Friday, November 18, 2011

PPP concerned over ‘memo gate’ scandal

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ISLAMABAD: The core committee of Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) on Friday discussed the controversy surrounding Ambassador to US Husain Haqqani over a secret memo alleged to have been sent by President Asif Ali Zardari to former chairman of US joint chiefs of staff Admiral Mike Mullen.
The committee meeting was held under the chairmanship of President Zardari who is also the party’s co-chairman.
The president took the party’s top leadership into confidence over his meeting with Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani and said that an investigation would be held into the matter.
Party stalwarts termed the situation grim and said that the opposition was taking advantage of the circumstances and attacking the government on this front.
President Zardari directed PPP leaders to effectively counter the opposition’s propaganda.
The president also discussed Zulfiqar Mirza’s London visit and his meeting with Scotland Yard officials with party officials and assured the core committee that he was not directing the former minister.

Ministry belongs to party: Sharjeel Memon

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ISLAMABAD: Sindh’s Information Minister Sharjeel Memon said on Friday that his ministry belonged to the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and that the party could take it back whenever it thought fit, FTNews reported.
Speaking to media representatives at the airport in Islamabad, he said the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) was a coalition partner of the PPP and that the two parties had cordial relations.
He further said that his visit to London was for personal reasons and that he had booked his ticket a week before flying. He further said that former PPP minister Zulfikar Mirza had booked his ticket only a day before departing for London and that their presence at the airport together was purely coincidental.
He said Mirza was doing everything independently and that the PPP had no relation to his actions.

Pakistan orders companies to block obscene texts

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ISLAMABAD: Texters in Pakistan better start watching their language.
A Pakistani cell phone company says the country’s telecommunications authority sent a letter Thursday ordering firms to block messages containing obscenities.
Anjum Nida Rahman, a spokeswoman for Telenor Pakistan, said Friday the company received a list of more than 1,500 English and Urdu words that were to be blocked. She said it was part of the regulator’s attempt to block spam messages.
Many of the words were swear words or sexually explicit terms. But the reason for blocking others, such as Jesus Christ and headlights, was less clear.
The Associated Press obtained both the letter and the list of words. The letter was dated Nov. 14 and gave companies seven days to implement the order.

Reshma Power Plant pays back Rs4.57bn on SC orders

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ISLAMABAD: The Reshma Rental Generation Ltd on Friday paid back Rs4.57 billion to the national treasury on the orders of the Supreme Court, FTNews reported.
Sources said that the administration of the Reshma project had informed the Supreme Court bench hearing the rental power projects (RPPs) scam case in writing regarding the payment.
The bench that has been hearing the case comprises of Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry and Justice Khilji Arif Hussain
Earlier on Thursday, the apex court had ordered the Reshma Rental Generation Ltd to pay back by Friday rest of the 14 per cent mobilisation fund advanced to it for setting up the rental power plant.
The amount ordered to be paid back stood at Rs4.57 billion. The company was told it would have to ‘face consequences’ if it failed to abide by the order.

‘Opposition’s stance against unconstitutional change welcome’

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ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan on Friday appreciated Leader of the Opposition’s statement in the National Assembly about opposing any unconstitutional change.
Speaking to media representatives, the minister said it was very encouraging to know that the opposition would oppose any unconstitutional change in the country.
She said this showed that political parties had learnt from past mistakes and that they would not repeat them in the future to derail the democratic process.
Firdous said the parliament which was the custodian of public rights was the right forum to discuss all issues.
Replying to a question regarding an alleged memorandum written to a US General, the minister said the government had faced such conspiracies in the past and that the anti-Pakistan lobby would not succeed in destabilising Pakistan through these plots.

PM rules out any unconstitutional change

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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Friday ruled out any unconstitutional change in the country saying, ‘only people will bring change in 2013 through elections’.
Responding to various point of orders of the Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz (PML-N) lawmakers regarding an alleged memorandum addressed to a US military official, Prime Minister Gilani said he had already issued a statement about it on the floor of the parliament in response to a point of order raised by Leader of the Opposition in the House.
“So raising this issue time and again is wastage of time. There are also several other issues in the country which should be discussed,” he said.
Prime Minister Gilani said that he had already summoned Pakistan’s Ambassador to the US to give an explanation in this regard. “Let us wait for the ambassador’s explanation,” he said.
He said that after the Abbottabad incident, the government summoned an in camera session on the opposition’s demand and concerned authorities gave a detailed briefing on that.
He said that the government always protected national institutions, including the ISI, in accordance with the country’s constitution.
Prime Minister Gilani further said that panic should not be created due to a newspaper report.
He said ‘blame game’ would not serve any purpose.

Haqqani fights a grim battle for survival

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ISLAMABAD: The controversy brewing over ‘secret memo gate’ refuses to die down. Now that former US military chief Admiral Mike Mullen has acknowledged its existence Ambassador Husain Haqqani appears to be fighting for his survival while the political scandal also threatens to envelop the presidency.
Ambassador Haqqani in a TV interview said he would travel to Islamabad to explain his position in a couple of days, but political pundits don’t think that the gravest ‘survival crisis’ during his over three years stint as the country’s envoy in Washington was over.
And an official, who has closely watched the saga unfold, claimed that the government looked inclined to accepting his resignation offer to pacify the powerful establishment.
The government had summoned the ambassador to clarify his role in the potentially explosive political scandal that has put the civil-military ties in a spin.
Mr Haqqani has himself admitted his predicament, but put a positive note to it saying the nature of crisis was not new.
“We have been at this crossroads before,” he twice said in twitter postings while replying to comments that the generals wanted his removal.
Mr Haqqani, who is obviously not the most liked person in the military establishment for having criticised it in his writings before becoming ambassador, was apparently referring to the furore over Kerry-Lugar Bill in 2009. It was an open secret then that the militaryhad demanded his removal, but the ambassador was able to tide over the crisis. Following the Kerry-Lugar episode, Mr Haqqani, known for fighting back, reinvented himself and at one point earned the confidence of the powers that be — something that helped him get at least one extension in his job contract.
Nevertheless, difficult situations continued to arise subsequently, but on each occasion he survived.
Mr Haqqani in an interview said: “I’ve been consistently vilified as being against the Pakistani military even though I have only opposed military intervention in political affairs.”
The latest controversy erupted almost a month ago when Pakistani-American businessman Masoor Ijaz in an op-ed piece for Financial Times claimed to have helped deliver a message from President Zardari to the then US Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen seeking help against a possible military takeover. In return, Ijaz had claimed that Zardari offered to replace army and intelligence leadership.
The secret communication was flatly denied by the government. Admiral Mullen too initially denied having dealt with Ijaz, but now acknowledged having seen the memo. However, the admiral maintains that he disregarded it for not being credible.
“Adm. Mullen had no recollection of the memo and no relationship with Mr. Ijaz. After the original article appeared … he felt it incumbent upon himself to check his memory. He reached out to others who he believed might have had knowledge of such a memo, and one of them was able to produce a copy of it,” his former spokesman Capt John Kirby told The Cable.
“That said, neither the contents of the memo nor the proof of its existence altered or affected in any way the manner in which Adm.
Mullen conducted himself in his relationship with Gen Kayani and the Pakistani government. He did not find it at all credible and took no note of it then or later. Therefore, he addressed it with no one,” Capt Kirby added.
Admiral Mullen’s acknowledgement is likely to add to the raging storm.
This is not the first time Ijaz, who heads New York-based Crescent Investment Management, has created a crisis situation for the government in Islamabad.
He tried to vilify Pakistan government in 1995 when his demand for 15 million dollars for delivering votes in the United States House of Representatives for the passage of the Brown Amendment was rejected.
Ijaz is also known for his association with former CIA Director James Woolsey.
But sacking Haqqani may not be all that easy and as one of his aides suggested, in a telephonic conversation with private news channel, the issue was much more complicated than it met the eye. “Is it only the ambassador or the top man (Zardari) is also under the cloud,” the aide retorted when asked how the envoy planned to deal with the situation.
Besides, the military is said to have not been satisfied with government’s explanations and is pushing for “a deeper and meaningful probe/fixing of responsibility”.
As the plot thickens fingers are now being pointed to a senior presidential aide for his alleged role in drafting the memo.
The military, a source claimed, was in possession of intelligence indicating that days after the delivery of memo on May 10 the US started closely monitoring the developments and particularly kept a close eye on the subsequent corps commanders’ conferences and what transpired during those sessions.
This revelation seemingly contradicts Mullen’s latest claim that he had disregarded the memo.
Meanwhile, another source said, the country’s permanent representative to the UN Hussain Haroon is likely to be made ambassador to Washington in the event of acceptance of Mr Haqqani’s resignation, while Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir could then take up the position in New York.

Decision to be based on national interest: Nawaz

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SUKKUR: PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif has said that although the time has come to force the government to step down, his party will take into consideration the interest of the country and the nation before deciding to quit the assemblies.
Talking to reporters at Sukkur airport on Thursday, Mr Sharif said he had held a conversation with former foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and another meeting with him was likely to be held on Nov 22.
Mr Qureshi resigned from the basic membership of the PPP and the National Assembly on Monday. Mr Sharif said he and his colleagues had been trying for a long time to make the government realise the severity of national problems, because it was essential for strengthening democracy to solve problems being faced by the people. However, he added, the performance of the government had been far from being satisfactory.
The PML-N chief visited Chak area in Shikarpur district and offered condolences to the families of three Hindus who had been killed recently.
Addressing a gathering, he deplored that the killers had not been arrested despite the lapse of a week and urged President Asif Ali Zardari to set up his camp in the area till the killers were arrested.
Mr Sharif said that during the PML-N government he had arranged a court in the house of a victimised woman in Sindh. He said those involved in crimes should be dealt with severely as the PML-N government had done while fighting with dacoits. Talking to a five-member delegation of the PML-N Lawyers` Forum belonging to the minorities that demanded protection, especially for Hindus, he assured them of his support and advised the members of the community not to leave the country.
Addressing a public meeting at Madaiji near Garhi Khuda Bux, he said that the nation should get united for the development and prosperity of the country.
Mr Sharif said the PML-N was capable of solving the problems of people.
Azhar Kumario, an elder, joined the PML-N on the occasion, leaving the PML-Q. Mr Sharif was accompanied by National Assembly`s former speaker Elahi Bux Soomro, Pir Pagara`s grandson Umar Shah Rashidi and other leaders of the PML-N.