Monday, December 19, 2011

Pakistan blames “Afghan commander” for Nato attack: BBC


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KARACHI: According to a BBC report, Pakistan’s military officials on Monday blamed an Afghan commander for the November 26 Nato strike on Salala check post in Mohmand agency, FTNews reported.
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) reported that the accused Afghan commander conspired on the instructions of Indian and Afghan intelligence to dismantle Pakistan’s ties with US and Nato.
According to the published report, Pakistani military officials were probing the incident on their own and also handed few details of the investigative report to their Nato counterparts across the border on Monday.
Pakistani officials demanded action against the accused Afghan National Army commander by Nato officials in Afghanistan.
Pakistan’s investigative report did not indicate involvement of any American officials in the attack.
According to the report Afghani troops, without any prior notice, were patrolling an area at Pak-Afghan border which required 72 hours prior notice to Pakistani forces.
The troops deployed at Salala check post opened fire on Afghan patrol team considering them militants and subsequently Nato air defence helicopters, came to afghan team’s rescue, attacked the Pakistani post.
According to Pakistan officials, Afghans knew exact location of the post hence calling Nato for help was a pre-planned scheme.
However the ISPR rebuffed the BBC report calling it inaccurate.

Nawaz vows to resolve Balochistan crisis


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KARACHI: Eminent Baloch leader, Sardar Ataullah Mengal said that the Pakistan Army has taken Balochistan to the point of no return and if Nawaz Sharif was able to resolve the Balochistan crisis he will no longer live in exile.
Mengal was talking to the head of PML-N, Nawaz Sharif at his residence in Karachi. Talking to media persons, Nawaz Sharif vowed to fight for the case of Balochistan on all fronts and said that there will be no progress on the issue if the killers of Nawab Akbar Bugti were not arrested.
Nawaz Sharif also admitted that Balochistan is facing cruelty.
Mengal added that past mistakes should not be repeated in Balochistan. He stressed the need for accountability of those involved in atrocities in the province.

Kayani, Zardari phone call focused on president’s health: ISPR


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KARACHI: An Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) spokesman issued an explanatory statement of the telephonic conversation between President Asif Ali Zardari and Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, FTNews reported on Monday.
The spokesman said Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani received a phone call from the president while meeting with the COAS General Ashfaq Kayani.
Zardari asked to convey his well wishes to Kayani. The COAS in return talked to the president, spokesman said.
During the conversation, General Kayani inquired after the president’s health, the spokesman said, adding that rumour mongering over the subject should stop.
The spokesman moreover said that events that took place in the country during the last 72 hours should not be linked to this conversation.

Pakistan restores Afghan border centres in step forward


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KABUL: Pakistan has restored liaison officers at coordination centres on the Afghanistan border, Nato said on Monday, in a slight easing of tensions, after Nato air strikes last month killed two dozen Pakistani soldiers and provoked fury across the country.
But the US-led coalition’s supply lines that run through Pakistan remain closed since the Nov. 26 incident and it is both in the interests of foreign forces as well as Pakistan that the routes be opened sooner rather than later, the alliance said.
Ties between the United States and Pakistan are fraught, with Islamabad blocking the Afghan supply line for one of the longest periods yet.
Last week, US lawmakers agreed to freeze $700 million in aid to Pakistan demanding it disrupt the movement of fertilisers used in making homemade bombs, the deadliest killer of foreign troops.
But the top Nato commander in Afghanistan, US General John Allen, had spoken to the Pakistani army chief General Ashfaq Kayani and there were signs of progress over the last few days, Brigadier General Carsten Jacobsen, a spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), told reporters.
“We have seen liaison officers, Pakistani officers, return to border coordination centres, General Allen has spoken to General Kayani, so we are moving in the right direction,” he said.
The border control centres were set up to help Nato and Afghan forces and their Pakistani counterparts on the other side of the porous border to coordinate operations against militants and avoid the kind of the incident that occurred last month in which two Pakistan army posts in Mohmand came under Nato fire.
Pakistan said the United States had carried out an unprovoked attack, an accusation rejected by Washington. An investigation has been ordered and Jacobsen declined to go into details of the incident ahead of the results.
But he urged Pakistan to reopen the two supply routes into Afghanistan, which carry just under a third of all cargo for foreign forces fighting in the landlocked nation.
“It is in our interest as well as Pakistan’s interests, for economic reasons that they reopen these routes sooner rather than later,” he said.
Night Raids
Jacobsen also defended the use of night raids on Afghan homes to hunt down insurgents, despite yet another call overnight from Afghan President Hamid Karzai to end the practice, deeply hated by most Afghans.
“Night operations remain the safest form of operations conducted to take insurgents off the battlefield,” he said, adding that in 85 percent of such raids not a single shot is fired.

Afaq Ahmed free to partake in political activities: Wasan


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KARACHI: Sindh Home Minister Manzoor Wasan on Monday said that President Asif Ali Zardari’s return had silenced the country’s political pundits, FTNews reported.
Speaking to media representatives at the Sindh Assembly, Wasan said President Zardari would also be addressing a gathering at Garhi Khuda Bux on Dec 27.
Responding to a question regarding Mohajir Qaumi Movement – Haqiqi’s chairman Afaq Ahmed, Wasan said that all political leaders in Sindh, including Ahmed, were free to partake in political activities.
He said the government believed in political freedoms and that restrictions were only imposed in previous regimes.

DG ISI should have resigned after Abbottabad operation: Asma


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KARACHI: Asma Jahangir, counsel for Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani, said on Monday that Director-General Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Ahmed Shuja Pasha should have resigned when Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was found and killed in Abbottabad, FTNews reported.
Speaking to media representatives outside the Supreme Court, Asma said appropriate methods should be adopted to criticise the court’s decisions and a lawyer should especially be very careful in this regard.
Asma said she was disappointed that copies of Mansoor Ijaz’s reply, which was sent through an email, was immediately distributed to others but was provided after a delay to her.
Asma said she was satisfied with today’s hearing and that she was prepared to defend her client to her utmost capabilities.

Husain Haqqani submits statement to Abbottabad commission


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani on Monday submitted his written reply to the Abbottabad commission, FTNews reported.
After the statement’s submission, the commission directed Haqqani to appear before it again.
Moreover, a statement from Sheikh Rashid, president of the Awami Muslim League, was also submitted to the commission today.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court was also hearing petitions on the memo affair filed by PML-N president Nawaz Sharif and others.
Earlier, the commission’s head, Justice (retd) Javed Iqbal, had said that the former ambassador was being summoned because the panellists wanted to find out the details of the visas issued by Pakistan’s embassy in Washington during his service.
Haqqani had resigned from his position of ambassador days after Pakistani-American businessman Mansoor Ijaz accused him of being behind the memo that said the military was plotting a coup and appealed to the Pentagon to help ward it off.
Haqqani has denied any connection with the memo.

President’s return ends all rumours: Firdous


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ISLAMABAD: Minister for Information and Broadcasting Dr. Firdous Ashiq Awan said on Monday that return of President Asif Ali Zardari to Pakistan has ended all rumours and foiled attempts of those who were creating chaos and instability.
Talking to the television channels, the Minister said the President was committed to the nation and he returned due to the prayers of the people.
She criticised those who opened their rumour making factories and created political instability and damaged economic activity in the country.
The Minister advised the media to play a responsible role and help the institutions in performing their obligations within the ambit of the constitution.
She said those who were spreading rumours about the health of the President undermined interests of the country at a time when the nation needed unity.
“Now if these elements have any moral courage then they should seek forgiveness from the nation,” she added.
She said Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and its leadership had always faced challenges and would go away from the country and would always remain with the people of Pakistan.
She pointed out that despite not having a majority, PPP took along its allies and pursued the policy of reconciliation due to which the parliament has been able to complete its four years.
She said those elements that were raising the issue of President’s absence will now be disappointed.
The Minister appreciated the leadership of President Zardari in protecting interests of the country.
She said PPP had been relying on the doctors of the President for providing information to the media.
She urged media and civil society to work with the government in promoting democracy and countering conspiracies at the international level.

SC criticises Babar Awan over press conference


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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court took notice of a press conference held by former law minister Babar Awan on Dec 1 after the court’s order to form a one-member commission to probe the memo scandal, FTNews reported.
The nine-member bench on Monday resumed the hearing of 11 petitions, including one filed by PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif, over the memo affair.
During today’s hearing, Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry criticised Awan and remarked that the court’s order was ridiculed in his press conference.
He said that the apex court always accepted positive criticism on court orders in good faith.
He directed Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq to take action against the former law minister, adding that the court would issue an order against the official who organised the press conference.
Chief Justice Iftikhar further said that the prime minster should have taken action against the law secretary over the press conference.
Moreover, Justice Jawad Khwaja, during the hearing, rejected the perception that the court was against the parliament.

The president is back!


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KARACHI: The mystery surrounding President Asif Ali Zardari’s departure earlier this month came to an end on Sunday when he arrived back in the country in the early hours of Monday as suddenly as he left.
The plane carrying the President landed at Air Force’s Masroor Base in Karachi past 1am, from where he was taken to his residence, Bilawal House.
By Sunday evening, the rumours about his arrival back in the country were headlines. That the rumours had emanated from the presidency were evident from the fact that most of his aides were hinting at his return, but refused to either confirm it or speak on the record.
Reports of security being bolstered at Bilawal House in Karachi were cited to prove that he would land there rather than in Islamabad.
But by midnight, after his plane had taken off from Dubai, there was still no official confirmation of where the president was to land; it was only when his plane entered Pakistan airspace that it was confirmed that he was on his way to Karachi.
President’s spokesman Farhatullah Babar told private news channel around midnight that the president would arrive at Karachi.
According to Pakistan standard time, the president flew from Dubai at around 11:30pm. He was accompanied by his younger daughter Asifa Zardari, security guards and his doctor. His plane landed at PAF Masroor base, where he was received by PPP leaders.
A close aide to the president also confirmed that Mr Zardari was feeling well, though he would rest in Karachi for a few days and chair party meetings before proceeding to Islamabad.
It was on Dec 6, a national holiday, that President Zardari was suddenly flown to Dubai. The country was left wondering what had prompted the departure.
The explanations ranged from serious illness to rumours of a soft coup to the idea that he had gone away to escape possible repercussions of the investigations into ‘memogate’.
The reason for the rumours galore was the memo affair which had towards the end of last month had compelled the government to announce the resignation of Pakistan’s ambassador to the US, Husain Haqqani.
Since American citizen Mansoor Ijaz had alleged that the PPP government had tried to collude with the American administration to rein in the Pakistan military, Haqqani had been fighting a losing battle.
He resigned on Nov 22, but within days the Supreme Court accepted a petition to look into the issue and asked the president, the army chief, the IS head and Husain Haqqani to submit their replies on the controversy.
With the SC order, the controversy got a new lease of life.
Rumours and speculation Critics and some observers began to conjecture that the scandal would sweep up the PPP government. The conjectures intensified to the extent that the general consensus was that Asif Zardari was under immense pressure.
Rumours and reports of his incoherent conversations with friends; colleagues and visiting dignitaries were the talk of the town as well as the country.
Hence, when he was flown out, most people were willing to believe that the pressure had had an adverse effect on his health, though the exact illness remained a mystery. From heart disease to stroke to mental disorders, everything was mentioned.
However, some analysts dismissed the reports that the president was seriously ill and instead claimed that he had left because he did not want to risk being in the country when the SC received the replies of the army chief and the ISI chief.
According to this theory, the president feared that if the replies of the military officials implicated him in the memo controversy, it was better for him and for the party that he be out of the country to lead and strategise for the PPP.
A third, more bizarre theory, which found few claimants, said he had left the country under a deal and would not return.
Sadly, the lack of accurate information from the PPP about the president’s health and illness simply gave the rumours more credence.
This lack of information gave his more vicious detractors the opportunity to argue that the president was unfit to continue as president because of his poor health.
That the government became aware of the consequences of this campaign was evident from the phone calls that the president then made from his hospital bed to the prime minister and journalists. Within days he shifted to his residence in Dubai.
However, a statement by the prime minister on Dec 12 that the president may need to rest for a couple of weeks then led to another round of speculation.
Compounding the confusion were the replies submitted to the SC on Dec 15 in which the statements of the ISI chief and the COAS were contradictory to the federation’s: the military officers were of the opinion that the memo existed and needed investigation while the government argued that the SC should dismiss the petition.
However, it is noteworthy that within a day the prime minister and the army chief held a lengthy meeting to dismiss the rumours of a confrontation between the army and the government while COAS Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani was even reported to have spoken to Zardari on the phone.
Whether it was something the general said or just the magic of the treatment the president was receiving but a day after the call, Zardari felt well enough to return to the country.
Analysts believe that while his return to the country will end one set of rumours, the whispers will not end completely.
All is not well in Islamabad, it appears, and people may continue to closely watch the president’s movements, and his relations with the military leadership, to determine if the crisis emanating from the memo scandal was over.