root out the terrorist elements in its country".

Pakistan's High Commissioner to Britain Wajid Shamsul Hasan responded by saying Britain should do more by allowing Pakistan to scrutinize people applying for visas.

Several plots to launch attacks on Britain have had links to Pakistan, including suicide bombings in 2005 which killed 52 people on three trains and a bus in London.

The Muslim Council of Britain criticized Brown for his remarks. Spokesman Inayat Bunglawala said the decision to deport the men following their release was "very dishonorable."

"When these arrests took place, in very dramatic circumstances with students being pulled from universities and thrown to the floor, we were told by the Prime Minister no less that this was part of a very big terrorist plot," he said. "We would hope that senior ministers and the Prime Minister will understand that it is completely unfair to make prejudicial and premature remarks in cases like this."
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Britain
UK police get more time to quiz terror suspects
2009-04-13
[Al Arabiya Latest] British police were granted Saturday a further week to question 11 men arrested over an alleged al-Qaeda-driven major terrorist plot, while one was released without charge, British police said.

Twelve men, among them 11 Pakistani nationals -- 10 in Britain on student visas -- and a Briton were arrested in raids across northwest England on Wednesday. "The North West Counter Terrorism Unit was last night given warrants for the further detention of 11 men arrested," a Greater Manchester Police spokeswoman said.

Suspects held in custody
An 18-year-old arrested in connection with the alleged plot was released without charge in relation to the anti-terror operation but is now in the custody of the U.K. Border Agency, which regulates immigration and can investigate the status of those entering Britain. The men, still held by police, are in custody in various locations across Britain. They range in age from 22 to 41, and can be held without charge for up to 28 days. Anti-terror police are still searching 10 addresses in the cities of Manchester and Liverpool as part of the probe.

A delay in the raid
Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the case involved a "very big terrorist plot" that security officials had been tracking for some time.

The raids had to be brought forward because of a security blunder by Britain's top counter-terrorism officer, Bob Quick, who was photographed carrying a secret document on the operation that said the alleged plot was "AQ-driven," meaning al-Qaeda. He resigned Thursday over the security breach.

Diplomatic spat
" Pakistan has got the problems of... groups of terrorists in their country operating from their country "
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
The operation caused a diplomatic spat between Britain and Pakistan. Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who wanted more assistance from Pakistan in rooting out extremists targeting Britain, held telephone talks with President Asif Ali Zardari.

Brown told the media that two-thirds of the terror plots investigated in Britain originated from Pakistan. "Pakistan has got the problems of . . . groups of terrorists in their country operating from their country," he said. "We need all the cooperation that we have with the Pakistani authorities to deal with these problems."

Pakistan fights back
Most terrorism plots in Britain since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United States, have had links to Pakistan, including suicide bombings which killed 52 people on London's underground and bus network in July 2005.

Pakistan's top diplomat in Britain, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, said Friday Pakistani authorities could help carry out background checks on student visa applicants but were not allowed to. "It is at your end, you have to do something more," Hasan told BBC television.

Though 10 of the 12 arrested were in Britain on student visas, Immigration Minister Phil Woolas insisted checks on applicants to weed out extremists were adequate.

Britain has been on high security alert ever since the July 2005 attacks on the London transport system, which killed 56 people including four suicide bombers.
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