Nigeria says illegal arms ship sailed from India

October 29, 2010

By Nick Tattersall

LAGOS (Reuters) – An illegal shipment of rocket launchers and heavy mortars intercepted in Nigeria first arrived in the country in July on a ship which sailed from India, the Nigerian customs service said on Thursday.

Nigeria’s secret service intercepted 13 containers in the port of Lagos this week, some of which were found to contain rocket launchers, grenades, explosives and ammunition.

The seizure raised concern about national security in Africa’s most populous nation, which is preparing for elections expected to be held next April and which was shaken by car bombings in the capital Abuja almost four weeks ago.

Customs Director Dikko Abdullahi said the containers were discharged from the vessel MV CMA-CGM Everest, which docked in Lagos on July 10 and sailed out again five days later.

The ship’s manifest listed the contents as building materials and its last port of call before Lagos was Jawaharlal Nehru port, south of Mumbai, the customs service said.

It did not say that the vessel’s journey had begun in India or that the containers were loaded there.

“Our system is configured to block suspicious importations of this nature,” Abdullahi said in a statement.

“The importer and exporter had no address on the system and we have reason to believe that the importer’s name given in the import documents is fictitious,” he said.

It is not unusual for shipments to take several months to pass through customs in Lagos, one of West Africa’s busiest ports.

The arms seizure follows car bombings on Oct. 1 which killed at least 10 people near an independence day parade in the capital Abuja. The security services have not publicly linked the two events.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), the main militant group in the oil-producing south, claimed the Oct. 1 attacks and has threatened further strikes, but the State Security Service says the main suspects have been caught.

There is also insecurity in the remote northeast, where a radical Islamist sect has firebombed police stations and shot local officials in recent weeks, though security experts say the attacks are opportunistic and disorganised.

The weapons shown to journalists in Lagos on Wednesday included 107mm mortars, not known to have been used by Nigerian militant groups.

The long-range mortars are designed to attack static targets such as buildings, and are used by armies to support infantry units. They have also been used by the Taliban in Afghanistan, security experts say.

(Additional reporting by Yinka Ibukun; editing by Tim Pearce)


12 killed in Orakzai, Mohmand clashes

October 29, 2010

Tariq Saeed

Peshawar - As the clashes between the insurgents and the security forces continued in the Pakistani volatile tribal belt, a dozen more militants were killed and many others sustained wound on Tuesday in Orakzai and Mohmand agencies. However, the skirmishes also resulted in martyrdom of a man in uniform while two others wounded seriously.

On the other hand the security forces Tuesday claimed to have cleared almost 90 percent area of the Orakzai Agency from terrorists, saying over 600 terrorists were killed and more than 67 security men martyred in the operation. The restive Orakzai Agency which has been in the grip of worst kind of violence for the last couple of weeks, as the reports reaching here said, continued to bleed on Tuesday and a soldier was killed and two others sustained serious injuries when the security forces convoy was ambushed by the miscreants who resorted to indiscriminate firing at Saanda area in Lower Orakzai Agency in the morning. The retaliatory fire by the security forces, according to official sources, eventually left at least six alleged terrorists dead and many others wounded.

Only a day earlier, it may be recalled a road side explosion in Kalaat area of Orakzai Agency had resulted in killing of as many as three people and wounding equal number of others while militants assault on the security forces convoy in Yakh Kandao area in Upper Orakzai Agency last week resulted in martyrdom of a serving colonel of the Pak army and five soldiers.

In the meanwhile, the forces Tuesday struck hard on the militant’s positions in Mohmand Agency Tuesday morning leaving around six militants dead. The forces as the reports said, heavily shelled the alleged terrorist’s hide outs in Kareer area of Tehsil Saafi in Mohmand Agency and destroyed a militant’s den as six trouble makers were gunned down and equal number of others received injuries. In Swat the security forces foiled an attempt of the militants to destroy a government school in Koza Bandai. The school building sustained partial damages. The forces soon after the incident launched massive search operation in the hub of Taliban Imam Dheri and Koza Bandai.

The security forces Tuesday said 90 percent area of the Orakzai Agency was cleared from the terrorists as the operation left over 600 terrorists dead and more than 67 security men martyred in action against the militants.

Briefing media men the Inspector General Frontier Corps (FC) Nadir Zeb said a limited operation was still underway against the terrorists in Upper Orakzai Agency area of Mamozai adding the operation would continue till the time the trouble makers were flushed from the region. He admitted that during the surgery in Orakzai at least 67 personnel of the security forces embraced martyrdom were razed down which were being restored in shelters.

To a query he said clues were found regarding Al-Qaeda presence in Orakzai; however, most of their operatives have been killed or fled the region. He further claimed that the terror activities in the country were planned also in Orakzai Agency but most of the plots were foiled by the security forces well in time. Likewise, he said, as many as 654 terrorists were killed and 250 others injured in the operation adding at least 32000 families were forced to leave their houses.


Govt all set to increase power tariff by 2-3pc per month

October 29, 2010

By Aftab Maken

ISLAMABAD: The PPP government, in line with the conditionality of the IMF and the World Bank, is all set to increase 2-3 per cent power tariff monthly with minimum power increase of 19.4 per cent and maximum of 30.4 per cent at the end of June 2011, says an official document of the Ministry of Water & Power available with The News.

All the monthly fuel adjustments, not notified as yet, will be notified immediately possibly on Nov 05 after determining the power tariff before Oct 30, 2010, it added. The document further suggests that the two possible scenarios for increasing power tariff of 2-3 per cent respectively per month with minimum increase of 19.4 per cent and maximum of 30.4 per cent respectively would help the government to eliminate the power subsidies.

Current power tariff is Rs7.09 per k Wh and with this proposed increase the power tariff will be Rs8.49 per k Wh and Rs9.24 per k Wh respectively in the remaining nine months of the current fiscal year, said the document.

The PPP government has so far increased 63.6 per cent power tariff during the last 30 months and with this proposed increase the power tariff in next 39 months will register an increase of 94 per cent at the end of this fiscal year.

However, if the proposed power reforms were not implemented, the document further pinpointed that the government needs at least Rs226 billion per month to gap the power subsidies. The government has only budgeted subsidy of Rs30 billion for 2010-11.

To overcome the power subsidies, the document also recommends that the final gap of Rs226 billion can be plugged through a number of measures that include Pepco measures, ministry of Water & Power notification and slab restructuring.

Monthly increase of two percent starting from Oct 1 will generate Rs42 billion while three percent increase will also generate revenue of Rs64 billion to gap the actual cost of the power generation, said the document.

An amount of Rs531.4 billion would be collected if the power tariff of July 2010 is persuaded whereas with the proposed increase the power tariff would be Rs573.3 billion and Rs596.1 billion respectively against the actual power cost of Rs694 billion, it added.

The initial power gap of Rs120 billion can reduce the revenue deficit by the introduction of reforms in Pepco, notification and slab restructuring and the final gap in the first scenario would be with a deficit of Rs8 billion while in the second scenario, it would be surplus of Rs15.4 billion, the document concludes.


Pakistan’s freedom incomplete till J-K freed from India: PPP

October 29, 2010

The freedom of Pakistan is incomplete till the whole state of Jammu and Kashmir is “liberated from Indian occupation”, Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting Sumsam Ali Bukhari has said.

Bukhari, a leader of the ruling Pakistan People’s Party, made the remarks while addressing a rally near the Line of Control on Wednesday to observe a Black Day against the alleged Indian occupation of Jammu and Kashmir.

He reiterated the pledge of late PPP founder Zulfikar Ali Bhutto that Pakistan would fight for a thousand years for the liberation of Jammu and Kashmir.

The Black Day was observed across Azad Kashmir through public processions and rallies in all major cities and towns, including the capital Muzaffarabad.

Protesters from all major political parties also staged sit-ins in different sectors of LoC.

The AJK chapter of the PPP organised a rally from Muzaffarabad to Chakothi town that was led by Bukhari.

Meanwhile, militant commanders based in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir have vowed to step up efforts to “liberate” Jammu and Kashmir, saying thousands of people are prepared to cross the Line of Control to help their “oppressed brethren” in their campaign to achieve independence.

Maulana Abdul Wahid Kashmiri, the head of the banned Lashker-e-Taiba in PoK, said militant groups were weighing the international community’s response towards the situation in Jammu and Kashmir.

In related news, Indian firing across the LoC injured protesters and people marching in solidarity with Kashmiris on the Azad side of the border. Indiscriminate firing by Indian BSF injured protesters at the PPP rally, though no confirmed casualties were reported.


CWG: Raids at 60 places around India for financial irregularities

October 28, 2010

Shweta Rajpal Kohli

New Delhi: Three-hundred officials are spending the day raiding 60 offices in different cities including Delhi, Kolkata, Bangalore and Mumbai for financial irregularities linked to the Commonwealth Games.

The offices being raided belong to companies who provided services like landscaping and street lighting as well as sports equipment for the Commonwealth Games.

The raids are aimed at unearthing unaccounted income or attempts to suppress profits. In Kolkata alone, 30 offices are being raided.

In the NCR, raids are being reported at the offices of Satya Prakash Constructions, which provided landscaping services for the CWG, and at the offices of Shiv Naresh Sports which provided synthetic track surfaces and sports accessories like tracksuits.

The recently-held event in Delhi was the most expensive Commonwealth Games ever. The Prime Minister’s office has promised that those who “shamed the country” through corrupt practices will be punished.

Different agencies including the Enforcement Directorate have been asked to uncover a multitude of financial misdeeds that range from payments being made to companies that don’t exist, to contracts that allowed those hired for the Games to get away with severely over-priced equipment and services.

Earlier this month, the offices of four different groups that provided overlays or moveable equipment like treadmills were raided by the income tax. BJP leader Sudhanshu Mittal’s house was among the places searched for documents by tax officials. Mittal was a Director for a company owned by his nephew, Vinay Mittal, that won a multi-crore contract for the Games. Mittal says he is being made a political scapegoat.


Arrest in Fake Bomb Plot Against DC Subway

October 28, 2010

AssociatedPress

A Virginia man has been arrested and indicted on charges he tried to help people he believed were al-Qaida operatives in planning to bomb subway stations in and around the nation’s capital. (Oct. 27)


Rebelling under the Banner of Islam

October 28, 2010

BY RISHAD SHAIKH

“Islamic Extremism” continues to be portrayed as the biggest threat to humanity through the lens of the media. While it is undoubtedly a big threat to world peace but it is not the only threat and definitely not the biggest. Furthermore, “extremism” or “terrorism” more aptly, is anything but Islamic irrespective of the affiliations of the people involved in these activities.

Those that ascribe to the militant ideology of Islam are quick to pass “fatwa” regarding the apostasy of the vast majority of the leaders ruling the Muslim world. They claim them to be corrupt and “not ruling according to the Shariah” and thus outside the pale of Islam. It is based on such fatwas that they embark on their unholy cause of liberating the Muslim lands from these evil apostate rulers. The self appointed saviours of Islam conveniently fail to acknowledge what Islam has to say about rebelling against the government and continue to wage their so-called Jihad against an unholy regime. And the saddest part is that all along the way they claim to be following the teachings of Prophet Muhammad!

But what did the Prophet actually have to say about this issue? Do we find anything in the Quran and Hadith (the two sources of Islamic law which the terrorists claim to be following to the hilt) on how to deal with corrupt and un-Islamic rulers? Yes, there’s plenty and it’s not what the militants would have you believe!

In an authentic narration Hudhaifa bin al-Yaman narrated, “The Prophet (saws) said, ‘There will be after me leaders who do not follow my guidance and do not follow my sunnah and there will be among them men whose hearts are like those of Satan in the body of a human being.’ And I asked the Prophet (saws), ‘What I should do at that time if I reach it?’ He said, ‘listen and obey the ruler, even if he lashed your back and took your money, listen and obey.’

Listen and obey while they lash your back and take your money! Now, that’s something that the common man would also have to struggle to do, let alone the militants! Next thing you know people will start criticizing Islam for being too passive!

In another narration, Auf bin Malik said, “O Prophet of Allah, do you recommend that we fight them?” He said, “No, don’t fight them as long as they do not prevent you from your prayers. And if you see from them something that you dislike, dislike their acts, do not dislike them. And do not take your hand out from obedience to them.”

Ok so no fighting but no disliking either! C’mon you’ve got to be kidding me! And I am sure the current president nor the ones before him have ever stopped anyone from their prayers, albeit the terrorists have!

The two most reliable collectors of hadith, Bukhari and Muslim also share a quote from the revered companion of the Prophet, Abdullah ibn al-Abbas which states, “if someone dislikes his ruler, he must be patient, because if he comes against the ruler in a rebellious or destructive manner by only a hand span and dies, he dies in a state of pre-Islamic ignorance (jahiliyyah) and sin.”

So all you wannabe martyrs- Think again before you blow yourselves up!

In addition to the sources mentioned above you will be able to find quotes of many imminent Islamic scholars throughout history stressing on the importance of obeying your leaders irrespective of their “piety” and degree of religiousness. Al-Bahjouri says “It is an obligation to obey the leader, even if he is not fair or trustworthy or even if he committed sins or mistakes.” Similarly Imam Abu Hanifa says that the head of the state, the Imam, cannot be expelled for being a corrupt person.

You need not be a rocket scientist (read: Mullah) to correctly interpret the above mentioned sources. Islam clearly advocates the people to obey their leaders and live peacefully while prohibiting taking up arms against the government. Rebellion against the ruler is considered to be a great iniquity in Islam. But before you start criticising Islam for being too passive and granting absolute immunity to rulers and allowing them to suppress and loot the masses; let’s see what Islam advocates as the right approach to adopt when it comes to correcting a corrupt government. A hadith states “The most excellent Jihad is when one speaks a word of truth in the presence of a tyrannical ruler.” Note that the hadith does not advocate the use of violence against the ruler but rather praises the one who attempts to correct a ruler by speech.

Let it be very clear, that an armed and violent opposition to a state regime can and never will be recognized as Jihad in the way of Allah, despite the claims made by groups involved in such activities. Today we find many groups instigating a rebellion against the government under the banner of Islam. In fact, such groups have stepped so far over the line that they do not only fight against the government but also seek to punish anyone associated with the “corrupt government” in any way whatsoever. Hence you find people such as government officers, public servants and members of the police and armed forces losing their lives to their terrorist activities. Of course they claim that people in such positions are actually helping the rulers to fulfill their evil fantasies but I would strongly recommend such people to read the story of a companion of the Prophet, Hatib Ibn Abi Balta. The man assisted the enemies of Islam during the life of the Prophet after having accepted Islam and passed on valuable secret information to them. Upon finding out, the Prophet demanded an explanation and was given one where Hatib Ibn Abi Balta explained he only aided them because he feared for his family back in Makkah, and hoped that they would give his family protection in return of his help. The Prophet, after hearing this explanation did not punish the companion nor did he consider him to be outside the fold of Islam. Thus, the legitimacy of the militant groups’ claim regarding people working for the government deserving punishment is also rendered null and void under the real banner of Islam.

With such solid text in place prohibiting Muslims to take up arms against the rulers, one wonders how so many groups today freely label the government and those working for it as apostates and issue “fatwas” to kill them. Maintaining peace and harmony in the society is more important to Islam than the removal of corrupt rulers with the use of violence and thus disturbing that peace.

Oh and by the way, Islam also tells us to pray for our leaders so that they may be guided to good. I wonder how many of us good Muslims (i.e non-terrorists) would ever raise our hands up to the heavens and pray for the likes of Zardari, Giliani, the Sharif brothers and who knows maybe even Musharraf! I take it, not many.

Rishadullah Shaikh is the New-Media Manager at Dawn.com


Protesters urged to breach LoC

October 28, 2010

Roshan Mughal

MUZAFFARABAD: The United Jihad Council (UJC) on Wednesday urged people to prepare themselves for breaching the Line of Control (LoC) in protest against continued human rights violations in Indian Kashmir.


People in Muzaffarabad hold a rally to condemn the Indian occupation in Jammu and Kashmir on October 27, 1947. Photo: Express

The council issued the call during a protest sit-in on the LoC to mark a ‘black day’ against the illegal occupation of Kashmir by Indian forces in 1947.

“Will you trespass the bloody ceasefire line when the call is given?” Syed Salahuddin, Chairman of the United Jihad Council – an umbrella of the 12 organisations fighting Indian rule in Kashmir – asked a gathering during an Azm-e-Azadi conference here on Wednesday. ‘Salahuddin go ahead! We are with you,’ the crowd responded in unison.

On the occasion, Indian forces resorted to unprovoked firing in Hajira, Pandu and Bhadi sectors in Rawalakot and Hattain districts, where the Azad Kashmir and Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front had staged protest sit-ins.

“We are neither tired nor bent. Our fight will continue against the Indian army until each and every inch of Jammu and Kashmir is liberated,” said Salahuddin as he demanded the government send a freedom Flotilla similar to that of Turkey to Indian Kashmir to provide victims with food and medicines.

He urged the Pakistani government to launch a diplomatic offensive for the liberation of Indian Kashmir by getting out of confusions over the principled stance on the issue.

Salahuddin appreciated China’s stance over Kashmir, which decided to issue Chinese visas to Kashmiris without an Indian passport, hoping that it will continue.

“We are thankful to China who has adopted a principled stand on Kashmir and refused visa to the Indian general of the Northern Command,” he said.

Hundreds of people belonging to Hizbul Muajhideen, Jamat-ud-Dawa, and other organisations attended the conference which demanded of the US president to use his office for the settlement of the Kashmir dispute to avoid a war in South Asia.

Members of Tahreek Azadi-e-Jammu Kashmir Amir, Jamat-Ud-Dawa AJK, Al Badar Mujahideen, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen, Jaish-i-Muhammad, Hizb-i-Islami and Pasban-e-Hurriyat attended the conference.


Pulling Fingernails Won’t Turn Kashmiris Into Indians, Pleads Arundhati Roy

October 27, 2010
  • Pity that nation that jails those who ask for justice’
  • ‘No one should be killed, raped, imprisoned or have their finger-nails pulled out in order to force them to say they are Indians’

India’s most famous novelist meets with the husband and brother of two Kashmiri women raped and killed by Indian Army soldiers. All major Indian newspapers warn Roy of imminent arrest on sedition charges.

BY ARUNDHATI ROY | Monday, 25 October 2010.
WWW.PAKNATIONALISTS.COM

SRINAGAR, Indian-Occupied Kashmir-I write this from Srinagar, Kashmir. This morning’s papers say that I may be arrested on charges of sedition for what I have said at recent public meetings on Kashmir. I said what millions of people here say every day. I said what I, as well as other commentators have written and said for years. Anybody who cares to read the transcripts of my speeches will see that they were fundamentally a call for justice. I spoke about justice for the people of Kashmir who live under one of the most brutal military occupations in the world; for Kashmiri Pandits who live out the tragedy of having been driven out of their homeland; for Dalit soldiers killed in Kashmir whose graves I visited on garbage heaps in their villages in Cuddalore; for the Indian poor who pay the price of this occupation in material ways and who are now learning to live in the terror of what is becoming a police state.

Yesterday I traveled to Shopian, the apple-town in South Kashmir which had remained closed for 47 days last year in protest against the brutal rape and murder of Asiya and Nilofer, the young women whose bodies were found in a shallow stream near their homes and whose murderers have still not been brought to justice. I met Shakeel, who is Nilofer’s husband and Asiya’s brother. We sat in a circle of people crazed with grief and anger who had lost hope that they would ever get ‘insaaf’ – justice – from India, and now believed that Azadi – freedom – was their only hope. I met young stone-pelters who had been shot through their eyes. I traveled with a young man who told me how three of his friends, teenagers in Anantnag district, had been taken into custody and had their finger-nails pulled out as punishment for throwing stones.

In the papers some have accused me of giving ‘hate-speeches’, of wanting India to break up. On the contrary, what I say comes from love and pride. It comes from not wanting people to be killed, raped, imprisoned or have their finger-nails pulled out in order to force them to say they are Indians. It comes from wanting to live in a society that is striving to be a just one. Pity the nation that has to silence its writers for speaking their minds. Pity the nation that needs to jail those who ask for justice, while communal killers, mass murderers, corporate scamsters, looters, rapists, and those who prey on the poorest of the poor, roam free.”

Arundhati Roy is an Indian novelist and Booker Prize recipient. She is opposed to her country’s occupation of Kashmir. This comment was published by SOS Kashmir


Turmoil hits PML-Q after “dating” Babar Awan

October 27, 2010

ISLAMABAD: Law Minister Babar Awan’s meeting with Ch Pervaiz Elahi has virtually created an internal turmoil in the PML-Q as Makhdoom Faisal Saleh Hayat-led camp within the party has threatened to part ways from the Chaudhrys of Gujrat, background discussions reveal.

The critics of Chaudhrys of Gujrat say that the Bank of Punjab scandal has allegedly caused sleepless nights to Pervaiz Elahi and his son, Moonis, a scam in which Babar Awan and Pervaiz Elahi are facing multiple allegations. “It was a meeting of like-minded people who shared same troubles and same threats,” said a party lawmaker with reference to Babar-Pervaiz issues with the bank.

The Monday night’s meeting has put the Chaudhrys on the defensive as they have beenconstantly asked to explain to party colleagues why they made the move. They have assured that they would take the party into confidence before any decision, a fact confirmed by more than three party leaders. Chaudhry brothers were not available for comments when approached.

However, majority of the party MNAs are reluctant to trust any word of consolation from their leadership and are instead insisting on Pervaiz Elahi to publicly explain his position and commit that no such meeting would be held in future that could spark speculations.

Although, Faisal, who is the party’s parliamentary leader in the National Assembly, is reluctant to come out publicly as yet a PML-Q MNA said Faisal was giving tough time to Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi and had told him in categorical terms that they won’t be staying together in case of any further meetings with the PPP leaders.

Faisal, in a guarded conversation, told our sources that the alliance with the PPP was out of question. He, however, admitted that the meeting had sparked wild speculations.

According to him, the PPP government’s massive corruption is the biggest hurdle in the way of any alliance. Faisal who has moved the Supreme Court on the controversial Rental Power Plants (RPPs) deal said it would be a ridiculous idea to join hands with a party that had been taken to court on corruption allegations. “Joining hands mean we will become partners in crime. Are we?”

Asked about his contacts with the leadership after Babar-Pervaiz meeting, Faisal refused to divulge the details, terming it an issue within the party.

However, leaders known for their close affiliation with Faisal said that the Chaudhrys had been trying to calm him down since the meeting. But Faisal and a group of party MNAs were not ready to accept any explanation less than a public statement in unequivocal terms from Pervaiz Elahi.

It has been learnt that majority of the party lawmakers were kept in the dark before this meeting and they only came to know through TV channels. The party received yet another strong blow when Pervaiz Elahi’s previous hard-hitting speeches were telecast on Geo TV’s Kamran Khan Show.

“There could have been no moment of more shame for us in general and for Pervaiz Elahi in particular,” commented an MNA. One of the lawmakers, who was among those who defected from the PPP in 2002 under the leadership of Faisal, said that they were badly disappointed with the Chaudhrys’ role as party leaders. He said that more than 10 MNAs were ready to join Musharraf’s newly-formed party and this mass defection was only stopped by Faisal’s intervention.


Remains of 100 Muslims found in Bosnian lake

October 27, 2010

NewsCore

The remains of more than 100 Muslim victims of Bosnia’s 1992-1995 war were found in a lake in the eastern part of the country, officials confirmed last night.

Some 500 incomplete sets of bones, exhumed from Perucac Lake by Bosnian and Serbian forensic experts, should account for around 108 victims, officials from institutes for missing people of the two countries said in Sarajevo.

The remains of the victims – believed to be Muslims killed at the start of the war by Bosnian Serb forces carrying out ethnic cleansing near the eastern town of Visegrad – must be identified through DNA analysis.

“After taking samples for identification, we should have the first victims’ identities within the next four to six weeks,” said Amor Masovic, head of the Bosnian Institute for Missing People.

Mr Masovic presented the results of the exhumation operation at the lake – a reservoir on the Drina River, which marks the border between Serbia and Bosnia – along with his Serbian counterpart Zeljko Odalovic.

Since late July, some 15 forensic experts, helped by more that 2000 civilian volunteers and the army, have searched the lake’s emptied bed.

Authorities are still searching for 824 Muslims reported missing in the Visegrad region, Mr Masovic said, and it is believed that a third of them were thrown into the lake.

Bosnia’s inter-ethnic war between its Croats, Muslims and Serbs claimed some 100,000 lives and some 10,000 people are still reported as missing, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.


Govt ignored its own plan to end corruption

October 27, 2010

By Ansar Abbasi

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s sharp downslide as one of the most corrupt nations in the world in 2010 is the consequence of Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani’s utter failure to implement a reforms programme prepared by his own government to check corruption and improve governance.Government sources said that the National Governance Plan, prepared by a high-level committee headed by the then Finance Minister Shaukat Tareen, remained untouched while there had also been no progress in the implementation of the restructuring programme of the eight corruption-hit and badly mismanaged loss making leading public sector enterprises by September 1.

Additionally, it is said that the promise of setting up of a new accountability commission still remains unfulfilled. The sources said that after the issuance of 2009 report of Transparency International, which showed Pakistan overtaking five most corrupt nations to become 42nd from the previous 47th most corrupt country in the world, the prime minister constituted some official committees to introduce reforms to check corruption and bad governance.

Interestingly, the reforms plan was prepared and submitted to the government but the prime minister did not implement any of the recommended reforms. As a consequence, both corruption and bad governance touched new heights in Pakistan.

On Tuesday, the Transparency International found Pakistan slipping from the 2009′s 42nd position to the present (2010) 34th most corrupt country in the world. In April-May this year, Shaukat Tareen, just before leaving the government, submitted to the prime minister a “National Governance Plan” that sought from Gilani to take some bold initiatives and undergo radical changes in the present day’s governance to improve governance and check corruption.

The National Governance Plan recommended an immediate cut in the size of the federal secretariat by reducing the number of federal ministries down to 30; giving protection of tenure to key bureaucrats and heads of government organisations; introducing of motorway policing model throughout the country; replacement of patwaris by revenue assistants to be appointed by the public service commissions; rationalisation (reduction) in the size of the Prime Minister’s Secretariat; working out a new code of working relationship between a minister and a secretary; pay to government servants on the basis of performance; revision of Government Lands Act 1912 for better and transparent allocation and utilisation of state land; filling of strategic positions through open competition; and computerisation of land revenue record, court cases, police record, property tax, etc. None of these reforms has been implemented as yet.

The plan also expected from the present government to fix the minimum tenure of service for secretaries of the cabinet, finance, interior, establishment, provincial chief secretaries and heads of police departments, and any other such position to three years. In case of all other federal secretaries, the term of the tenure, the plan recommended, be protected for two years.

Similar protection of tenure was recommended for provincial home secretaries, heads of police and other similar positions at the provincial level.The plan also proposed restructuring of the Establishment Division into a professional human resource department of the Government of Pakistan having special emphasis on career management and training of the government servants.

It recommended that pay for performance may be introduced with five performance criteria i.e. excellent, very good, good, average and below average. Bonus and rewards for excellent performers along with a punitive framework with regards to promotions may be devised.

Tareen’s National Governance Plan also recommended that Annual Confidential Report (ACR) of the government servants may be replaced with a redesigned open ended performance evaluation report in which goal and targets are set at the beginning of the tenure along with key performance indicators, which are tailored to reflect the scope of work and range of responsibilities relevant to each job.

The report sought restructuring of the key public sector institutions by appointing professional CEOs/head of organisations, whose appointment should be ratified by parliament. They should then be ring-fenced to act independently on financial and professional matters.

Government, it was proposed, should carry out restructuring of all public sector enterprises to improve service delivery, enhance transparency and avoid fiscal burden on the exchequer. However, nothing has been done as yet in this regard.

Restructuring of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has also been proposed and it was recommended that the FBR may be reformed with the aim of increasing the tax/GDP ratio, widening the tax base, simplifying tax laws, creating a transparent and easy to understand tax structure and fostering a culture of voluntary tax compliance through strategies to deter, detect and address non-compliance.

The report also sought strengthening of regulatory authorities by having reconstituted autonomous boards with appropriate private sector participation and an effective CEO, authorised to develop their own code of conduct and a strong management system.

Gilani had committed early this year to restructure Pakistan International Airlines Corporation, Pakistan Railways, Pakistan Steel Mills Corporation, Pakistan Electric Power Company Limited, Trading Corporation of Pakistan, Pakistan Agriculture Services and Storage Corporation, Utility Stores Corporation and the National Highway Authority, which instead of earning profits for the government are eating up hundreds of billions of rupees from the public exchequer because of massive corruption and mismanagement.

The prime minister had announced to restructure these public sector enterprises by changing their board of directors, appointment of new managing directors, CEOs and directors, approval of restructuring plans and starting of the implementation plans. September 1 was set as the deadline for this task but the Gilani government failed to do this and instead started plaguing organisations like OGDCL, State Life of Pakistan Corporation and others by making controversial appointments.


Pakistan border region becomes terror epicenter

October 26, 2010

By KATHY GANNON
The Associated Press

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — It’s a land of daunting mountains, crisscrossed with rugged paths. Tucked in the valleys, families live a subsistence existence in mud houses secluded behind 10-foot-high walls, cooking over open fires and sleeping under the sky. Dirt poor, uneducated, their only knowledge of the outside world comes from a crackling radio.


In this file photo taken on Sept. 13, 2006 Pakistan army soldier stands next to ammunition seized from militants in Wana of Pakistani tribal region of Waziristan. These wilds of North Waziristan, on Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, have become a crossroads for terrorism. In mosques, mullahs tell worshippers that it is a religious duty to fight the U.S.-led forces just over the mountains in Afghanistan. Villagers open up their homes to would-be fighters and suicide bombers heading across the border to kill coalition troops _ or heading the other direction into Pakistan’s heartland to carry out attacks that have shaken the fragile U.S.-allied government in Islamabad. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed, file) (Anjum Naveed – AP)

The wilds of North Waziristan, on Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, have become a crossroads for terrorism. The United States is pushing Pakistan to mount an offensive there before the year is out, but Pakistan is saying it won’t be rushed.

U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen has branded North Waziristan the “epicenter of terrorism,” and President Barack Obama has said controlling it is key to winning the Afghan war.

In mosques, mullahs tell worshippers that it is their religious duty to fight the U.S.-led forces just over the mountains in Afghanistan. Villagers open up their homes to would-be fighters and suicide bombers heading across the border to kill coalition troops – or heading the other direction into Pakistan’s heartland to carry out attacks that have shaken the fragile U.S.-allied government in Islamabad.

The threat is also exported far abroad.

Among the thousands of militants holed up in the territory are scores with European or U.S. passports, believed to be planning attacks in Europe and North America. The arrest of a German in Afghanistan this year revealed a plot hatched in North Waziristan to carry out bloody bombings and shootings in Europe. It was also to North Waziristan that U.S. resident Faisal Shahzad traveled to train in arms and bombmaking, before attempting to detonate a car bomb in New York City’s tourist-packed Times Square in May.

Any offensive will be a formidable task. Until 2004, the Pakistani army had not entered North Waziristan, part of Pakistan’s highly autonomous tribal border belt. Even now the army, with 140,000 soldiers deployed elsewhere in the tribal region, has little presence in North Waziristan. At their base in the region’s main town, Miran Shah, they rarely patrol.

One of the main militant groups in North Waziristan led by Hafiz Gul Bahadur handed out pamphlets at the bazaar in Miran Shah on Sunday warning the government that any offensive would result in “unending war.” A copy of the pamphlet was obtained by The Associated Press and verified by intelligence officials and local residents.

Some 10,000 foreign militants are in North Waziristan, says Kamran Khan, a parliament member from Miran Shah, a figure that mirrors estimates by U.S. and Pakistani officials.

They are mixed in a cauldron of armed jihadist organizations, including Afghan Taliban, Pakistani Taliban and al-Qaida. One of Afghanistan’s deadliest insurgent groups, the network of Jalaluddin Haqqani, has been headquartered in Miran Shah for three decades. U.S. and Pakistani intelligence believe they sighted al-Qaida’s No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahri, in the territory in 2004 and nearly killed him with a drone strike.

“Everyone is there. There are Arabs, Uzbeks, Tajiks, Indonesians, Bengalis, Punjabis, Afghans, Chechens and the ones they call the white jihadis” – meaning European militants, Khan said, speaking to The Associated Press in Islamabad.

Residents are widely sympathetic with the Taliban and their fight against the Americans in Afghanistan, said Khan, 28, who says he only travels to Miran Shah with an escort of 30 armed guards because of regular death threats.

“Our area has no development, no education, only madrasas (Islamic religious schools),” said Khan. “Our people listen five times a day to the maulvis (clerics) and they are always saying this is jihad.”

Because of the dangers, international journalists are restricted by the government from entering the territory. Its tribes have close connections with the key border city of Peshawar, 170 kilometers (100 miles) to the northeast.

Roughly the size of Connecticut, North Waziristan’s population of 350,000 is mainly Pashtun, the same majority ethnic group in Afghanistan that is the backbone of the Taliban. Mountain paths lead across the unguarded border into the Afghan provinces of Paktia and Paktika, both Taliban strongholds.

In the 1980′s, North Waziristan was a vital supply route for U.S.-backed rebels fighting the invading Soviet Union in Afghanistan. Islamic holy warriors from around the globe flocked to the territory.

Among them were Osama bin Laden and his Arab warriors, who before setting across the border stayed in Miran Shah’s gritty hotels, where pieces of dirty foam on the wooden floors serve as beds.

Washington has stepped up drone attacks in the territory. One resident told AP of two cemeteries in North Waziristan with the graves of 300 foreign fighters, most killed by drones.

Pakistani officers say the army will launch an offensive – but the question is when. They say the military won’t be rushed.

“It has to lay the foundations, create the conditions, weaken and divide its enemies” and solidify civilian control elsewhere in the tribal belt so troops there can be deployed in the operation, he said, speaking on condition of anonymity to talk frankly of the plans.

The initial foray could be a limited operation against Mir Ali, a small town east of Miran Shah where U.S. intelligence says al-Qaida has reconstituted, the official said.

But most likely, any offensive would not go after the Afghan Haqqani network, a key target that Washington wants hit to ease attacks on its troops in Afghanistan. Doing so could spark a backlash from sympathetic Pashtuns in the tribal belt and fuel accusations by rightwing politicians and TV commentators that the Pakistan army is selling out to Americans.

If Pakistani forces go too far, “there will be a contagion of rage across the Pashtun tribes against the Pakistan army, and they will be faced with the choice of being driven from the tribal region (or) having a major wave of attacks in Pakistan cities,” Michael Scheuer, former CIA pointman in the hunt for bin Laden, told AP.

Instead, an offensive would likely focus on the Pakistani Taliban, which has declared war on the Islamabad government, and on any non-Afghan militants.

Another challenge is that the Pakistani military is tied down elsewhere.

The army is still trying to stabilize neighboring South Waziristan, where an operation late last year flushed out Taliban fighters but also drove hundreds of thousands of residents from their homes.

And many troops are busy holding down the nearby valley of Swat, where the military put down a Taliban surge in 2008.

“If we leave Swat today, they (the Taliban) will be back tomorrow,” said the security official.

Editor’s Note: Kathy Gannon is special regional correspondent for Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Associated Press writer Rasool Dawar contributed to this report from Peshawar.


Who will flag down Rehman Malik’s fleet?

October 26, 2010

Shahbaz Rana

ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Rehman Malik faced an embarrassing situation when it was revealed that he is using four official vehicles against his entitlement of just one. His action is raising questions as to who raising the question who will respect the law of the land when its guardian himself is blatantly violating it.


Interior minister illegally using FIA cars

“Three vehicles of the Federal Investigation Agency, are attached with the interior minister,” said Director-General Federal Audit, Syed Gulzar Hussain.

The information was volunteered at a time when the acting interior secretary was trying to portray a pristine image of the minister in the Public Accounts Committee, insisting that Malik was using just one 2003 model of a 1,300cc car.

Malik is the second cabinet minister in a battalion of over 90 who is found to be “criminally misusing cars” by the office of the Auditor General of Pakistan.

Earlier, Communications Minister Arbab Alamgir was the one caught violating a law which allows a minister or a minister of state to use only a 1,800cc car.

The revelations make a mockery of the prime minister’s austerity campaign which also demands the use of 1,600cc cars by ministers in the wake of a pressing financial crisis.

Leader of the Opposition in the National Asembly Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan the other day said that even Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani had to spend time in jail on the allegation of misusing official cars.

During the PAC meeting, Acting Secretary Nasir Hayat asserted that the minister was using just one car from the ministry’s pool. The minister, however, is often seen using a white SUV instead of using a seven-year-old car bearing a registration number of IDP 8888.

It is hard to believe that the minister is using a 1,300cc car when a joint secretary, administration, of his ministry was found illegally using a 2,400cc double-cabin vehicle and two Additional Superintendents of Police were also found illegally using 1,800cc cars.

There is “a criminal misuse of cars” by interior ministry officials, observed the committee’s acting chairperson, Yasmeen Rehman, of PPP.

“The vehicles being used by Pakistani police are not used even by police in the United States,” said the DG Federal Audit. The Auditor General of Pakistan Syed Tanvir Ali Agha said all ministries should provide details whether these vehicles were purchased after due diligence. “Systems are in place but prima facie internal controls are not working in the interior ministry,” the AGP said.

“If ministries failed to forego their regal lifestyle, the PAC would direct the finance ministry to freeze their budgets,” said Chaudhry Nisar.

He said starting from November 1, secretaries of the ministries concerned would be held responsible if any official was found using any car above the recommended ceiling.

The Higher Education Commission, which by any standards, should be foremost in following rules and regulations, is also found misusing cars in a rather odd manner.

The DG Federal Audit told the PAC that Allama Iqbal Open University (AIOU) possessed 20 expensive all-terrain SUVs. “The management is involved in selling their spare parts and it is public knowledge that if you cannot find spares of (that particular SUV) you can get it from the AIOU,” said Syed Gulzar Hussain.


Kashmir was never integral part of India: Arundhati

October 26, 2010

PTI

Activist Arundhati Roy, who created a controversy by questioning Jammu and Kashmir’s accession to the Union, on Sunday said the State was never an integral part of India.


Writer and activist Arundhati Roy addresses a seminar ‘Wither Kashmir: Freedom or enslavement’, organised by the Coalition of Civil Societies, in Srinagar, on Sunday. Photo: Nissar Ahmad

“Kashmir has never been an integral part of India. It is a historical fact. Even the Indian government has accepted this,” the Booker Prize winner said.

Ms. Roy alleged that India became “colonising power” soon after its Independence from the British rule.

She was speaking at a seminar on the theme ‘Wither Kashmir: Freedom or enslavement’ organised by the Coalition of Civil Societies (CCS) here.


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