Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Husain Haqqani resigns, ready to face investigation


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Ambassador to the US Husain Haqqani has submitted his resignation to Prime Minister Gilani in light of the ongoing ‘Memogate’ scandal.
Haqqani was in a high level meeting with the Pakistani civilian and military leadership in Islamabad today.
A statement made on his official Twitter account stated that “I have requested PM Gilani to accept my resignation as Pakistan Ambassador to US.”
The statement further said “I have much to contribute to building a new Pakistan free of bigotry and intolerance. Will focus energies on that.”
Husain Haqqani has been Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States since 2008.

US supports democratic system in Pakistan: Munter


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ISLAMABAD: US Ambassador to Pakistan Cameron Munter on Tuesday extended American support for the political and democratic process in Pakistan.
Talking to the media after visiting the Rawalpindi office of the Medical Transcription Billing Company (MTBC), the ambassador while commenting on the ‘memo issue’ said that the US State Department has been very careful in giving its reaction on it as it is a Pakistani matter.
“We respect Pakistani institutions to address that matter,” Munter said.
Replying to a question about American reaction to the memo issue, the ambassador said, “We are strongly supportive to the democratic process (in Pakistan), the constitution, the rule of law, your country, and the will of Pakistani people to make sure that there will be justice” adding that “we support that and see how it will work”.
Regarding replacing Pakistan’s Ambassador Haqqani from Washington, Munter said, “We have to wait and see”.
Replying to a question about his meeting with Chairman Tehrik-e-Insaf Imran Khan in the presence of Director General Inter Services Intelligence agency General Ahmed Shujah Pasha, Munter said, “I met with Imran Khan and I met with General Pasha but I have not met them together.”
Answering another question about any soft corner for Imran Khan, Munter said, “People (in Pakistan) are looking for leadership, people are looking for a kind of society where there is openness, and many people of this country are talking about a political system that will be transparent, that will be open and democratic, prosperous and stable” adding that, “you will always hear from us supporting those kind of ideas.”
Appreciating the work being done at MTBC, the American ambassador said it is the best example of Pak-US partnership in people-to-people contacts and in business.
He said he was satisfied to see the people working together showing leadership, innovation and partnership and respect for each other.
The US ambassador toured various departments of MTBC and observed the operations of the facility.
The MTBC, a US based firm, started its operations at PAFWA Community Centre, Islamabad with the goal of training and encouraging young Pakistani women to develop their IT and entrepreneurial skills.
In 2005, the MTBC started its operation in Rawalpindi and enhanced its outreach to young professionals with a view to developing quality manpower.
The MTBC has provided jobs to 1,000 persons in Rawalpindi and over 500 are also working in its Bagh office.

Taliban should give up terrorism to initiate talks: Rehman


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ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Rehman Malik on Tuesday said dialogues have already been offered to the Pakistani Taliban but these cannot happen unless the militants throw away their arms and give up terrorism.
“There is nothing formal regarding talks with the Taliban. The Taliban usually send messages to us and I also sometimes convey them a message so that peace could prevail. But it is clear that if the Taliban want to shake hands with us they would have to get rid of their arms,” he said.
The minister was responding to questions raised after inaugurating a ceremony where 50 new Mobile Registration Vans (MRVs) were added in the fleet of the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) to facilitate the population settled in remote areas.
“Few days back we received a message from the Taliban for talks and yes we also offered them. We are happy they have realised that killing innocent people is wrong and the only way forward is the path of peace,” he said.
The minister said he could not say much on the issue and added that all the stakeholders would sit together to find an amicable solution.

Army not undertaking any negotiations with TTP: ISPR


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RAWALPINDI: Strongly and categorically refuting media reports, a spokesperson of the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said on Tuesday that the army was not undertaking any kind of negotiations with the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) or its affiliated militant groups.
Such reports are concocted, baseless and unfounded, the spokesperson added.
Any contemplated negotiation or reconciliation process with militant groups has to be done by the government, the spokesperson concluded.

Pakistan shelves ‘obscene’ text message ban


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan rowed back on Tuesday from demands that text messages containing nearly 1,700 “obscene” words should be blocked, following outrage from users and campaigners.
On November 14, the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) distributed a list of 1,695 words in English and Urdu, the national language, to operators, giving them seven days to implement a filtering system.
But the list was met with uproar, both at the attempt to censor messages and the inclusion of many seemingly innocuous terms, among them “Jesus Christ”, “lotion”, “athlete’s foot”, “robber”, “idiot”, “four twenty” and “harder”.
On Tuesday, PTA spokesman Mohammad Younis Khan told AFP the authority would consult civil society representatives and mobile phone operators on refining a much shorter list of words, giving no timeframe for any eventual ban.
“At the moment we are not blocking or filtering any word,” Khan said. “No final decision has been taken in this regard,” he added.
A PTA committee with representatives of civil society and mobile phone operators will decide on a “final list of objectionable words” which Khan conceded could be only around “a dozen”.
“We have no plan to block any word until and unless it is approved by that committee and it will take time to reach that decision,” he added.
A letter accompanying the list on November 14 said filtering was legal under the Pakistan Telecommunication Act of 1996 which prohibits people from transmitting messages that are “false, fabricated, indecent or obscene”.
The PTA on Tuesday claimed that the November 14 list was merely “preliminary” and “advice” for operators to adopt a filtering system.
Mobile operators have already detailed their “concerns and reservations”and said they would seek further clarification from the PTA.
“Most of the words mentioned in the list are used legally,” lawyer Syed Mohammad Tayyab told AFP.
“Like 420. It is a section of the Pakistan Penal Code,” he said.
“The PTA policy is unjust and unfair on the face of it. It needs judicial review,” said Tayyab, who is also a senior prosecutor in terrorism cases.
Campaign group Bytes for All had vowed to challenge the order in court, saying “a new, ruthless wave of moral policing” violated rights to free speech and privacy, and made a mockery of the entire country.

Hafiz Gul Bahadur warns against working with army

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PESHAWAR: A powerful militant commander who has a peace deal with the Pakistani military said his fighters would not stop army engineers building a road through territory he controls in the country’s northwest, but warned locals working on the project would be killed as spies.
The statement by Hafiz Gul Bahadur shows the shaky nature of the deal he has in the Afghan border region of North Waziristan, which is home to many of the most active militant groups. It follows reports that the Pakistani Taliban, perhaps the most deadly faction there, had entered into preliminary peace talks with the government.
Bahadur and his some 4,000 fighters are a deadly foe for US troops across the border in Afghanistan, but do not target Pakistani troops, unlike some militant factions, including the Pakistani Taliban. This distinguishes the Bahadur group in the eyes of the Pakistani army, which has an unofficial nonaggression pact with them and other allied groups like the Haqqani Network.
Earlier this month, Bahadur threatened to abandon the deal, complaining the army had killed some of his men.
Army engineers are building new roads in the tribal regions, seeking to win over the population. The United States, which is supporting Pakistani anti-insurgency operations to reduce attacks in Afghanistan and squeeze al-Qaeda, is paying for some of them. The army is building one such road through North Waziristan.
We ”will not create any hurdle in their work so long as our pact is intact, but residents are restricted from contacting them, providing gravel, machinery and vehicles,” the Bahadur group said in a statement, which was distributed in North Waziristan and received by The Associated Press on Tuesday.
”Such people will have no protection from the holy warriors,” the statement said, accusing the army of recruiting locals for spying. ”They will be responsible for any losses.”
Army officials were not available for comment.
The military has undertaken operations in most of the tribal regions, but has yet to do so in North Waziristan. It has several thousands troops stationed in the remote region. As well as Bahadur, the region is home to the leadership of the Pakistani Taliban, the Haqqani network and al-Qaeda operators planning and training for attacks around the world.
The United States has asked Pakistan to move into the region, but it has not done so, saying it lacks the troops. The United States routinely attacks militants there with drone-fired missiles.
The Pakistani Taliban have claimed responsibility for many of the hundreds of suicide attacks on army, intelligence and civilian targets around the country since 2007. It wants to oust the democratically elected government and replace it with a hardline Islamist state.
Some commanders have said recently that they are in preliminary contact with government intermediaries to discuss a possible peace deal. The government has not confirmed this. Any deal with the Pakistani Taliban would likely alarm the United States, which has criticised past deals.

Court cannot order reopening of overseas cases, Awan tells SC


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leader and former law minister Babar Awan on Tuesday told the Supreme Court that it could not order the reopening of cases overseas, FTNews reported.
The apex court was hearing the petition seeking a review of the court’s judgment that declared the controversial National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) illegal.
During the hearing, Awan said the attorney general at the time had written the letter to the authorities without taking advice.
He further said that the court had ignored the law of past and close transaction, adding that the court had no authority to reopen overseas cases to investigation.
Awan claimed that the federal government had never protected the NRO.
During the hearing, Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry remarked that the constitution and law governed the country.