Monday, January 30, 2012

Thirteen Afghan children freed after raid in seminary: police


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SAHIWAL: Farid Town police have captured 13 Afghan children from a private seminary in a rented residential house at Bashir Colony at noon today. The building was taken on rent by an Afghan national having a Pakistani passport and CNIC.
Police claimed that all the children were from Badakshan, Afghanistan and have been living illegally in Pakistan, FTNews has learnt.
Muhammad Saiee, Sub Inspector, Farid Town Police station said that police raided the private house in Bashir Town after being given a tip off. Neighbors disclosed to police that the children were getting a religious education from a Madrasah, which was being run by two religious teachers named Bashir Ahmed and Ihsanullah.
Qalib Abbas, SHO, Farid Town disclosed that not a single child has any legal documents showing their Afghan identity.
The police have arrested Bashir Ahmed, the seminary teacher. He ran all the seminary affairs including providing food to the children in the rented house. FTNews learnt from police sources that Ihsanullah, the head teacher of the seminary has not been arrested.
“We have been told that he has gone to Afghanistan from the last 25 days” the SHO further added.
The police has registered FIR (55/12) under Section 14, Foreigner Act. The names of the children are…Gul Ahmed, Najeebullah, Wajhiullah, Habibullah, Ihsanul Haq, Faizul Hasan, Abdul Tawab, Kifayatullah, Sibghatullah, Islamuddin, Mukhtar Ahmed, Muhammad Saddiq and Shahabudin.
Children are in custody with the Farid Town Police. Ihsanullah is the brother-in-law of the arrested Bashir Ahmed. Basir Colony is located in Village 86/6-R adjacent to Sahiwal City.

Haqqani to travel to the US


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani is expected to fly out of the country in the early hours of Tuesday after restrictions on his travel were eased by the Supreme Court, sources told FTNews.
According to sources, Haqqani will be leaving for Doha on a private jet around 4 am Tuesday morning, from where he will later travel to the US. Haqqani is also scheduled to meet with top officials in the US.
Sources also told FTNews that the former ambassador met with the Deputy Chief of the US Mission in Islamabad Jonathan Pratt at the Prime Minister’s House where the memo case and other issues were discussed.
Earlier during the day, Haqqani’s counsel Asma Jehangir had requested the apex court to ease travel restrictions placed on her client, who, she argued, had family abroad.
Subsequently, the court permitted Haqqani to travel.
“He is allowed to proceed out of country,” Chief Justice Iftikhar said in his order, after Jehangir guaranteed her client would appear before judges at four days’ notice if required.
The court moreover directed that in case of travelling abroad, Haqqani would have to inform the court’s registrar office.
“I am glad that the Supreme Court has restored my right to travel, which had been rescinded without any charges being filed against me. I will join my family in the US after discussions with the leaders of the Pakistan People’s Party,” Haqqani had told an AFP reporter.

Zardari urges Sindh ministers to reach out to people


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KARACHI: President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday held a meeting with Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) ministers of Sindh Cabinet here at Bilawal House and urged them to reach out to public for solving their problems.
The meeting was also attended by Chief Minister Sindh Qaim Ali Shah.
The ministers briefed the president about working of their respective ministries and departments.
The chief minister briefed the meeting on the overall political situation in the province.
The president advised the ministers to reach out to the people to address their problems.
He also advised them to develop and maintain close liaison with MPAs and help resolve the problems of their constituencies.
Briefing media representatives after the meeting, Provincial Information Minister Shazia Marri said that the president directed the ministers to increase coordinating with coalition partners.
In a related development, the president discussed seat adjustment in Sindh for the upcoming Senate polls with Pakistan Muslim League – Functional (PML-F) leader Imtiaz Sheikh.
While, Sindh Home Minister Manzoor Wassan said that the president has directed him to improve over all law and order situation of Karachi.

Suicide bomber kills three in Peshawar


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PESHAWAR: Three people died on Monday in a suicide bomb attack in an adjacent area of Peshawar.
The attack, feared to be a targeted assault, occurred at a house that was under construction in the Pukha Ghulam area. Local sources said that the house was being rented to Haji Akhundzada, who is a militant leader from Bara, Khyber Agency.
Seven people, including two children, are reported injured and have been taken to the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar. Hospital sources say their condition is serious.

Sectarian attack?: One killed in Gulberg area of Karachi


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KARACHI: A wave of killings continue to plague Karachi, as another man from the Shia sect was targeted in the limits of Gulberg Police Station on Monday.
Taseer Abbas Zaidi was killed in FB Area Block 20 when two men on a motorbike open fired on him.
He was the brother of noha khawan Raza Abbas. The deceased will be buried at Wadai-e-Hussain.
Tension gripped the area immediately after the incident and unidentified men forced shopkeepers to close their stores in Ancholi and the Water Pump areas. Shara-e-Pakistan is also reported to be blocked.
Protestors also blocked the media and targeted media personnel. They were present on the Ancholi side of the Sohrab Goth bridge and members of Pashtun community on the other, with Police and Rangers deployed to avoid any untoward incident.
Booths under the bridge were also set on fire during the protests.
The city has been under the grip of sectarian and political violence during the last couple of weeks, with the death toll standing at above 20 in the month of January.
In another act of targeted killing, 59-year-old Jaffar Mohsin Rizvi, alias doctor, the son of Syed Baqar Rizvi, was gunned down in Gulberg on Saturday.

SC takes suo motu notice of PIC deaths


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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Monday took a suo motu notice of the dozens of deaths caused by counterfeit medicines supplied by the Punjab Institute of Cardiology (PIC) to heart patients in Lahore, FTNews reported.
Justice Tassaduq Hussain Jillani would take up the matter on Tuesday. Notices have been issued to the attorney general and to the provincial health secretary in this regard.
Meanwhile, Religious Affairs Minister Khursheed Shah on Monday placed the entire responsibility of the deaths on the Punjab chief minister.
Speaking to media representatives in Lahore, Shah questioned the holding of 17 ministries by Shahbaz Sharif and wondered why the chief minister could not find 17 people in his party who would be capable of heading the said ministries.
He held responsible Sharif for deaths of 350 people from the dengue virus and said that now more than 100 heart patients had lost there lives due to his incompetence.
Shah said that drug regulation was now a responsibility of the provincial governments after the passage of 18th Amendment.
Regarding Mansoor Ijaz’s plea for recording his testimony in the memo case abroad, Shah said that the Supreme Court was not a mobile court which would go abroad to record statements.

SC directs ISI, MI to produce seven detainees


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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Monday directed the intelligence agencies to produce seven people in their custody on Feb 9, FTNews reported.
An apex court bench comprising Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, Justice Khilji Arif Hussain and Justice Tariq Parvez heard a petition filed by a woman whose three sons had been picked up by intelligence personnel for their alleged role in the Oct 2009 attacks on the army GHQ and the Inter-Services Intelligence agency’s Hamza Camp in Rawalpindi.
The woman had alleged that her sons and eight other people had been kept in illegal confinement since May 29, 2010, and four of them, including one of her sons, Abdus Saboor, had died in mysterious circumstances.
Raja Arshad, the lawyer of Judge Advocate General (JAG) Branch and chiefs of the ISI and MI told the bench that the four had died due to illness.
Arshad further said that he was not aware of the nature of the illness but that his clients were ready to conduct port mortems of the bodies.
The chief justice mentioned that the prime minister had appeared before the court and told the lawyer that no one was above the law and the Constitution.
The Constitution provides people protection and guarantees their independence, he added.
Subsequently, the hearing was adjourned to Feb 9.

NA committee approves draft of 20th amendment bill


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ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly Standing Committee on Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs on Monday approved the draft of the 20th Constitutional Amendment Bill, FTNews reported.
The committee’s meeting was attended by only seven out of its 17 members. Committee members from the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) decided not to attend the meeting.
The committee approved the draft after a debate. The bill protects lawmakers elected in controversial by-elections after the passage of the18th Amendment from possible disqualification by the Supreme Court.
The bill would now be sent to the National Assembly for voting and would be sent over to the Senate once approved by the lower house of the parliament.
The main aim of the bill concerning by-elections tabled by Minister for Religious Affairs Syed Khursheed Shah is to rectify a flaw which came to light when the hearing of a petition filed by Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan, the Supreme Court questioned the legal status of lawmakers who had been elected as members of parliament and provincial assemblies in by-elections held at a time when the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) was incomplete due to non-appointment of its members as required under the 18th Amendment.

SC extends memo commission's deadline for two months


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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has extended the Memogate commission’s deadline for two more months as Mansoor Ijaz failed to appear before the commission to record his statements, FTNews reported on Monday.
The court was hearing an application filed by the judicial commission, which sought the extension of the deadline to complete the probe.
The court accepted the application and said that it was up to the commission whether it wants to go abroad to record Ijaz’s statements or call him to Pakistan.
During the hearing, Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq told the court that the government did not have any reservations on the extension of the term given to the Memogate commission.
The attorney general also said that Canadian company Research In Motion (RIM) which carries the BlackBerry records has denied handing over the data required. The company said that if the Pakistani government wishes to obtain the data then it should send an application through the Canadian High Commission.
Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, heading the nine-member bench, said that Ijaz’s letter had been received which he had requested be kept undisclosed. The chief justice added that the letter will be sent to the Registrar so that the information provided in it can be used at an appropriate time.
Former ambassador to the US Husain Haqqani’s former counsel Asma Jehangir argued that everyone in the court was talking about Article 19 of the Constitution, but Ijaz’s letter, in contrast, was being kept a secret.
Jehangir also appealed against the extension of two-months given to the commission and requested that the court cut it down to one-month, but the court snubbed her request.
The Supreme Court had formed the judicial commission on December 30 last year and had given a four-week deadline to complete the investigations.
SC disposes off Haqqani’s travel ban
The court accepted Asma Jehangir’s request of allowing her client, Haqqani to travel abroad to visit his children.
The court disposed off the travel ban but imposed that whenever the Memogate commission or the court summons Haqqani, he will have to comply and come back to Pakistan within a period of four days.
“I am glad that the Supreme Court has restored my right to travel, which had been rescinded without any charges being filed against me,” Haqqani told Reuters after the decision.
“I will join my family in the US after discussions with the leaders of the Pakistan Peoples Party.”
Haqqani had earlier filed an application requesting to allow him to travel abroad as he was barred from doing so owing to his alleged connection in the Memogate scandal.

Adiala prisoner deaths: ISI, MI submit reports to court


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ISLAMABAD: Lawyer Raja Irshad on Monday submitted reports of Military Intelligence (MI) and the Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) to the Supreme Court in the case of disappearance of 11 prisoners from Adiala Jail.
Eleven prisoners, convicted for attacking the Pakistan Army’s General Headquarters in Rawalpindi and the ISI’s Hamza Camp, had gone missing from Adiala Jail, and four were later found dead.
The three-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, had served notices to the ISI and MI chiefs on January 25 to explain the circumstances behind the deaths.
Irshad, while talking to the media, said that the agencies were ready to have the postmortem of the dead prisoners done and to hold a forensic inquiry.
He added that the prisoners had died at the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar due to some illness, and said that the Raymond Davis saga was not connected with the disappearances.
The hearing of the case has been adjourned till February 9.

Fake medicines: YDA calls off strike after successful negotiations


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LAHORE: Office bearers of the Young Doctor’s Association on Monday called off the strike to protest the suspension of senior doctors after negotiations with the Punjab Health Department were successful.
The YDA had decided that in the first stage, they would observe a strike at out-patient departments of Punjab Institute of Cardiology (PIC) and other public hospitals in Lahore.
A doctor working at the PIC had warned that if the doctors are not restored, UDA could go on a strike throughout the province.
There are around 250 to 300 doctors working at PIC and around 100 of them showed solidarity with the YDA’s decision.
FIA orders release of MS of PIC
The Federal Investigative Agency (FIA) ordered the release of MS of PIC Dr Saleem Jaffar in the fake medicine case, reported FTNews.
Dr Jaffar was taken into custody on Sunday for his alleged involvement in the fake medicine which has caused the deaths of over a 100 people in Punjab.
The joint investigation team of the FIA, probing into the matter, released Jaffar on not finding sufficient proof against him.
The Lahore High Court, hearing the case today, said that a case of murder should be held against the people involved in the whole scenario.
The PIC medicine triggered an unknown disease that is said to get deposited in the bone marrow and ultimately ends the body’s resistance. The generation of white blood cells stops in the body and a severe chest infection also takes place.
The symptoms of the disease include a change in complexion, low platelet count, vomiting blood and a severe chest infection.
The Federal Investigative Agency (FIA) has formed an investigation team which is probing the matter and has arrested the people allegedly involved in the distribution of the medicine.

Disinformation alleged: Longer tenure ruled out for spymaster


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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani has rubbished the impression that his administration was considering extending the tenure of the country’s top spymaster in an effort to heal its months-long rift with the security establishment.
Relations between the security establishment and the PPP-led coalition government have been bedevilled by the infamous Memogate scandal which is yet to see its drop-scene.
With Inter-Services Intelligence chief Lt Gen Ahmad Shuja Pasha retiring this March, rumours have swirled about the government granting him a possible extension.
“It’s disinformation that meetings with the military brass prior to my departure for Davos were meant to ease the tensions with them,”
the prime minister told journalists upon returning from the Swiss city where he attended the World Economic Forum.
The premier refused to comment on his statement about the replies submitted by army chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and Gen Pasha in the apex court in the Memogate case.
“Things are settling down. I’ve sacked the person who was responsible for the chaos and I don’t want to re-open the much-debated issue as I’ve already clarified the situation,” he said, referring to former defence secretary Lt Gen (retd) Khalid Naeem Lodhi.
Early elections
Opposition parties, especially the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (Fazlur Rehman Group) have been calling for snap elections.
To this demand, the prime minister said, “With the passage of the fifth budget, the election year starts and we are of the view that early elections are likely after the budget.”
Gilani said that his government would take all political parties into confidence and try and evolve a consensus on the 20th constitutional amendment bill.
“In politics, bridges are built, not walls,” he added. “We want free, fair and transparent elections and a smooth transition will set a tradition for future.”
He reminded the media that his government had said last year that the next federal budget would be unveiled in May to parliamentarians to give more time to debate issues of their constituencies.
Reign of democracy
The prime minister credited both his government and the opposition for the smooth-sailing that democracy had the country.
He appreciated the opposition for making it possible for the president to address parliament, according to the schedule. “He (Asif Ali Zardari) will become the first president to address a joint sitting of parliament for the fifth time,” Gilani said.
Contaminated medicines
The premier said that the rising death toll due to spurious medicines in Punjab was frightening and the nation was saddened by this tragedy. However, he noted with concern that officials in Punjab were blaming the federal government for “their own negligence”.
“The Punjab government is an obstacle in establishing a drug regulatory authority (DRA) … as the three provinces (Sindh, Balochistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa) have agreed to the establishment of a DRA,” he claimed.
When asked about Punjab chief minister’s statement that he was ready to provide security to Mansoor Ijaz, the self-proclaimed whistleblower of the Memogate scandal, Gilani said: “Shahbaz Sharif’s statements cannot provoke me. I don’t want to criticise the provincial government as I’m the face of the Pakistan government abroad.”
Foreign policy
On Pakistan’s relations with the United States, the prime minister said that his government made history by adopting a “free and open foreign policy”.
“We protected national interests (both) in letter and spirit,” he added. “Other political parties want to stop Nato supply routes through musical concerts, but the PPP government took practical steps and stopped the Nato supplies (in protest against the Nov 26, 2011 Nato air raids on Pakistani border posts),” he said referring to Imran Khan’s Tehreek-e-Insaf, which has been a trenchant critic of US drone strikes and Pakistan’s cooperation in the war against terror.

LHC admits petition calling for inquiry in spurious drugs issue


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LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) on Monday admitted for hearing the Punjab government’s petition to carry out a judicial inquiry in the issue of counterfeit medicine provided by the Punjab Institute of Cardiology (PIC), FTNews reported.
An announcement on the formation of an inquiry commission was expected to be done later.
The hearing pertaining to deaths by spurious drugs took place in Justice Umar Ata Bandial’s court.
The Punjab government’s inquiry officer Major Mubashir, officials from the Federal Investigation agency (FIA), the additional secretary health and other concerned officials were present during the hearing.
The court was told that a collective inquiry was underway on the issue of deaths caused by counterfeit medicine.
During the hearing, the provincial government’s inquiry officer assured the court that serious action would be taken against those found responsible.
Moreover, the additional secretary health informed the court that around 50,000 medicines had been distributed among the people and that 350 people had been affected by these drugs.
He further said that the medicines in question were later taken back from patients who were being treated at the PIC.
“Seven hundred people were re-examined out of which 339 people were sent home healthy,” said the additional secretary.
The additional secretary said that special teams had been constituted for all provincial districts.
Adjourning the hearing to Feb 6, the court asked the federal and provincial governments to submit their replies on the issue.