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Current Affairs

NATO Supply routes: Washington's mind games

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Current Affairs

Monday, 07 May 2012 08:50

Adds PCNS should review its decision for the benefit of the country. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

ISLAMABAD: As Pakistan and the United States struggle to break the impasse in their troubled relationship, Washington has cautioned Islamabad of ‘multiple repercussions’, if the six-month-long blockade of Nato supplies is not lifted.

The implications include a halt in US assistance for the country’s fragile economy and squeezing the political space available to the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party by relying on other political groups, according to officials familiar with the development.

“During the meetings Marc Grossman recently had with Pakistani officials, it was obvious that the US was running out of patience,” one official told The Express Tribune, requesting his name not be disclosed.

“A message has been conveyed at the highest level that if the government cannot take a decision regarding Nato supplies, the US will rely on Nawaz Sharif,” he disclosed. However, his claim could not be independently verified.

The official added that the Obama administration was increasingly concerned over the delay in the reopening of the vital supply routes for foreign forces stationed in Afghanistan.

Last month, the country’s parliament announced new terms of engagement that seek an unconditional apology from the US over the Salala incident. Initially, Washington agreed to accept the demand but due to a delay in the passage of the new recommendations, coupled with domestic compulsions of President Barack Obama, it seems now the US is reluctant to take such a step. A well-informed PPP lawmaker acknowledged that the government was in a fix on how to move forward after the US hardened its stance.

“There is now a growing realisation that it was a mistake and miscalculation to ask parliament to formulate new foreign policy guidelines,” said the lawmaker.

Parliament has taken a tough stance on some of the issues making it difficult for the government to implement, he contended.

The PPP lawmaker also revealed that the delay in the reopening of the Nato supply lines annoyed the US to the extent that it conveyed to the party leadership its options of working with alternate political forces of the country.

Defence Minister Ahmed Mukhtar on Sunday also hinted at mounting pressure on the government to reopen the supply routes. He told reporters in Lahore that Pakistan could face economic sanctions if it did not unplug the routes.

When approached, the US Embassy denied Washington conveyed any threats to Islamabad. “The UN wants Nato supplies to reopen, the US wants Nato supplies to reopen but that should not be characterised as a threat,” said the embassy spokesperson.
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Kamran Yousaf | The Express Tribune


 

PCNS links end to drone attacks with NATO supplies

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Current Affairs

Thursday, 12 April 2012 08:53

ISLAMABAD - The Parliamentary Committee on National Security (PCNS) on Tuesday finalised the preliminary report on its recommendations for new terms of engagement with the United States, linking the resumption of NATO supply routes with a halt in drone attacks inside Pakistan.


The report will be presented to the leadership of various political parties for a nod. The committee members are scheduled to again meet on Thursday for giving final touches to the report. Later, the report will be presented to the joint sitting of the parliament.


Although US Ambassador Cameron Munter met with Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) chief Fazlur Rehman to clarify his country’s position on reopening of NATO supply routes, the latter remained adamant on his boycott of PCNS meeting.
A source while requesting anonymity told Pakistan Today that the PCNS, in its new draft, had recommended that the government should make a conditional offer to the US about reopening of NATO supply routes, only if drone attacks were halted forthwith.

“We have also proposed to block transportation of weapons through NATO supply routes, while it was also recommended that no airbase would be handed over to any foreign force. The committee has also recommended that NATO supply routes may be opened with imposition of levy. No security contractor would be allowed to operate inside Pakistan in covert or overt operations, the PCNS further recommended.

PCNS chief Senator Raza Rabbani told media that the JUI-F continued its protest and boycott of the meeting, while the PML-N had sought permission for getting the draft approved by its party leadership.

Rabbani said the PCNS had made some new recommendations and members would now hold consultations with their respective parties. The PCNS will next meet on Thursday.
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Staff Report | PakistanToday.com.pk


 

Pakistani dies in firing by Nato forces

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Current Affairs

Friday, 16 March 2012 11:58

QUETTA: A Pakistani man was killed in firing by Nato forces at a village on the Pak-Afghan border in the Chagai district on Wednesday. They also arrested four others and took them across the border.

Sources said that five Pakistanis belonging to the Chagai district were on their way home from Helmand province of Afghanistan in two vehicles early in the morning when Nato forces opened fire on them near the border village of Bibi Jan.

The firing left Saleh Mohammad dead. Nato forces arrested four Pakistanis who were travelling in the vehicles.

“They took four Pakistanis across the border,” sources said, adding that both vehicles were damaged in the attack.

The Pakistanis taken into custody were identified as Mohammad Raza, Syed Khalid Dad, Syed Rahim Noor and Mohammad Azam.
All of them belonged to the Bibi Jan village.

The sources said it was the forth incident of firing on Pakistanis in the border area of the Chagai district by Nato forces over the past one week.
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Saleem Shahid | Front Page | From the Newspaper


 
 

ISI denies abduction charges

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Current Affairs

Friday, 16 March 2012 09:22

ISLAMABAD, March 14: The Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) on Tuesday told the Islamabad High Court (IHC) that banned outfit Hizbut Tahrir (HT) was trying to defame the agency and demoralize its officials by leveling false allegations against them.The single bench was hearing petition for recovery of two missing activists of the banned outfit.

It was the official response of the ISI to the statement of a HT activist Osama Hanif who after being released, while recording his statement before the magistrate in October last year alleged that Major Tariq had abducted him and detained him in a building in sector G-9/4 of Islamabad. The ISI through director legal ministry of defence, commander Shahbaz Hussain denied the allegation.

Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Tariq Mehmood Jahangiri read out the ISI letter before the IHC single bench comprising Chief Justice Iqbal Hameedur Rehman, in which the agency said, “directorate general ISI has informed that no person with the name of major Tariq has been posted in ISI office at sector G/9-4, neither ISI is involved in alleged detention of the defunct Hizbut Tahrir activists. Therefore, the allegations leveled against ISI are baseless and aimed to demoralise its officials and defame the organization. As a matter of fact, activists of defunct organization Hizbut Tahrir have gone underground to undertake militant/subversive activities and their relatives blamed agencies for their disappearance.”

The court directed the commission of enquiry of enforced disappearance to submit the progress report on the two missing HT activists Dr. Abdul Qayyum and Dr. Waheed and adjourned the matter till April 14.

Umer Hayat Sindhu, counsel for the missing persons told Dawn that it had become the habit of the agencies to mislead the courts. He said in the case of 11 missing prisoners and other missing person cases, the agencies were continuously telling a lie to the court and insisted that the missing men might have been gone to take part in “Jihad” on their own.

In the instant case, ISI repeated its earlier stance whereas 4 missing persons after their release categorically stated that they were picked by the ISI officials.

It may be mentioned that HuT activist Hanif who alleged agencies for his abduction was among those six HT activists who went missing during July and August last year in a crackdown on banned outfit after the military authorities arrested brigadier Ali Khan for his alleged connections with HT.
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Malik Asad | Metropolitan > Islamabad | From the Newspaper


 

Sharifs plan defamation suit against Younus Habib

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Current Affairs

Friday, 16 March 2012 09:01

LAHORE: Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif says his family has decided to take Younus Habib to court for allegations levelled by him in the Mehran Bank scandal.

Addressing a press conference at his residence on Wednesday, he said Younus Habib’s allegations of having paid Rs2.5 million to him and Rs3.5 million to Nawaz Sharif in the early 1990s were a pack of lies. He said a defamation suit would be filed and a panel of lawyers had been formed to prepare the case.

Mr Sharif accused some elements of using Mr Habib to cover up their own corruption and bluntly told them that the ‘malicious’ campaign would neither deter the PML-N leadership from exposing their loot nor stop it from demanding implementation of the court’s NRO verdict.

He said Mr Habib should either present evidence of telegraphic transfer (TT) of money or face legal action.

He also termed Asif Jamshed, who allegedly received the TT as stated by Mr Habib in his changed statement, a fraud, who had embezzled $8 millions from Habib Bank, but the PPP government posted him as managing director of Punjab Bank in 1994.

Mr Jamshed fled to New York when the PML-N returned to power and fired him in 1997.

He said the Supreme Court should take notice of the doling out of Rs1.43 billion to various politicians by Mr Habib, recover the money and penalise the beneficiaries.

Responding to a question, the chief minister said his family had obtained a loan of Rs48 million from Mehran Bank in 1992 and paid back Rs102.1 million, including the principal amount and mark-up.

Criticising the role of secret agencies in distribution of money among politicians, he said the practice affected promotion of democracy, weakened institutions and the rule of law.

Mr Sharif said he was personally aware that Rs500 million had been drawn by the ‘IG of liars’ (apparently alluding to Interior Minister Rehman Malik) during governor’s rule in Punjab in 2009. The money, he alleged, had been used through the IB (Intelligence Bureau) to win loyalties of MPAs against the PML-N.

He said if the apex court summoned him, he would reveal on oath the dirty role played by some men from Islamabad in this respect.

Mr Sharif recalled that it was PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif who had raised the Mehran Bank issue in the 1990s and led a convoy of opposition members and journalists to D. G. Khan for showing the Razi Farm allegedly purchased with the money illegally taken from the bank.
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Amjad Mahmood | Back Page | From the Newspaper


 
 

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