Friday, December 16, 2011

Tsunami of PTI ready to curb out the existing system: Khan


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KARACHI: Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan said that the tsunami of Tehrik-i-Insaf was coming to root out the prevailing system and claimed to be the only leader who had earned abroad and spent in Pakistan, FTNews reported.
While addressing the public rally in Mardan, Imran Khan said the existing system was a capitalist system in which the rich was becoming richer and the poor was becoming poorer.
Imran Khan said that no one could get the justice in the existing system.
PTI chief promised to bring the system in which the equal education would be granted and taxes would also be paid by the leader at high authority.
Moreover, Khan said his government would close the Governor house and the Prime Minister House.

Gilani asks US to respect Pakistan’s ‘red lines’


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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani asked the United States of America on Friday to respect Pakistan’s red lines, its national sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Talking to US Ambassador to Pakistan Cameron Munter who called on him at the PM House, Gilani said the United States must guarantee that the frontiers of the country would be respected in future.
Prime Minister Gilani said it was his primary responsibility to safeguard Pakistan’s dignity and honour, adding that respect for sovereignty and non-repeat of unilateral action were the very minimum that Pakistan expected.
He also stressed that close cooperation was maintained between Pakistan and the United States to fight against terrorism, the common enemy of the civilised world.
He said Pakistan wanted to work with the United States to defeat the menace.
The PM gave credit to the democratic government and said the Parliament was fully behind the government in this regard.
He said no war can be fought without the support of the people.
The prime minister reiterated Pakistan’s position and said that an independent, prosperous and stable Afghanistan was in Pakistan’s interests.
He said Pakistan would support the process of reconciliation in Afghanistan which was Afghan-led and Afghan-owned and did not destabilise Pakistan.
The US Ambassador said the common enemy of terrorism must be defeated for which both the countries needed to focus and cooperate with commitment and single-mindedness.
He said the convergence of interests between the two countries against terrorism provided a realistic basis and common ground to continue to collaborate and save the world from the curse of extremism and terrorism.

PTI will not accept any unconstitutional steps: Imran Khan


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan on Friday said that his party fully favoured the democratic system and would not accept any unconstitutional steps, FTNews reported.
Speaking to media representatives in Islamabad, Khan said the country had been destroyed by military dictatorships and another martial law would not be tolerated.
Responding to a question regarding his talks with US ambassador Cameron Munter, Khan assured that his position during the meeting was similar to his public stance and that no changes had occurred in his stand after meeting Munter.
Regarding calls for resignation by ISI chief Ahmed Shuja Pasha over memogate, Khan said the Supreme Court was dealing with the issue and he hoped that a fair probe would unveil those responsible.

Zardari to return to Pakistan next week: Shamsul Hasan


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom Wajid Shamsul Hasan claimed that President Asif Ali Zardari would return to the country next week, FTNews reported.
Speaking to CNN-IBN, Hasan rebuffed speculations that the Pakistani military was trying to sideline the president.
He blamed the media for “irresponsible reporting regarding the president’s health issues”.
He said “so-called analysts and intellectuals have been giving deadlines for the past four years regarding the removal of Asif Zardari from the Presidency, but they have failed in their predictions”.

Seven militants, one soldier killed in Orakzai clashes


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KALAYA, Orakzai: Pakistani troops killed seven militants in clashes after a landmine planted by insurgents on a roadside killed a soldier in the northwestern tribal region of Orakzai, security officials said.
Orakzai is one of the most lawless areas in Pakistan’s northwest tribal region, which is made up of seven districts near the Afghan border.
Pakistan launched a major operation in Orakzai in March last year after militants fled a sweeping offensive in the nearby tribal district of South Waziristan.
Late last year military officials said lower Orakzai had been cleared, but the militant threat persisted in some pockets of the upper part of the area.
Around 4,000 people have been killed in militant attacks in Pakistan since July 2007.

Memo exists, say Kayani, Pasha


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ISLAMABAD: Both Army Chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and ISI Director General Lt Gen Shuja Pasha, in their first official and public statements on the memo scandal on Thursday, dropped a bombshell by acknowledging the document and expressing satisfaction with the evidence provided by American businessman Mansoor Ijaz.
In separate replies filed with the Supreme Court, which is hearing petitions related to the matter, they called for a thorough investigation about the memorandum, which they blamed on former ambassador to the US, Hussain Haqqani, saying the issue had an impact on national security.
Their replies were submitted to the court’s registrar by Attorney General Anwarul Haq. “There may be a need to fully examine the facts and circumstances leading to conception and issuance of the memo,” Gen Kayani said and underscored that the episode “has an impact on national security and… attempts to lower the morale of Pakistan Army”.
Gen Pasha demanded a detailed investigation, saying “access to unadulterated truth and justice is a right of the people of Pakistan, the real sovereign masters of this country”.
The ISI chief also asked the court to summon Mr Ijaz, who had kick-started the controversy through an article in the Financial Times on Oct 10; and getting the computers, cell phones and Black Berry devices of Mr Haqqani and Mr Ijaz for which he offered to “render necessary assistance to its (SC) appointed commission”.
Even as Mr Ijaz has publicly offered to appear before the court in the case and has sent in his reply, Gen Pasha twice refers to his (Ijaz’s) willingness to personally present evidence before the apex court.
The other important common feature of both replies is that they confirm that Mr Haqqani had been summoned to the country on their insistence following which the premier asked him to resign.
“It was, therefore, important that complete details be established as early as possible. I strongly recommended to the prime minister that our ambassador in the United States, who was best suited and informed on the matter, be called to brief the country’s leadership,” Gen Kayani said and went on to narrate his subsequent meetings with President Asif Zardari and PM Gilani on the issue, including the last in the series in which Mr Haqqani was heard and asked to quit.
Gen Pasha, narrating his meeting with President Zardari on Nov 18, said he recommended to the president that “the issue pertained to national security and should not be taken lightly. I suggested to the president that it will be in the fitness of things to ask our ambassador in Washington to verify or contradict the matter.”
The army chief also gave a brief account of a briefing he received on the issue from Gen Pasha on Oct 24 after the spy chief had met Mr Ijaz in London.
“He (Gen Pasha) opined that the evidence shown to him by Mr Mansoor Ijaz was enough to establish that Mr Mansoor Ijaz remained in touch with Mr Hussain Haqqani from 9 May, 2011, onwards and exchanged numerous text messages and telephone calls. As per DG ISI’s assessment, the sequence and contents of text messages and telephone calls created a reasonable doubt regarding Mr Hussain Haqqani’s association with the memo.”
The ISI chief gives an insight into how he got in touch with Mr Ijaz through an unnamed ‘source’ and that the meeting was set up in London on Oct 22 following the publication of the businessman’s article in Financial Times.
In addition to the details about his meeting with Mr Ijaz, in which the latter explained the context of the issue and shared related information, Gen Pasha specially refers to his demand for seeing the devices used for communication to believe his (Ijaz’s) story.
“Having seen these means of communication used, I was satisfied that he had enough corroborative material to prove his version of the incident,” the ISI chief said.