Punjab vs federation: PML-N vows to support judiciary in case it seeks military’s help

July 27, 2011

By Abdul Manan

The federal government is stalling on implementing the Supreme Court’s orders to cover up corrupt practices of its coalition partners, Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has said.

“The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) will hold a party convention on July 27 after which we will hold a high-level party meeting to draw strategies to force the government to obey court rulings,” Shahbaz said at a press conference held on Tuesday at his Model Town residence in Lahore.

Announcing war against the federal government, he said that he was willing to sacrifice his own government to ensure that the judiciary’s verdicts in the corruption scandals, such as the Hajj scam and the National Insurance Company Ltd land scam, are honoured. “The PML-N will support the judiciary if it asks for the military’s help to implement its verdicts,” he said.

Shahbaz said that President Zardari is the biggest hurdle in the way of an independent judiciary. “Zardari wants Dogar courts from where he can get a ruling of his own liking,” he said.

Asked why the court is not initiating contempt proceedings, he said that it was the court’s prerogative and he cannot comment on it. However, he said that the PML-N will not be a silent spectator as the court is humiliated and will take direct action against the federal government. “Defying court rulings will be like spoiling the country’s basics. If needed, we will again launch a long march against the federal government,” he said.

Meanwhile, Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader and former law minister Babar Awan has criticised Shahbaz’s speech saying he is ‘politicising’ judicial matters.

“The PML-N is trying to play the judicial card and will fail like [it did] in the past,” Awan told the media at the Governor House. “He has indirectly given a message to the federation that Punjab will defy it.”

He said that the chief justice of Pakistan should take suo motu notice of Shahbaz’s statement in which he has tried to provoke the people against the federal government.

Awan said that before announcing war, Shahbaz should review whether Punjab is itself complying with court orders or not. “The court has also given a verdict against current Lahore police chief for negligence in the Gojra incident but he continues to serve,” he said.

He said that Shahbaz has used unparliamentary language against President Zardari just to provoke the PPP. “There is no constitutional war between the executive and the judiciary in any province and I cannot understand who Shahbaz is challenging in his declaration of war,” Awan said.


Call APC, include army and judiciary, Shahbaz asks PM

March 8, 2011

Pakistan Today

Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has advised Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani to call an all-parties conference, including the army and judiciary, to devise solutions to the country’s problems. The prime minister, however, told reporters in Islamabad that he would respond to Shahbaz Sharif’s proposal after going through the details. Shahbaz told reporters after the inauguration of a three-day anti-polio campaign at his residence in Lahore that two days ago he had spoken to the prime minister on the phone, on the advice of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif, to seek a way to steer the country out of the crises.

Punjab CM says all stakeholders should be taken on board to discuss challenges, Gilani says he will respond to proposal after seeing details

He said the contact with Gilani was meant to cool down political tensions in the country, especially those between the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and the PML-N and to refocus on the people’s issues. He said he was ready to meet the PM if invited. He said that the need of the hour was for “all the stakeholders, including the political leadership, army and judiciary [to] discuss the challenges faced by the country”. “The prime minister can call us or we can arrange a meeting in Lahore to develop complete consensus on finding ways to improve the deteriorating situation in the country,” the CM said.

He said that because of the deteriorating conditions in the country, there should be no point-scoring on the political front. He said gas outages were discussed in his phone call to the PM and that he had stressed it should be ended as soon as possible and hopefully the problem would be solved soon. PM TO RESPOND: To Shahbaz Sharif’s proposals, Prime Minister Gilani said, “Let the details come then I will respond to this proposal … I will also convene a meeting of the leaders of all parliamentary parties for discussion on national issues.”

Talking to reporters addressing a Seerat conference, Gilani said that whether or not the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) would join the cabinet should be directed to the party itself, but added that the MQM was one of the allies of the government. He said the government could not fight a war with the United States on the issue of drone strikes. “We are against drone strikes … we are using all diplomatic channels to convince the US that these strikes are proving counter-productive. However, we cannot have a war with the US on this issue,” he said.

The premier assured the nation that the government would not take any decision on the issue of Raymond Davis against national interests. He declined to comment on the Supreme Court’s orders to terminate the contract of the Federal Investigation Agency’s director general because the matter was still in court. Gilani said if investigations proved that Interior Minister Rehman Malik had failed to provide adequate security to slain minorities affairs minister Shahbaz Bhatti, action would be taken against him.


Pres Zardari oped in Sunday’s Washington Post

March 7, 2011

By Asif Ali Zardari
Washington Post

Just days before her assassination, my wife, Shaheed Benazir Bhutto, wrote presciently of the war within Islam and the potential for a clash between Islam and the West: “There is an internal tension within Muslim society. The failure to resolve that tension peacefully and rationally threatens to degenerate into a collision course of values spilling into a clash between Islam and the West. It is finding a solution to this internal debate within Islam – about democracy, about human rights, about the role of women in society, about respect for other religions and cultures, about technology and modernity – that shall shape future relations between Islam and the West.”

Two months ago my friend Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab, was cut down for standing up against religious intolerance and against those who would use debate about our laws to divide our people. On Tuesday, another leading member of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), Shahbaz Bhatti, the minister for minority affairs and the only Christian in our cabinet, was murdered by extremists tied to al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

These assassinations painfully reinforce my wife’s words and serve as a warning that the battle between extremism and moderation in Pakistan affects the success of the civilized world’s confrontation with the terrorist menace.

A small but increasingly belligerent minority is intent on undoing the very principles of tolerance upon which our nation was founded in 1947; principles by which Pakistan’s founder, Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, lived and died; and principles that are repeated over and over in the Koran. The extremists who murdered my wife and friends are the same who blew up the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad and who have blown up girls’ schools in the Swat Valley.

We will not be intimidated, nor will we retreat. Such acts will not deter the government from our calibrated and consistent efforts to eliminate extremism and terrorism. It is not only the future of Pakistan that is at stake but peace in our region and possibly the world.

Our nation is pressed by overlapping threats. We have lost more soldiers in the war against terrorism than all of NATO combined. We have lost 10 times the number of civilians who died on Sept. 11, 2001. Two thousand police officers have been killed. Our economic growth was stifled by the priorities of past dictatorial regimes that unfortunately were supported by the West. The worst floods in our history put millions out of their homes. The religious fanaticism behind our assassinations is a tinderbox poised to explode across Pakistan. The embers are fanned by the opportunism of those who seek advantages in domestic politics by violently polarizing society.

We in Pakistan know our challenges and seek the trust and confidence of our international allies, who sometimes lose patience and pile pressure on those of us who are already on the front lines of what is undeniably a long war. Our concern that we avoid steps that inadvertently help the fanatics is misinterpreted abroad as inaction or even cowardice. Instead of understanding the perilous situation in which we find ourselves, some well-meaning critics tend to forget the distinction between courage and foolhardiness. We are fighting terrorists for the soul of Pakistan and have paid a heavy price. Our desire to confront and deal with the menace in a manner that is effective in our context should not become the basis for questioning our commitment or ignoring our sacrifices.

If Pakistan and the United States are to work together against terrorism, we must avoid political incidents that could further inflame tensions and provide extremists or opportunists with a pretext for destabilizing our fledgling democracy. The Raymond Davis incident in Lahore, which directly resulted in the deaths of three Pakistani men and the suicide of a Pakistani woman, is a prime example of the unanticipated consequences of problematic behavior. We need not go into the legal, moral and political intricacies of this case. Suffice it to say that the actions of Davis and others like him inflame passions in our country and undermine respect and support for the United States among our people. We are committed to peaceful adjudication of the Davis case in accordance with the law. But it is in no one’s interest to allow this matter to be manipulated and exploited to weaken the government of Pakistan and damage further the U.S. image in our country.

Similarly counterproductive are threats to apply sanctions to Pakistan over the Davis affair by cutting off Kerry-Lugar development funds that were designed to build infrastructure, strengthen education and create jobs. It is a threat, written out of the playbook of America’s enemies, whose only result will be to undermine U.S. strategic interests in South and Central Asia. In an incendiary environment, hot rhetoric and dysfunctional warnings can start fires that will be difficult to extinguish.

The writer is president of Pakistan.


Can it get Worse?

January 17, 2011

Tariq Ali

Mumtaz Hussain Qadri smiled as he surrendered to his colleagues after shooting Salman Taseer, the governor of the Punjab, dead. Many in Pakistan seemed to support his actions; others wondered how he’d managed to get a job as a state bodyguard in the carefully screened Elite Force. Geo TV, the country’s most popular channel, reported, and the report has since been confirmed, that ‘Qadri had been kicked out of Special Branch after being declared a security risk,’ that he ‘had requested that he not be fired on but arrested alive if he managed to kill Taseer’ and that ‘many in Elite Force knew of his plans to kill Salman Taseer.’

Qadri is on his way to becoming a national hero. On his first appearance in court, he was showered with flowers by admiring Islamabad lawyers who have offered to defend him free of charge. On his way back to prison, the police allowed him to address his supporters and wave to the TV cameras. The funeral of his victim was sparsely attended: a couple of thousand mourners at most. A frightened President Zardari and numerous other politicians didn’t show up. A group of mullahs had declared that anyone attending the funeral would be regarded as guilty of blasphemy. No mullah (that includes those on the state payroll) was prepared to lead the funeral prayers. The federal minister for the interior, Rehman Malik, a creature of Zardari’s, has declared that anyone trying to tamper with or amend the blasphemy laws will be dealt with severely. In the New York Times version he said he would shoot any blasphemer himself.

Taseer’s spirited defence of Asiya Bibi, a 45-year-old Punjabi Christian peasant, falsely charged with blasphemy after an argument with two women who accused her of polluting their water by drinking out of the same receptacle, provoked an angry response from religious groups. Many in his own party felt that Taseer’s initiative was mistimed, but in Pakistan the time is never right for such campaigns. Bibi had already spent 18 months in jail. Her plight had been highlighted by the media, women had taken to the streets to defend her and Taseer and another senior politician from the Pakistan Peoples Party, Sherry Rehman, had demanded amendments to the blasphemy laws. Thirty-eight other women have been imprisoned under the same law in recent years and soon after a friendly meeting between Yousaf Gillani, the prime minister, and the leader of the supposedly moderate Jamaat-e-Islami, a member of the latter offered a reward of ten thousand dollars to whoever manages to kill Bibi.

Taseer’s decision to take up Bibi’s case was not made on a whim. He had cleared the campaign with Zardari, much to the annoyance of the law minister, Babar Awan, a televangelist and former militant of the Jamaat-e-Islami. He told journalists he didn’t want the socio-cultural agenda to be hijacked by ‘lunatic mullahs’, raged against governments that had refused to take on fanaticism, and brushed aside threats to his life with disdain. He visited the prison where Bibi was detained – the first time in the history of the Punjab that a governor has gone inside a district jail – and at a press conference declared his solidarity with her. ‘She is a woman who has been incarcerated for a year and a half on a charge trumped up against her five days after an incident where people who gave evidence against her were not even present,’ he told an interviewer. He wanted, he said, ‘to take a mercy petition to the president, and he agreed, saying he would pardon Asiya Bibi if there had indeed been a miscarriage of justice’.

Two weeks after this visit Taseer was dead. I never much cared for his business practices or his political affiliations and had not spoken to him for 20 years, but he was one of my closest friends at school and university and the two of us and the late Shahid Rehman – a gifted and witty lawyer who drank himself to death many moons ago – were inseparable. Some joyful memories came back when I saw his face on TV.

It’s 1960. The country is under a pro-US military dictatorship. All opposition is banned. My parents are away. The three of us – we are 17 years old – are at my place and we decide that something has to be done. We buy some red paint and at about 2 a.m. drive to the Cantonment bridge and carefully paint ‘Yankee Go Home’ on the beautiful whitewashed wall. The next morning we scrub the car clean of all traces of paint. For the next few weeks the city is agog. The story doesn’t appear in the press but everyone is talking about it. In Karachi and Dhaka, where they regard Lahore as politically dead, our city’s stock rises. At college our fellow students discuss nothing else. The police are busy searching for the culprits. We smile and enjoy the fun. Finally they track us down, but as Taseer notes with an edge of bitterness, Shahid’s father is a Supreme Court judge and one of my aunts is married to a general who’s also the minister of the interior, so naturally we all get off with a warning. At the time I almost felt that physical torture might be preferable to being greeted regularly by the general with ‘Hello, Mr Yankee Go Home.’

Two years previously (before the dictatorship) the three of us had organised a demonstration at the US Consulate after reading that an African-American called Jimmy Wilson had been sentenced to death for stealing a dollar. On that occasion Salman, seeing that not many people had turned up, found some street urchins to swell our ranks. We had to stop and explain to them why their chant of ‘Death to Jimmy Wilson’ was wrong. Money changed hands before they were brought into line. Years later, on a London to Lahore flight, I met Taseer by chance and we discussed both these events. He reminded me that the stern US consul had told us he would have us expelled, but his ultra-Lutheranism offended the Catholic Brothers who ran our school and again we escaped punishment. On that flight, more than 20 years ago, I asked him why he had decided to go into politics. Wasn’t being a businessman bad enough? ‘You’ll never understand,’ he said. ‘If I’m a politician as well I can save money because I don’t have to pay myself bribes.’ He was cynical in the extreme, but he could laugh at himself. He died tragically, but for a good cause. His party and colleagues, instead of indulging in manufactured grief, would be better off taking the opportunity to amend the blasphemy laws while there is still some anger at what has taken place. But of course they are doing the exact opposite.

Even before this killing, Pakistan had been on the verge of yet another military takeover. It would make things so much easier if only they could give it another name: military democracy perhaps? General Kayani, whose term as chief of staff was extended last year with strong Pentagon approval, is said to be receiving petitions every day asking him to intervene and ‘save the country’. The petitioners are obviously aware that removing Zardari and replacing him with a nominee of the Sharif brothers’ Muslim League, the PPP’s long-term rivals, is unlikely to improve matters. Petitioning, combined with a complete breakdown of law and order in one or several spheres (suicide terrorism in Peshawar, violent ethnic clashes in Karachi, state violence in Quetta and now Taseer’s assassination), is usually followed by the news that a reluctant general has no longer been able to resist ‘popular’ pressure and with the reluctant agreement of the US Embassy a uniformed president has taken power. We’ve been here before, on four separate occasions. The military has never succeeded in taking the country forward. All that happens is that, instead of politicians, the officers take the cut. The government obviously thinks the threat is serious: some of Zardari’s cronies now speak openly at dinner parties of ‘evidence’ that proves military involvement in his wife Benazir Bhutto’s assassination. If the evidence exists, let’s have a look. Another straw in the wind: the political parties close to the ISI, Pakistan’s main intelligence agency, have withdrawn from the central government, accusing it of callousness and financial malfeasance. True, but hardly novel.

Another necessary prerequisite for a coup is popular disgust with a corrupt, inept and failing civilian government. This has now reached fever pitch. As well as the natural catastrophes that have afflicted the country there are local wars, disappearances, torture, crime, huge price rises in essential goods, unemployment, a breakdown of basic services – all the major cities go without electricity for hours at a stretch and oil lamps are much in demand in smaller towns, which are often without gas and electricity for up to 12 hours. Thanks to the loan conditions recently imposed by the IMF – part of a gear change in the ‘war on terror’ – there have been riots against the rise in fuel prices in several cities. Add to this Zardari’s uncontrollable greed and the irrepressible desire of his minions to mimic their master. Pakistan today is a kleptocracy. There is much talk in Islamabad of the despised prime minister’s neglected wife going on a shopping spree in London last month and finding solace in diamonds, picking up, on her way back home, a VAT rebate in the region of £100,000.

Can it get worse? Yes. And on every front. Take the Af-Pak war. Few now would dispute that its escalation has further destabilised Pakistan, increasing the flow of recruits to suicide bomber command. The CIA’s New Year message to Pakistan consisted of three drone attacks in North Waziristan, killing 19 people. There were 116 drone strikes in 2010, double the number ordered in the first year of the Obama presidency. Serious Pakistani newspapers, Dawn and the News, claim that 98 per cent of those killed in the strikes over the last five years – the number of deaths is estimated to be between two and three thousand – were civilians, a percentage endorsed by David Kilcullen, a former senior adviser to General Petraeus. The Brookings Institution gives a grim ratio of one militant killed for every ten civilians. The drones are operated by the CIA, which isn’t subject to military rules of engagement, with the result that drones are often used for revenge attacks, notably after the sensational Khost bombing of a CIA post in December 2009.

What stops the military from taking power immediately is that it would then be responsible for stopping the drone attacks and containing the insurgency that has resulted from the extension of the war into Pakistan. This is simply beyond it, which is why the generals would rather just blame the civilian government for everything. But if the situation worsens and growing public anger and economic desperation lead to wider street protests and an urban insurgency the military will be forced to intervene. It will also be forced to act if the Obama administration does as it threatens and sends troops across the Pakistan border on protect-and-destroy missions. Were this to happen a military takeover of the country might be the only way for the army to counter dissent within its ranks by redirecting the flow of black money and bribes (currently a monopoly of politicians) into military coffers. Pakistani officers who complain to Western intelligence operatives and journalists that a new violation of sovereignty might split the army do so largely as a way to exert pressure. There has been no serious breach in the military high command since the dismal failure of the 1951 Rawalpindi Conspiracy, the first and last radical nationalist attempt (backed by Communist intellectuals) to seize power within the army and take the country in an anti-imperialist direction. Since then, malcontents in the armed forces have always been rapidly identified and removed. Military perks and privileges – bonuses, land allocations, a presence in finance and industry – play an increasingly important part in keeping the army under control.

Meanwhile, on a visit to Kabul earlier this month, the US homeland security secretary, Janet Napolitano, announced that 52 ‘security agents’ were being dispatched to the Af-Pak border to give on the spot training to Afghan police and security units. The insurgents will be delighted, especially since some of them serve in these units, just as they do in Pakistan.


Remembering Benazir Bhutto: ‘Our PPP is in power but we haven’t arrested her killers’

December 28, 2010

“Whenever I visit Bibi’s grave, I feel she is asking me, ‘Why are my killers still at large?’” said a devout Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) follower Nazir Shaikh.

“I often visit Garhi Khuda Bakhsh and while offering fateha I feel this irrepressible guilt,” another PPP supporter, Ghulam Ali Mirani confided. “Our party is in power today but we are still so helpless that we have not been able to arrest the murderers.” When asked what he thought of the UN inquiry report, he said, “I don’t know about the UN and its report. But I do want her killers arrested.”

“Her murder has become a mystery, which remains unsolved even three years later,” added Shaikh.

Meerani and Shaikh left for Garhi Khuda Bakhsh on Monday along with a host of companions. Thousands of PPP supporters reached Garhi Khuda Bakhsh to pay homage to Benazir Bhutto on her third death anniversary. Buses, wagons, Suzuki vans and private cars were arranged for the workers by local PPP leaders. PPP MPA Dr Nasrullah Baloch led a big convoy from Lab-e-Mehran Sukkur, while the federal minister for labour, manpower and religious affairs, Syed Khursheed Ahmed Shah, who according to the programme was to lead the convoy, left on his own in a hurry. Similar convoys were also arranged from other cities in upper Sindh, including Ghotki, Jacobabad, Shikarpur and Kashmore.

In Sukkur, the gathering point for the PPP supporters was Lab-e-Mehran, where a Quran khwani and Fateha was held for Benazir. After the ceremony, the workers milled about waiting for the labour minister to lead their convoy. However, the minister zoomed out of Circuit House, Sukkur, in a sleek Land Cruiser without a number plate and left Sukkur city without a glance at the surprised workers.

The programme might have been ruffled but morale remained high and shouting their love for Benazir, the crowd moved to their many vehicles and left for Garhi Khuda Bakhsh on their own. Shouts of “Zinda hai Bibi zinda hai”, “Jab tak suraj chand rahe ga, Bhutto tera naam rahe ga” [As long as there is the sun and moon, there will be your name] and “Jeay Bhutto” [Long, live Bhutto] accompanied the procession, which included MPA Nasrullah Baloch, Sukkur district president Mushtaq Surhio and general-secretary Dr Arshad Mughal.
Emotions ran high on Monday, with tears giving way to anger and hopelessness.

Elderly Niaz Ali, who was wearing a black shalwar kameez, was sure that Benazir’s murderers would be caught. “No matter how powerful they [assassins] might be, one day they will be brought to justice and on that day I will be able to breathe again,” he said.

He felt that had Benazir been alive, things would have been much better. “Her only fault was that she wanted to help the poor,” he said.

Rafi Mirani reiterated this. “We would not have been in this poor condition had Bibi been alive. I’m going to her grave with a heavy heart,” he said in a choked voice.

“Sometimes we still can’t believe she is not among us any more,” said Mohammad Bakhsh, who was holding onto a PPP flag. “Time is passing by so quickly, it’s already her third anniversary.” For Akram Shaikh, who claimed to be a diehard worker of the PPP, “Bibi’s murder was the murder of the PPP”. These were the only words he uttered stonily before walking off.

Another high-strung worker, Ali Murad, said if he could get his hands on Bibi’s murderers, he would kill them. “Because we have not just lost a leader but we have lost a loving mother and a caring sister.”
Many of the supporters were of the view that the reconciliatory policy was good to some extent, but Benazir’s murderers should not be spared at any cost.

Sindh Revenue Minister Jam Mehtab Dahar led a big convoy of PPP supporters from Ubauro, Daharki and Mirpur Mathelo, while Kashmore district president PPP Mukhtiar Sorhiani and general-secretary Noor Ahmed Dayo led workers from Kandhkot and Kashmore. Jacobabad district president Mohammad Pannah Odho and others led supporters from Jacobabad and Thull to Garhi Khuda Bakhsh.


External actors: Saudi Arabia’s covert role in Pakistan

December 8, 2010

By: Saba Imtiaz

In a US embassy cable published by WikiLeaks, Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the US Adel al Jubeir is quoted saying, “We in Saudi Arabia are not observers in Pakistan, we are participants.” That statement sums up decades of Saudi Arabia’s involvement in Pakistan’s political affairs.

While the UK and the US appear to play a visible role in the country, as Zardari is quoted as telling the US ambassador, “We won’t act without consulting you”, it has now emerged that Saudi Arabia is also a behind-the-scenes broker.


Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the US Adel al Jubeir is quoted saying,
“We in Saudi Arabia are not observers in Pakistan, we are participants.”

In 2000, many of Nawaz Sharif’s supporters were somewhat stunned as they watched a news broadcast of the man who vowed to “eat grass” if it meant Pakistan would have nuclear capability, waving them goodbye from a car. He was on his way to Saudi Arabia, where he would spend several years in exile until he returned to Pakistan in 2007. In the kingdom, Sharif was a “guest” of the royal family, and conditions set by the Musharraf government for his exile included that Sharif would not serve time in jail, forfeit Rs500 million in property, would not return to Pakistan for 10 years and would be disqualified from holding public office for 21 years. A leaked memo reveals that prior to his return to Pakistan, Sharif had “promised the king to avoid questioning Musharraf’s recent political decisions in public.” Sharif had been serving a life sentence for a hijacking case when he was suddenly acquitted and left the country. But he had friends in powerful places. According to a 2000 Telegraph report, “Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Abdullah, who negotiated the deal, had threatened to cut diplomatic ties with Pakistan if his friend Sharif was not freed.”

But even though, as Ambassador al Jubeir is quoted saying, “Sharif broke his promise by conducting political activity while in the kingdom,” he is still a key figure for the Saudis. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al Faisal is quoted saying in a cable that Sharif is a “force for stability” and “a man who can speak across party lines even to religious extremists.” A US official also noted that the “Saudis have an economic hold on Sharif, since he was reportedly the first non-Saudi to receive a special economic development loan from the Saudi government with which to develop a business while here in exile.” It is evident that were Sharif to take charge again, he would have the backing of the kingdom.

The other “winning horse” in the Saudis’ book is the military. Praise flows for the military in leaked cables, with General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani described as a “good man”. The Saudis also emphasised the need for the military to be a stabilising influence and reiterated their support for former president Pervez Musharraf in 2007. “With all his (Musharraf’s) flaws,” al Jubeir reportedly said then, “he is the only person that you (the US) or we have to work with now.”

Even though the Pakistan-Saudi Arabia relationship is referred to in glowing terms in government-issued history books and official statements, leaked cables reveal that Saudi Arabia’s support of Pakistan is conditional on who is at the helm of affairs. The current Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP)-led government has found its relationship to be under strain because of a number of reasons. The kingdom, according to leaked cables, has historically disliked the PPP and fears that Zardari, who it suspects is Shia, could be part of a Shia triangle in the region (with Nur al Maliki’s government in Iraq and Mahmoud Ahmedinajad’s in Iran). This has also affected aid, as well as an agreement to provide oil to Pakistan at concessionary terms. Zardari has built strong ties with Iran, which is reportedly one of the reasons for the kingdom’s disapproval.

But even countries like the US understand the kingdom’s role, as is evident from cables reporting meetings between US and Saudi Arabia government officials. In a March 2009 cable, with tensions high over the long march, then-US ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson wrote, “We should encourage Zardari to continue efforts to ease tensions and ask the Saudis and the UAE to weigh in with their respective allies.”


I will sacrifice govt for democracy: Gilani

September 22, 2010

Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani has said he was ready to sacrifice his government on the altar of democracy provided the system stayed intact.


President’s inner circle to meet today.

“If I had faith that the change in the country would come about through democratic and constitutional route and democracy will stay even after our departure, I will not only willingly quit the government but will also offer prayers of gratitude,” he said while talking to senior journalists.

He said he was not interested in government. If the continuity of democratic system is ensured, “I will be only too glad to sit in the opposition benches”. He said the county can ill-afford the removal of government through undemocratic means.

He said with Maulana Fazl’s visit to the US, Pakistan’s principled stand on Kashmir will be highlighted. He command’s parliament’s complete trust and is going to America with full mandate.

Meanwhile with speculations of a change of regime in the country gaining momentum, and the Supreme Court’s fresh pressure on the government, President Asif Ali Zardari on Tuesday called a series of meetings of his top political associates. A select circle of his confidants in the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), known as the ‘core committee’, is scheduled to meet the president today (Wednesday).

A one-line statement issued by a spokesperson for Zardari said the core committee of the PPP would be meeting here to discuss the current political situation of the country. Though the statement did not give any specific details, the reports of a possible political upheaval is likely to be at the top of discussions.

Federal ministers, Babar Awan, Naveed Qamar, Rehman Malik, Khursheed Shah and Nazar Mohammad, are among the members of the committee.

On Thursday, Zardari is also scheduled to preside over the party’s Central Executive Committee (CEC), a broader circle of the PPP’s leadership which takes policy decisions.

Observers attach importance to these meetings in the backdrop of what they see as ‘rapidly changing’ political scenario.

Meanwhile US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne W Patterson also called on the president. A short statement issued after the meeting claimed that the rehabilitation of flood victims was discussed. Meanwhile, the federal cabinet will also meet on Wednesday. (With additional reporting by IRfan ghauri)


THE LEMMING SYNDROME

December 22, 2009

FATIMA RIZVI

Lemmings periodically self destruct through mass suicide. This phenomenon has defied explanation and remains a case of irrational behavior in the animal kingdom. More difficult to understand is similar behavior among humans. Take the Pakistan Peoples Party. It’s the only truly federal party and it made a good national showing in the elections. Much of the credit must go to its late charismatic leader Benazir Bhutto but her widower Zardari has soldiered on. He took over the leadership of the party and forged a coalition government that endures. He raised a slogan for Pakistan as the home province of Bhutto, Sind, sizzled on the brink of violence. He has kept the opposition at bay. He did not go on a witch hunt. Now inexplicably he has his finger on the self destruct button.

Instead of using his skill to ram the National Reconciliation Ordinance through Parliament the Peoples Party dithered and eventually the Ordinance lapsed for want of Parliamentary ratification. The Supreme Court declared it null and void as expected. Now the Party is screaming discrimination threatening to tear the country apart. Violence has been threatened in Sind in the most aggressive manner and one stalwart of the Party in Punjab has given similar indications. Understandably the Party has rallied around the President but open defiance of the judicial process and raising the specter of provincial violence does not befit a Party that is federal and has nation wide roots and support. It is a recipe for eventual self destruction.

Read Complete Article : http://fatimarizvi.newsvine.com/_news/2009/12/22/3662134-the-lemming-syndrome


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