Saturday, December 03, 2011

Anjum Aqeel arrested from court premises


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RAWALPINDI: The court (Special Judge Central) here on Saturday rejected the bail plea of Pakistan Muslim League- Nawaz (PML-N) Member National Assembly (MNA) Anjum Aqeel in the Police Foundation Land scam case.
Later, Anjum Aqeel and Abdul Hanan, co-accused in Police Foundation Land scam case, were arrested by the FIA from the court’s premises after the rejection of the bail plea.
Speaking to media representatives outside the court, PML-N leader Zafar Ali Shah said they had accepted the decision of the court.

Certain elements trying to divide nation: PM


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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Saturday said that certain elements were trying to divide the nation on the issues of the Nato attack and memogate scandal, FTNews reported.
After a meeting of the Pakistan People’s Party – Punjab’s parliamentary party, PPP – Punjab president Imtiaz Safdar Warraich told media representatives that during the gathering, the prime minister stated that the Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz (PML-N) was trying to create the impression that President Asif Ali Zardari was a threat to the country’s nuclear program.
The prime minister said the political parties’ lack of confidence on the president was saddening, Warraich said.
The meeting took place under the chairmanship of Prime Minister Gilani and PPP MPAs informed him of their grievances with the Punjab bureaucracy.

Tariq Khosa refuses to head commission on memogate


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ISLAMABAD: Former Director-General of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) Tariq Khosa has refused to head a one-man commission to investigate the memo scandal, FTNews reported on Saturday.
The commission was set up by the Supreme Court.
Khosa, who has also served as inspector general of Balochistan police, is a brother of Justice Asif Saeed Khosa and Punjab Chief Secretary Nasir Khosa.
Earlier, former law minister Babar Awan had questioned Khosa’s nomination at a press conference by saying that he was a brother of the Punjab chief secretary and a judge of the Supreme Court.
But those who worked with Khosa called him an ‘upright’ man and a ‘clean’ government officer.
The scandal erupted when US citizen of Pakistani origin, Mansoor Ijaz, accused Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States, Husain Haqqani, of masterminding an alleged memo sent to a senior US military official asking for help to rein in the Pakistani military after the American raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad in May.
Haqqani denied the allegation and resigned from his position of ambassador in the wake of the controversy.

Pentagon says Pakistan not joining bombing probe


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WASHINGTON: Pakistan is refusing to participate in the US investigation of last week’s Nato bombing along the Afghanistan border that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.
At a Pentagon briefing Friday, Defence Department press secretary George Little said the US asked Pakistan to be part of the investigation, but the Pakistanis have ”elected to date” not to participate.
That decision is just one in a series of actions Islamabad has taken in retribution for the incident, including a move to shut down supply lines that the United States uses to get food, fuel and other equipment from ships at Pakistani ports on the Arabian Sea to troops in Afghanistan.
At the same time, however, US military officials said Friday that Pakistan has continued to have representatives at the border coordination centres working with Afghan and coalition forces.
So far, the US has sufficient supplies on hand and has been able to find other ways to get shipments through to Afghanistan, including alternate routes through Uzbekistan.
”Logistics is about alternatives; it’s about options, and we’re certainly working through what sort of options we may need to pursue,” said Navy Capt. John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman.
Asked why the US has chosen to express its regrets for the incident but has not explicitly apologised to the Pakistanis, Kirby said that ”in this case, this was clearly a military engagement…that cross-border fire resulted in the deaths of some two dozen Pakistani soldiers, not innocent villagers or civilians.”
Kirby added that it is too early to assign blame for the deaths because the investigation is not yet completed.
Other defence officials have told The Associated Press that when US and Afghan forces came under fire, the US checked with the Pakistan military to see if there were friendly troops in the area and were told there were none.
Pakistani officials have said that the US gave them the wrong location when asking clearance to return fire.
Defence officials deny that, and say the investigation is likely to point substantial blame at the Pakistanis.
The US officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is not complete.
German Brig. Gen. Carsten Jacobson, a spokesman for the Nato coalition in Afghanistan, said it will take much of December to complete the investigation.
”We need Pakistan to join this process so that we have a rounded picture,” he said, adding, however, that, ”we have to understand that emotions obviously are very high on the Pakistani side.”
The incident has deteriorated the already shaky US relationship with Pakistan, endangering the war in Afghanistan, including reconciliation efforts with members of the Afghan Taliban who often seek sanctuary in Pakistan.
But defence officials said that so far the retribution from Pakistan, including the shutdown of supply lines, has had negligible effect on the war effort, including operations to go after insurgents.
”I don’t think, if I was a member of the Haqqani network or the Taliban, that I’d be lollygagging around that area,” said Kirby.
US Defence and State Department officials also said the US continues to reach out to Pakistan and hopes that the relationship can be mended.
At the State Department, spokesman Mark Toner told reporters that efforts were continuing to persuade Pakistan to participate in next week’s conference in Bonn, Germany, on the future of Afghanistan. The Pakistanis withdrew from the event this week.
”We think it would be regrettable if Pakistan were not to attend this conference,” Toner said. ”It’s important for the region. It’s important for the neighbourhood. It’s important that we all work to put Afghanistan on a square and solid footing.”
Toner said that the US and Pakistan had a shared interest in combating extremist groups operating in Pakistani-Afghan border areas and that cooperation needed to be improved.

Militant hideouts pounded in Orakzai, over dozen killed


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PARACHINAR: Helicopter gunships attacked militants’ hideouts in the northwestern tribal region of Orakzai, killing around a dozen insurgents, local security officials said.
Five hideouts were destroyed, they said. There was no independent confirmation of the death toll and militants often dispute official figures.