Friday, February 03, 2012

Four killed in Peshawar car-bomb explosion


17
PESHAWAR: Four men died on Friday in a bomb attack along the Peshawar Ring Road, which was reportedly targeting a tribal elder hailing from the Khyber Agency.
Malik Astana Gul, who belongs to Bara, was the target but was not present at the time of the attack at the two-storey building in the Pishta Kharra area from where he used to run a real estate business and also used it as his hujra.
One of the deceased was identified as Ghazi, who died while he was being taken to hospital. Two bodies, one of which belonged to a middle-aged man who was yet to be identified, were pulled out by rescue workers.
A renowned doctor, his friend and another tribal elder were present in the two-storey building when the attack occurred, according to Lal Marjan, a relative of Gul. Almost 60-70% of the building’s structure completely collapsed by the force of the explosion.
According to Marjan, Gul had not received any threats. He leads the Malik Din Khel tribe in Khyber Agency.
Police reached the spot soon after the attack and cordoned off the area to begin investigations.
SP Cantt Mian Saeed Ahmed said that they believed that a vehicle was used in the attack as car parts were found from the blast site.
However, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Senior Minister Bashir Bilour said that initial evidence collected showed that a rocket launcher might have been used. He said that 25-30 kilogrammes of explosives were used in the attack and it was suspected to have been packed into a Suzuki pick-up car.
A Bomb Disposal Squad official confirmed Bilour’s information.
This is the second attack on a tribal elder from Khyber Agency. On January 30, tribal leader Haji Akhunzada was killed in Pakha Ghulam area, on the outskirts of Peshawar.
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain confirmed the death toll and said that Gul, like Akhunzada, was suspected to be a leader of a tribal lashkar and hence was the target of the attack.
Speaking about peace talks between the US and Taliban, he said that the K-P government welcomed the development but Pakistan must be included in the negotiations.

Punjab Assembly session: Another day, another ruckus


16
LAHORE: ‘Another day, another ruckus’ has become the tagline for Punjab Assembly sessions. For the third time in a row, the session was disrupted after members of the opposition and treasury benches hurled allegations and used abusive language against each other.
Legislators, regardless of their party affiliations, chose to politicise the Punjab Institute of Cardiology (PIC) medicine issue during today’s (Friday) session.
The assembly resumed the session after two days at 10:58am, around two hours over the scheduled time.
Punjab Law and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Rana Sanaullah gave his replies during the question hour session assigned to the Home Department.
The agenda of the house was to debate the PIC fiasco, but none of the members showed any seriousness towards discussing the issue.
Leader of the Opposition Raja Riaz, speaking on a point of order, said that Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif should disclose the name of the “high-level personality” he has alleged to have been involved in the spread of dengue and register an FIR against him.
Riaz threatened to disrupt the proceedings and demanded that Sanaullah apologise for his remarks against the treasury benches. He also lashed out at Shahbaz Sharif, saying that the chief minister has successfully completed his journey from “Khadim-e-Aala to Qatil-e-Aala”.
Speaker Rana Muhammad Iqbal was then forced to suspend the session for ten minutes and call Raja Riaz to his chamber. Riaz later returned and announced that the Punjab Government had assured him that Shahbaz Sharif will come to the house on Monday and inform them of the PIC issue.
When proceedings resumed, Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader Zulfiqar Gondal pointed out that neither the Parliamentary Secretary on Health nor any officials of the Health Department were present. Sanaullah assured him that every word of the debate would be conveyed to the chief minister.
Sameena Khawar Hayat of Pakistan Muslim League – Quaid (PML-Q) and Shaikh Allaudin of the Unification Bloc also hurled allegations against each other.
Khawar, during the debate, said that “Qatil-e-Aala” was responsible for the PIC deaths. She said that Shahbaz Sharif was running the province on “ad hocism” and demanded that he come to the assembly and answer their questions.
Allaudin then rose up and demanded that the chair stop Khawar from making personal attacks on the chief minister.
Both of them then resorted to using abusive language against each other. Mehar Ishtiaq, Chair of the House, then adjourned the session.
Sajida Mir of PPP and Dr Ghazala of PML-N later exchanged harsh words in front of the media over the criticism of party leadership.

‘Conspiracies against Senate elections to be revealed soon’


14
ISLAMABAD: Embattled Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said Friday he will respect the outcome of a Supreme Court move to indict him on contempt charges.
“I will go there and I will present my stance before the court,” Gilani told reporters in Lahore.
He said the matter was “sub-judice” and he should not comment on the issue, but added that he “will respect the court order” and reiterated his opposition to conflict between state institutions.
“I have attended the court when summoned in the past and I will attend again now,” he said, adding that “every body should follow the constitution”.
Gilani told reporters that he had said before that conspiracies were being hatched to stop the Senate elections.
He assured that the Senate elections would be held on time and conspiracies would be revealed soon.
He said that talks with political parties on general elections could take place after elections of the upper house next month.
Gilani rebuffed allegations leveled by Punjab and said that the federal government was assisting the provincial government on the issue of deaths caused by fake drugs.
He said that Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) decides on the POL prices, adding that a request had been made with the Speaker National Assembly to constitute a committee to review the matter.

Malik vows to probe faulty reports in spurious drugs case


13
ISLAMABAD: Federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik on Friday vowed to probe the faulty test reports by local laboratories in the spurious drugs case, FTNews reported.
Speaking at a National Assembly session, Malik informed the house about adding names of owners of the involved pharmaceutical companies in the Exit Control List (ECL).
On Wednesday, Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif had told the media that a British laboratory had found 50mg of an anti-malarial agent in Isotab produced by Efroze Chemicals in Karachi.
According to Sharif, local laboratories from Karachi to Peshawar had declared the suspected medicines usable.
The suspected drugs’ reaction claimed lives of another eight patients on Thursday, raising the death toll to 127 in Punjab.
Malik said that he has ordered an investigation to find out whether the Pakistani laboratories were not properly equipped for conducting such tests or if someone had directed them to produce these reports.
The minister said that all substandard medicines had been confiscated from Punjab and then from Karachi, adding that he has also directed all medical stores to not issue medicines without prescription.

Bogus votes: Imran Khan files appeal to 'stop' by-elections


11
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan filed a civil miscellaneous appeal on Friday to his previous petition seeking removal of fake votes from the voter lists and asked that the by-elections scheduled for February 25 be stopped.
Khan submitted his appeal to the court through Advocate Hamid Khan and said that the Election Commission of Pakistan was holding the by-elections without correcting the current voter list.
Earlier, the ECP had categorically stated that the deadline given by the Supreme Court to purge the lists of fake votes by February 23, 2012 was “humanly impossible” and had sought assistance from political parties for extension of the deadline.
Hamid Khan, while speaking to FTNews, said that a follow-up appeal was submitted because the ECP was conducting elections on the same date, despite court’s orders to correct the voter list.
The Supreme Court, while hearing Khan’s earlier petition, had observed that elections cannot be conducted based on the old electoral lists and that the ECP should recompile them.
Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry had remarked that the previous lists had over 30 million bogus votes which could not be verified.

7 security personnel, 18 militants killed in lower Kurram


10
PESHAWAR: Seven security personnel and 18 militants were killed during clashes in the Shaheedano Dhand area of lower Kurram Agency, officials said on Friday.
A senior official confirmed that three security personnel had also been injured and seven had gone missing.
“The shootout took place in lower Kurram, right on the border with North Waziristan,” the official said.
The area is a rugged mountainous terrain, where security officials have been trying to block the route used by militants to move from one tribal area to another.
This is the second attack in Kurram in less than a week. Earlier, at least eight security personnel and 35 militants were killed in an attack on a newly established security post in central Kurram.
The heights of Kurram are of strategic importance because of their natural connectivity from Tirah valley of Khyber to North Waziristan.
Shelling in upper Orakzai
Security forces carried out shelling in the Kaago, Qamar and Tor Simat area, killing six militants and destroying two hideouts, official sources said.

Intra-party consultations: PPP set to appeal indictment


8
ISLAMABAD: With one eye firmly fixed on next month’s Senate elections, the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party’s leadership has decided to contest Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani’s contempt case in the Supreme Court – and not seek any sort of confrontation with the judiciary.
After the court summoned the PM on February 13, the government’s current go-to man in legal matters, Aitzaz Ahsan, is likely to file an appeal in a few days.
Sources in the PPP said that the party high command has advised its cadres not to resort to public rhetorical attacks against the assertive judiciary.
Rather, the PPP will fight its case in court with all its might, arguing that President Asif Ali Zardari enjoys immunity under the Constitution against all criminal proceedings inside and outside the country.
Most of the party’s leaders remained tight-lipped when approached to comment on Thursday’s court proceedings. However, during informal interactions, the majority said that the government was being squeezed by the judiciary.
“We have a right to go for a review, as has been mentioned by the counsel of the PM,” the PPP leader said. “One should not forget that after the 18th Amendment that right of a fair trial has been recognised as basic right of every citizen under clause 10A of the Constitution.”
The PPP leader was not sure if the government would comply with the court and write a letter to the Swiss authorities, but said that, if it ever happened, it would be the last option, as the party will not give up easily.
Their focus also seems to be the Senate elections.
“Right now we have next month’s Senate elections as a top priority. We want to secure our majority in the upper house first. The legal team has also been asked to chalk out a strategy accordingly,” a central leader from the PPP said.
The elections for 54 Senate seats are due to take place on March 2. The PPP, with its current strength in provincial legislatures, is confident about securing the maximum seats to make it the single largest party in the house.
There were some unconfirmed reports that, after the court’s decision, Aitzaz gave a briefing to leaders of the allied parties on the implications of the order. However, the PM’s spokesperson denied this.
The allies of the ruling party have been sitting on the fence when it comes to the issue of the court order on implementation of the NRO verdict. Some have even suggested that the government should not confront the court and write the letter to defuse the situation.
The PPP core, however, feels that this would be political suicide.

Gilani faces contempt hearing on 13th


6
ISLAMABAD: The peaceful interlude in Islamabad did not last long. By summoning Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to appear before it on Feb 13, the Supreme Court moved a step closer on Thursday to finding him guilty of contempt of the court.
“We are satisfied that prima facie there is enough case to proceed further in the contempt case,” announced Justice Nasirul Mulk, who heads a seven-judge bench, before putting off further proceedings till Feb 13 for framing the charges.
The prime minister will appear in person before the court for a second time for not pursuing $60 million graft cases in Switzerland that also involve President Asif Ali Zardari.
The abrupt manner in which the order was announced came as a surprise to the prime minister’s counsel, Barrister Aitzaz Ahsan, as he was not expecting that the bench would suddenly terminate the hearing.
Earlier, Justice Nasirul Mulk told the counsel that the court would hear him till the end of the day, but suddenly stopped the proceedings to announce that the bench would take a break for about half an hour to discuss the matter.
Mr Ahsan could only say he still had many things to argue and had not concluded as yet.
Apparently what prompted the court not to proceed further was the failure in getting an assurance from the counsel that a letter would be written to the Swiss authorities by the government even if the court accepted Mr Gilani’s argument that his earlier decision of not writing the letter was because of wrong advice given to him.
On the other hand, Mr Ahsan argued the government would write the letter only if the court said so and, that too, after exhausting all legal remedies.
When the bench reassembled it simply said that it had decided to frame contempt charges against the prime minister.
In a last-ditch effort, Mr Ahsan sought at least 30 days’ time to file an intra-court appeal against the order, but the bench remained unconvinced.
At first the bench decided to frame the charge on Feb 10, but at the insistence of the counsel it changed the date to Feb 13.
Barrister Ahsan told reporters after the hearing that he would suggest to the prime minister to consider moving an appeal against Thursday’s order.
Section 19 of the Contempt of Court Ordinance V of 2003 says that an intra-court appeal will go before a larger bench and the appellate court may suspend the impugned order pending disposal of the appeal.
If the order is not suspended by the appellate bench, Advocate Chaudhry Faisal Hussain said, the original bench which had framed the charge would continue with the hearing in contempt trial.
Ironically, Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq, being the principal law officer, will compile the charges and prosecute the prime minister.
EXPERT OPINION: The apex court’s decision immediately led to a variety of predictions by legal experts and commentators. But there was no consensus on what would be the final outcome.
“I see a clash between institutions and it will be unfortunate,” Supreme Court Bar Association President Yasin Azad said, adding that the court should have shown restraint.
“Never in our history were dictators or generals taken to task by the judiciary for flouting the Constitution,” he deplored. He said the biggest institution in the country that called the shots was the “third force”, but elected governments were never allowed to function independently.
Senior lawyer Hafiz S.A. Rehman was, however, optimistic and said too much water had flown under the bridge. “I believe that the prime minister will tender an unconditional apology by saying he was wrongly advised, but now he is in the process of writing the letter,” he said, adding that the court would then discharge the notice.
Advocate Ahmed Raza Kasuri was also of the opinion that if Mr Gilani tendered an unconditional apology, the court would show grace in extending the courtesy of forgiveness.
Advocate Tariq Mehmood said that at the moment there was no threat to Prime Minister Gilani.
Atmosphere inside the courtroom at the last leg of the proceedings become tense when Justice Asif Saeed Khosa, a member of the bench, asked whether the government would write the letter if the court accepted the bona fide of the prime minister.
“When the prime minister came he said he had all the intention to implement the court order, but on the basis of advice he did not,” Justice Nasirul Mulk said. He then asked whether the prime minister would write the letter if the judges held that the advice was incorrect.
“This is beyond my brief,” Barrister Ahsan said.