Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Azam Swati resigns from JUI-F & Senate


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ISLAMABAD: Azam Khan Swati has resigned from the JUI-F and the Senate, FTNews reported.
During a press conference, Swati said national institutions such as PIA and Pakistan Railways were being destroyed by the corrupt government.
“The nation is at risk from those tasked to protect it” Swati said.
Swati also criticised the role of the Parliament, stating that it was not dealing with the problems faced by the common man.
Swati had also served as the minister for science and technology.

President Zardari to remain under doctors’ observation


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari is in Dubai for treatment for a heart condition, the government said on Wednesday, with one source saying he had suffered a minor heart attack and fuelling speculation that the leader may resign.
The statement from the prime minister’s office said Zardari went to a Dubai hospital at the insistence of his children, who live there. It contradicted earlier reports from Zardari’s own office that the tests were scheduled and routine.
“The president went to Dubai following symptoms related to his pre-existing heart condition,” Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani’s media office said.
“The president will remain under observation and return to resume his normal functions as advised by the doctors.”
A presidential spokesman later quoted Zardari’s doctor as saying his condition was stable.
A Pakistani source in Dubai familiar with the 56-year-old president’s condition told Reuters that he had suffered a minor heart attack.
“Two days ago, he had chest pain” and decided to go to Dubai, the source said.
Six years ago, Zardari had also had a minor heart attack, the source said. “Since then, he has been on medication.”
“He had a minor heart attack on Tuesday. He flew to Dubai where he had an angioplasty. He’s in good health now,” Mustafa Khokhar, adviser to the prime minister on human rights who sits in the cabinet also told AFP.
“There’s no question of any resignation,” he added.
A Dubai-based member of Zardari’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), Mian Muneer Hans, said the president landed in Dubai around 7:30 pm on Tuesday.
“He walked to his car in the airport and was not on any ambulance,” said Hans, adding that he was accompanied by his doctor and petroleum minister Asim Hussain. Zardari was taken straight to the American Hospital in Dubai, said Hans.
“He’s taking rest in the hospital now. He may be there for two to three days,” he added.
The hospital’s chief executive officer Thomas Murray, contacted by Reuters, declined to comment on the reports.
The rumours about his health and possible resignation swirled on Twitter and other social media.
“Some elements blew up this to create unrest in the country,” said Fauzia Wahab, a senior member of the PPP. “His visit to Dubai and having a medical check up is perfectly normal.”
Zardari was due to address parliament this week after the Supreme Court admitted an opposition leader’s petition demanding a judicial inquiry into the memo issue, including any role played by Zardari. That address has now been postponed.
If he were to leave office, he would become vulnerable to long-standing corruption charges in Pakistan by losing his legal immunity as a head of state.

Bilawal meets Prime Minister Gilani


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan People’s Party’s Chairman, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, met with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani here on Wednesday, FTNews reported.
During the meeting, Bilawal expressed satisfaction over the health of President Asif Ali Zardari.
The PPP chairman told the prime minister that after initial medical inspection, the doctors in Dubai said the president’s health was satisfactory.
Earlier, Mustafa Khokhar, minister in charge of human rights, had told the media that President Zardari had a minor heart attack and had undergone an operation in Dubai.

Rehman Malik meets Cameron Munter


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ISLAMABAD: United States ambassador to Pakistan, Cameron Munter, met with Interior Minister Rehman Malik in Islamabad on Wednesday, FTNews reported.
The two discussed subjects of mutual interest, the ministry said.
The one-on-one meeting was held at the minister’s residence, the ministry said.
Earlier, speaking to media representatives on the memogate scandal, Malik had said that the role of Mansoor Ijaz was also damaging for the United States.
Malik had also stated that the US should conduct a thorough investigation regarding Ijaz’s role.

Zardari had ‘minor heart attack’: Khokhar


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari suffered a “minor heart attack” and has undergone an operation in Dubai, but is in good health otherwise and will return to Islamabad Thursday, a minister told AFP.
Mustafa Khokhar, minister in charge of human rights, said that contrary to media reports there was “no question of any resignation” by Zardari, who is under pressure over a scandal that saw his ambassador to the US step down.
“He had a minor heart attack on Tuesday. He flew to Dubai where he had an angioplasty. He’s in good health now. He will come back tomorrow. There’s no question of any resignation,” Khokhar told AFP on Wednesday.
The minister contradicted presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar who said Zardari had been in hospital for tests and a planned medical check up.
State media said Zardari was accompanied by his physicians and personal staff, and that the tests were routine, linked to a “previously diagnosed cardiovascular condition”.
Zardari has been under pressure from a scandal over a memo that has seen Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States resign, and had announced on Sunday that he would soon address a joint session of parliament.

LHC issues notice to Awan in contempt case


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LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) on Wednesday issued a notice to Babar Awan and fixed December 20 for hearing a contempt of court case against the former law minister, FTNews reported.
Advocate Farooq Ahmad in his petition stated that Awan had passed derogatory remarks against the Supreme Court and hence disrespected the judiciary.
The petition further stated that his remarks had also hurt the feelings of the people of Punjab and Lahore.
Awan had held a heated press conference after the apex court directed the formation of a commission to investigate the memogate scandal.

Haqqani sues Newsweek over Ijaz’s article


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KARACHI: Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani has sued US magazine Newsweek for publishing an article written by Mansoor Ijaz, FTNews reported on Wednesday.
Haqqani has initiated a legal battle with the magazine by serving a notice which claims that the article has caused “irreparable damage” to his and President Asif Ali Zardari’s reputation.
The American businessman, in his article published on December 3, had disclosed that Zardari and Haqqani were aware of the May 02 raid in Abbottabad before the operation commenced.
The article further quoted Ijaz as saying that Haqqani assured him about the prior approval of the president ahead of delivering the controversial memo to Admiral Mike Mullen.
Analysts were raising questions over the step taken by Haqqani by suing the magazine and not the author of the article.

Zardari may resign over ‘ill health’: report


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A US magazine on Wednesday claimed that President Asif Ali Zardari who had gone to Dubai for medical check-up may have angioplasty on Wednesday and he may resign from his office on account of “ill health”, FTNews reported.
A former US government official told The Cable that Washington was informed that Zardari had a ‘minor heart attack’ on Monday night and he flew to Dubai via air ambulance.
The report posted on the website of foreign policy magazine further claimed that Zardari was ‘incoherent’ during his telephonic conversation with President Barack Obama which took place over the weekend regarding the Nato air strikes.
“The noose was getting tighter —it was only a matter of time,” the former official said, expressing the growing expectation inside the US government that Zardari may be on the way out.
Senior analyst Shuja Nawaz told The Cable that “this is the ‘in-house change option’ that has been talked about.”
Meanwhile, a Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) lawmaker and Sindh Information Minister Shazia Marri rebuffed the news of resignation and said the president had gone to Dubai for routine medical check-up.
The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) said it would consider the report authentic unless refuted by official sources.