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Monday, February 28, 2011

Libya unrest sparks refugee crisis at Tunisia border


Libya's border with Tunisia is being overrun with migrants, many of them from Egypt, fleeing turmoil in Libya, aid workers say.





Thousands of Egyptians have been streaming into Tunisia from Libya


A UN refugee official told the BBC that 20,000 Egyptians were stranded and needed food and shelter. Many are sleeping in the open despite the cold.


Some Egyptian refugees staged protests shouting: "We want to go home."


About 100,000 people have fled anti-government unrest in Libya over the past week, the UN estimates.


The BBC's Jim Muir at the Ras Jdir border crossing with Tunisia says the exodus of Egyptian workers from western Libya began on Wednesday, but has been intensifying daily since then.


Liz Eyster of the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) told the BBC that Tunisian authorities were no longer able to cope with the influx.


"They've been accommodating people in shelters, schools and places of their own. But we're now aware of the fact that they're very much stretched and they need the support of the international community."


Monji Slim, the local representative of the Red Crescent, told AFP news agency: "It is a humanitarian crisis, our capacities to take in people are exhausted. The entire world should mobilise to help Egypt repatriate its nationals."


About 7,000 Egyptians have already been evacuated by air, but Ms Eyster said there was a "bottleneck in getting the Egyptians back home".


One stranded refugee said: "All the people here are demonstrating because they want to go to Egypt. All countries are sending aircraft to rescue their people - Turkey, Korea, India, Bangladesh - everyone is arriving and leaving except for Egyptians."


A number of countries have been evacuating foreigners by air and sea.


On Sunday a Greek ship carrying hundreds of migrants - mainly from Brazil, the Philippines, Thailand, Portugal, the Netherlands and Britain - docked at the port of Piraeus near Athens.


'Revolution'


The exodus comes as the Libyan leader, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, battles for political survival in an uprising that began in the east of the country.


At least 1,000 people are believed to have been killed in nearly two weeks of violence in which eastern cities cities have fallen to anti-government forces.


Col Gaddafi is facing the biggest challenge to his 41-year rule, but still controls the capital Tripoli.


However the centre of Zawiya, about 50km (30 miles) to the west, was being held by the anti-government camp on Sunday. Pro-Gaddafi forces are surrounding the city.


"This is our revolution," some demonstrators, quoted by Reuters news agency, chanted.


A number of protesters stood on top of a captured tank while others crowded around an anti-aircraft gun, Reuters added.


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Washington was "reaching out to many different Libyans in the east".


She was speaking on her way to Geneva to meet the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to discuss the crisis.


Opposition forces that control Benghazi and other eastern cities say they have formed a national council to act as the political face of the anti-Gaddafi movement.


Late on Saturday, the UN Security Council unanimously backed an arms embargo and asset freeze on senior Libyan government officials.


It also voted to refer Col Gaddafi to the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity.


In a telephone interview with a Serbian TV, he said the sanctions were null and void.


"The people of Libya support me, small groups of rebels are surrounded and will be dealt with," he added.


Col Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam denied that his father had any assets abroad.


"We are a very modest family and everybody knows that," he told ABC News. "They are saying we have money in Europe or Switzerland... It's a joke."


He also denied widespread reports that Libyan troops and mercenaries had fired on civilians.

An American Honor Killing: One Victim's Story

By NADYA LABI / PEORIA















Noor al-MalekiFaleh al-Maleki Maricopa County Sheriff's OfficeThe parking lot outside the Department of Economic Security where Noor al-Maleki was killed

"Dude, my dad is here at the welfare office," a 20-year-old woman named Noor al-Maleki texted a friend on Oct. 20, 2009. Noor was at the Department of Economic Security (DES) in Peoria, Ariz., helping Amal Khalaf fill out paperwork for food stamps. Noor was living with Khalaf, a maternal figure whom she'd known since childhood.


Noor was estranged from her parents, who disapproved of what they considered her American ways - a fondness for tight jeans and makeup, and a reluctance to accede to their plans for her. Those plans included an arranged marriage to a man in Iraq. Her father, Faleh al-Maleki, was furious when Noor abandoned the marriage, later becoming involved with one of Khalaf's sons. A few weeks before he turned up at the DES office, according to Khalaf, the father warned her that if Noor continued living with her family, "something bad would happen."


He meant it. Faleh, who had become a U.S. citizen two months earlier, told his son that he went to the DES to apply for benefits; he had lost his job. But after apparently seeing the two women there, he stalked out. Khalaf went outside to talk to him but couldn't find him. It was a sunny day, in the mid-80s, so Noor suggested going to a Mexican restaurant across the parking lot for a drink.


Walking slightly ahead of Noor, Khalaf glanced to her side and saw a gray jeep bearing down on them. Faleh was in the driver's seat. Khalaf saw him turn the wheel sharply and head toward her and Noor. She made eye contact with him, throwing her hands in the air and yelling, "Stop!"


Faleh kept going, plowing into the women and speeding off. Khalaf never felt the impact. She awoke on the ground to strangers huddled over her.


Khalaf couldn't see Noor, gasping for breath as blood gushed out of her mouth. The jeep had rolled over her. She suffered a head injury and multiple facial fractures, among other injuries. She never regained consciousness.


On Feb. 22, Faleh al-Maleki was convicted of killing his daughter, committing aggravated assault against Khalaf and leaving the scene of a crime. His defense attorney argued that he had intended to spit on Khalaf and accidentally ran over the two women. Prosecutors had pressed a first-degree murder charge. They characterized his actions as an "honor killing," a controversial term that refers to a family member or members killing a relative, usually a girl or young woman, whose behavior is judged to have tarnished the family honor.


"Some families think that the women of the family represent their reputation," Rana Husseini, a Jordanian journalist who has spent nearly two decades campaigning against the practice and author of the book Murder in the Name of Honor, explains. "If a woman has committed a violation in their point of view, they believe if they kill her, they have ended the shame.


Blood cleanses honor." According to the most recent U.N. Population Fund estimate, which is more than a decade old, 5,000 such killings occur worldwide each year. Experts believe the real number is actually much higher.


The jury found Faleh guilty of the lesser charge of second-degree murder, finding that he didn't plan the act in advance. They also found the existence of aggravating factors, which means he could face up to nearly 46 years in prison. The evidence presented at trial made clear, however, that Faleh was influenced by a warped sense that Noor had impugned his family's honor.


Most honor crimes take place in villages in the developing world, however, not in the parking lot of a nondescript American welfare office. The U.S. is supposed to be the melting pot, where immigrants assimilate into the larger culture, discarding much of their native selves. But some communities - like Faleh's - have stubbornly resisted that transformation. Noor's murder was an anomaly, but the attitudes that facilitated it don't spring from the brain of a single deranged man - they are deeply rooted in an Iraqi community that insists on its right, its American right, to believe in the justifiability of practices like honor killings.


A Bloody History


The exact origins of honor killings are not known; the practice likely existed among different ancient cultures. Among northern Arabian tribes, the practice predates Islam in the 7th century. In a typical honor killing, the victim is judged to have engaged in a transgression that can encompass just about anything - from wearing Westernized dress to becoming a target of gossip to balking at an arranged marriage to being raped. The murder is often a collective family decision, with the father, a brother or male cousin carrying out the act; rarely, a female relative like the mother does the killing.


The crimes occur most commonly in the Middle East, South Asia and North Africa. Without decent statistics, it's impossible to ascertain which countries are the worst offenders, but Husseini points to Pakistan, Yemen and Iraq. In those countries and elsewhere, honor killers are treated with lenience; they often get a slap on the wrist if they plead honor as a mitigating circumstance.


It used to be that an honor killer in Jordan could plead a "fit of fury" defense - similar to the crime-of-passion defense in Western penal codes - and do little or no time at all. In 2009, Jordan toughened the application of its laws, making it harder for honor killers to invoke the fit-of-fury defense. To elude even the light penalties that often exist for honor killings, however, families sometimes delegate the bloody task to male juveniles.


Islam doesn't sanction honor killings, and the practice is not limited to Muslims. The crimes also occur in Christian communities in the Middle East and in non-Muslim communities in India. Last July, for example, after a number of Hindu girls were killed for dating out of caste, the Indian Prime Minister convened a commission to investigate whether harsher laws are needed to curb the crimes.


The majority of crimes, however, do occur in Muslim communities, and some of the perpetrators seem to believe that killing for honor is their religious duty. Strict attitudes toward sexual behavior in Islam - sexual relations outside marriage are punishable by death in Saudi Arabia and Iran - don't discourage that mind-set.


Americans would like to believe that a Phoenix suburb, with concrete strip malls that look like any other in the U.S., except that some storefronts have writing in Arabic, is a far cry from a rural village in Jordan or India. But is it?


The practice has followed immigrants from countries like Yemen and Iraq to the West. Phyllis Chesler, an emerita professor of psychology and women's studies at the City University of New York, has documented 40 attempted and successful honor crimes in North America and Europe between 1989 and 2008; 10 of those were in the U.S. According to Layli Miller-Muro, executive director of the U.S.-based Tahirih Justice Center, which provides free legal service to women fleeing violence, her nonprofit organization has received a number of calls in the past several years from young women who fear being killed for honor because they refused an arranged marriage.


New Land, New Ways


More than 36,000 Iraqis have settled in the Phoenix area in the past four decades, according to Farouk al-Hashimi, chairman of the Iraqi Cultural Association in Glendale, Ariz. They arrived in three waves: the first consisted of largely educated, upper-middle-class Iraqis in the 1970s and '80s, the second was dominated by refugees of the first Gulf War, and the latest has been people displaced by the recent war. The second group comprised Shi'ite soldiers of limited education, al-Hashimi says, adding, "They struggle to adapt to American thinking and American standards."


Among the second wave, Faleh seemed eager to accept America on its own terms. After living in a refugee camp in Saudi Arabia, he resettled with his family in Dearborn, Mich., in 1994. He got a job as a truck driver, often leaving home for days or weeks at a time. Back then, Faleh's and Khalaf's families were, as Khalaf says in Arabic, "like one big family." Both families are from Basra in southern Iraq, and they lived within doors of one another in Dearborn.


Wearing a black-and-white sheer scarf over her hair, with a similarly colored tunic over black pants, Khalaf is sitting at her home. She has largely recovered from the fractured pelvis and femur that she sustained during the attack. Her son and Noor's sweetheart, Marwan al-Ebadi, a skinny 21-year-old with tattoos running up his left arm, is translating, while her husband listens.


When the Ebadis moved to Glendale in 1999, the Malekis followed, living with them for a couple of months. In Arizona, according to his friends and family, Faleh became a heavy gambler, often borrowing money from friends. He rejected their suggestions that he go to a mosque. His wife got a job simulating the role of Iraqis in training exercises at a U.S. military base in California.


Despite embracing aspects of American culture, the Malekis didn't allow their children the same latitude. They expected the children to speak Arabic at home, dress modestly and be obedient. "They all basically had a cage around them. They had so much stuff to talk about, and they couldn't," Khalaf recalls. "Once they said something, they got hit."


During her teenage years, Noor began asserting herself. She was striking, with long, dark hair and tawny eyes, and she flirted with the idea of modeling - a taboo for a good Muslim girl. She worked hard at school, getting good grades and writing for the school newspaper, but she also wanted to hang out with her friends and have fun.


Faleh felt his control slipping away. He told Thamer al-Diney, his friend and a fellow truck driver who had lived with him in the Saudi camps, "Noor gives me a hard time. She tires me." Al-Diney advised Faleh to take Noor back to Iraq. According to al-Diney, Faleh responded, "I will take her, marry her [off] and say, 'Stay here.'"


When Noor was 17, Faleh took her to Iraq, marrying her to a man who wanted to emigrate to the West. Noor went along with her father's plans at first, but she returned to the U.S. after half a year, without the husband, stalling on the paperwork to facilitate his green card. "In her mind," al-Ebadi says, "she wasn't married."


Noor's parents saw matters differently, and her relationship with them deteriorated. In May 2008, Noor got into an accident in her father's car; he tried to press criminal charges against her for theft. He told the police that he'd argued with Noor because he'd seen a photograph of her with men he didn't know. In Noor's interview with the police, she explained that she was in the process of moving out of the family home. Over the speakerphone on Noor's cell phone at the police station, Faleh told Noor that he wanted her to return home because of how her being gone "would look on the family."


Noor returned home, only to argue once more with her parents. Soon after, Khalaf told the police, she found Noor sleeping in a van in the driveway and took her in. Noor's parents went looking for her, but they didn't find her. Meanwhile, Noor began exploring how to get an order of protection against her father.


By summer's end, Noor had learned that her mother was casting spells on a doll that was supposed to be her. "You may refer to me as Layla Diab," she wrote to al-Ebadi, informing him that she was changing her name. (Al-Ebadi was in prison for having hit Noor; he insists it was an accident.) Noor explained, "This way when my crazy mother does witchcraft or whatever evil it is she does, it won't affect me.'"


The Manhunt


Fortunately, a Phoenix suburb differs from an Iraqi village in at least one sense. While their counterparts abroad might look the other way, the police and prosecutors in Arizona pursued Faleh aggressively.


As soon as Faleh sped off, the Peoria police were on the case. Lead detective Chris Boughey and his partner met with Ali, Faleh's oldest son, who initially said that he hadn't spoken to his father since before the assault. The next day, another detective called Noor's mother, Seham, as she was driving home from California. Seham was so difficult to interview - she kept yelling at the officer that Khalaf was a liar - that the police asked a local Muslim leader to act as an intermediary.


Within a week, Faleh was apprehended when he tried to enter the U.K. He had headed to Mexico and then flown to London. He was extradited to the U.S.


In an interview with Boughey and another officer, Faleh characterized the incident as "kind of an accident," saying he "lost control." He insisted that he loved Noor, saying that he had pictures of her on his cell phone to prove his claim.


Faleh told the officers that in his culture, his daughter should not have left the house and was not supposed to be "Americanized." He added, "I know the culture is outside, and we are inside, we are outside. You see what I'm saying?"


When Boughey probed deeper, Faleh admitted that he had wanted to "scare" Noor. Boughey then asked if he tried to hurt Noor. Faleh looked down, sighed and nodded his head in agreement. According to the police transcript of the interview, he made a final attempt to explain himself, comparing Noor's behavior to part of his house being on fire and asking the detective, "So we burn all the house, let the house burn or we try to stop the fire?"


The Peoria police said they were investigating the extent to which family members were involved, but to date, no charges have been brought against anyone other than Faleh. Both Ali and Seham initially denied speaking to Faleh after he ran over Noor, just before 2 p.m. But records of his cell phone showed five calls between Faleh's phone and Ali's between 1:16 p.m and 2:30 p.m. In a similar time frame, there were 12 calls between Faleh's phone and the phone Seham told police she was using in California. Faleh also called a male relative in Detroit. And about 15 minutes after the crash, he called his cousin in Phoenix.


In the days following his disappearance, police learned that Ali and Seham had filled a prescription for Faleh, an insulin-dependent diabetic, and stopped by the workplace of the cousin.


Faleh also admitted to Boughey that he called the cousin for money; the cousin sent someone over the border with $1,900.


While they appeared to have helped Faleh escape, did the family members know beforehand that Noor was in danger? During a phone call in Arabic to her husband at the jailhouse (Faleh didn't know the police were taping his calls), Seham scolded him for killing Noor, saying, "You rushed into it, Faleh. Honestly, you rushed into it."


Aftermath of a Murder


"The whores ... burned us," Faleh said in another jailhouse conversation with his wife. He added, "They destroyed me." Seham responded, "May God seek revenge on them, God willing."


Seham reassured her husband that "the people are not letting you down. They know you are a good-hearted person and have nothing." At a later point, Faleh urged her to round up Iraqis from his tribe to protest his imprisonment at the American consulate. "No one hates his daughter, but honor is precious, and nothing is better than honor, and we are a tribal society that we can't change," Faleh said. "I didn't kill someone off the street; I tried to give her a chance."


At her husband's advice, Seham tried to drum up support and raise more than $100,000 in cash for a lawyer. She met with the imam at al-Rasool Mohammed, a Shi'ite mosque in Peoria popular among the Iraqi immigrants, many of whom speak limited English. Seham attended the mosque a few times, but she stopped going when no money was forthcoming. She also petitioned the Iraqi Cultural Association, without success.


It is easy for the community to distance itself from Faleh now that he is a convicted murderer. But who spoke up for Noor when she was reportedly being brutalized at home and forced into an arranged marriage? Did any of Faleh's contemporaries defend her right to dress herself how she wished? Why is Khalaf's husband so quick to insist that Noor was a virgin and never involved with his son? Why do the teenage girls at al-Rasool mosque scold Noor for violating the precepts of their religion?


The attitudes that fueled Faleh's rage are widespread in his community. It is no coincidence that Faleh believes that Iraqis in the U.S. and abroad will judge him more kindly if they think it's an honor killing. "Connect it to honor," Faleh advised Jamal from jail.


Asked whether the community has taken away any lessons from Noor's murder, the owner of an Iraqi grocery store in Peoria nods, explaining, "They don't want their daughters to become like Noor."


Saher Alyasry, a mother in her mid-30s praying at al-Rasool mosque, speaks out firmly, in Arabic, while her teenage daughter, rocking a newborn, translates. "I think what he did was right. It's his daughter, and our religion doesn't allow us to do what she did," she says. "A guy who cares about his reputation, he should do that because people will start talking about him if he doesn't." When asked if honor is more important than love, she responds, "Yes. What's the point of loving her if she's bad?"


According to the police report, as Noor lay in a coma, every time Seham touched her daughter, Noor's heart rate spiked. She was unplugged after her doctors informed the family that she was clinically brain dead. Only then did she reach a place where her family could no longer hurt her.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

CIA man in Pakistan may not have immunity

A former State Department lawyer says real questions remain about the legal status of Raymond Davis


By Justin Elliott





Supporters of Pakistani religious party Jamat-e-Islami attend a rally against Raymond Allen Davis in Lahore, Pakistan.


(UPDATED) An expert who previously worked in a key State Department diplomatic affairs position is questioning the Obama administration's claim that Raymond Davis, the American currently imprisoned in Pakistan after killing two men, has diplomatic immunity.


A specialist in diplomatic law, Ron Mlotek served for 25 years as legal counsel at the State Department Office of Foreign Missions, which regulates foreign missions in the United States. In an interview with Salon, Mlotek said there remain crucial unanswered questions in the case, and that the question of Davis' immunity is not nearly as clear-cut as the administration has argued.


"On the basis of what has been publicly reported, it appears to me that the State Department is relying on legal smoke and mirrors," says Mlotek, who retired two years ago. In his former position, Mlotek dealt with many cases of alleged crimes by foreign representatives in the United States.


Davis was recently revealed to be a former Blackwater contractor working for the CIA in Pakistan, though it turns out those are not the most relevant facts when it comes to determining whether he has immunity.


Davis shot and killed two men in disputed circumstances while driving in the eastern city of Lahore last month; the U.S. maintains he acted in self-defense. An American vehicle that was dispatched from the "safe house" where Davis was living in Lahore then struck and killed a Pakistani bystander while rushing to the scene to pick up Davis. Subsequently, the wife of one of the slain men committed suicide. The case has sparked large protests in Pakistan.


Davis was arrested after the incident and has been held in Lahore while a court considers his claim of immunity. The Obama administration has argued that Davis' detainment is not permitted because he has full diplomatic immunity -- a position that, if he does enjoy such immunity, would be correct, according to Mlotek.


So the key questions are: How does one get full diplomatic immunity, and does Davis have it?


There are two relevant international treaties to consider: the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (1963) and the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961).


When a diplomatic officer (someone who works at the embassy) or a consular officer (someone who works at a consulate) is dispatched to a foreign country, the United States informs the so-called "receiving state" that the officer is arriving and describes his or her job at the embassy or consulate. The mode of official communication is known as a "diplomatic note." After getting the notification, the receiving state -- in this case Pakistan -- typically recognizes the person as a diplomatic officer or a consular officer and issues some kind of diplomatic ID card or notice of recognition.


Diplomatic officers get full immunity, while consular officers get only limited "official acts immunity." This difference is crucial in Davis' case. That's because the administration has changed its story about Davis' status. In late January, the administration described Davis as "a staff member of the U.S. Consulate General in Lahore." Later on, they insisted that Pakistan had been officially informed in early 2010 that Davis was "a member of the administrative and technical staff" at the embassy.


Diplomatic officers who work at the embassy get absolute immunity, meaning, according to Mlotek, that they "could in theory pull out a gun and shoot down a family in cold blood and walk away and the foreign government could not lay a finger on them." But consular officers have a lesser class of immunity that covers only actions that are part of their official duties.


"Davis' official duties almost certainly would not have involved using an unregistered pistol against Pakistani civilians," says Mlotek.


But, in a background briefing this week, an unnamed administration official seemed to claim that the U.S.informed Pakistan that Davis worked for the embassy in Islamabad and therefore that he has full immunity. The specifics of what the U.S. told Pakistan in 2010 are not clear. I've asked the State Department for more information on this and will update this post if I hear back.


Assuming what the administration is now claiming is true, there is a second set of potential flaws in the claim of full immunity, according to Mlotek. That is, if the U.S. informed Pakistan in 2010 that Davis was working at the Islamabad embassy, why was he actually working in Lahore?


Mlotek summarizes the potential problem:


"Suppose we not only lie about the fact that he's a spy, but we lie about the fact that he has anything to do with the embassy in Islamabad. And then, to top it all off, not only is he not in Islamabad, he's in Lahore. He's not even working in the premises of the consulate. He's working in a secret facility that we have not announced. The Vienna Convention specifically obligates the U.S. to tell Pakistan about where their premises are. And not only that, he's carrying a weapon -- we didn't tell the Pakistanis that," Mlotek says. "At what point do you say the diplomatic note was not valid?"


Mlotek also says a crucial concern when he worked at the Office of Foreign Missions was the "reciprocity angle."


"What if the other guys did the same thing here? Would the U.S. allow the Pakistani agent to go free?"


UPDATE: State Department spokeswoman Nicole Thompson tells me that the January 2010 diplomatic note regarding Davis will not be made publicly available. "We don't release diplomatic communications," she said.


Justin Elliott is a Salon reporter. Reach him by email at jelliott@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @ElliottJustin More: Justin Elliott

Intelligence assets: After Davis’ arrest, US operatives leaving Pakistan

By Asad Kharal


LAHORE: At least 30 suspected covert American operatives have suspended their activities in Pakistan and 12 have already left the country, according to sources familiar with the matter.





The foreign ministry states that there are 851 Americans with diplomatic immunity currently in Pakistan, of whom 297 are not working in a diplomatic capacity. PHOTO: FILE


In the aftermath of the shootings in Lahore on January 27 by suspected CIA operative Raymond Davis, intelligence agencies in Pakistan began scrutinising records of the Americans living in Pakistan and discovered several discrepancies, causing many suspected American operatives to maintain a low profile and others to leave the country altogether.


The foreign ministry states that there are 851 Americans with diplomatic immunity currently in Pakistan, of whom 297 are not working in a diplomatic capacity. However, sources at the interior ministry put the number of non-diplomats at 414. The majority of these 'special Americans' (as the ministry refers to them) are concentrated in Islamabad, with some also residing in Karachi, Lahore and Peshawar. Interior ministry records show that most of the "special Americans" live in upscale neighbourhoods in Islamabad and Lahore, with smaller presences in Karachi and Peshawar.


Most of the 'special Americans' are suspected of being operatives of US intelligence agencies who are on covert missions in Pakistan, reporting to the US Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), according to sources familiar with the situation.


Counter-intelligence agencies in Pakistan have long suspected a covert US espionage presence in Pakistan. The first internal investigation into suspicious activities by American citizens in the country was conducted in March 2009, which revealed some significant gaps in the implementation of laws concerning foreign citizens.


Under the Foreigners Act of 1946, foreign citizens are not allowed to live in cantonment areas anywhere in the country. Yet the majority of the suspected American intelligence operatives in Lahore are reportedly living in the Officers'/Generals' Colony on Sarwar Road and Cavalry Ground in the Lahore Cantonment.


Several senior retired army officers - ranging in rank from brigadier to lieutenant general - have rented out their homes to American citizens at rates astronomically higher than the rents of similar homes in the area. The presence of these Americans came to light when several serving and retired Army officers who lived in the neighbourhood reported suspicious activity, including unauthorised foreigners living in cantonment areas.


Foreign citizens in Pakistan have to obtain a no-objection certificate (NOC) from security agencies before they can rent a residence. This process is meant to ensure that they are not living in prohibited areas. But somehow American citizens were able to get NOCs issued to live in cantonment areas in violation of the law.


Sources say that the intelligence agencies' reports state that many of the Americans living in these residences are assumed to be US Special Forces - including members of the covert Delta Force of the United States Army - and therefore are considered armed and dangerous.


The report further claims that the late US special representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke, had visited one of the covert American teams in Lahore, at a residence on Sarwar Road owned by a retired army general.

Friday, February 25, 2011

THE DAVIS SCENARIOS

BY MIR JAMSHED BALOCH


Area14/8


Scenario One: Davis gets diplomatic immunity and walks. This may happen after a determination by the Pakistan government, Pakistani courts or the International Court of Justice. Pakistan will be the loser and may face unrest triggered by anti-government protests. The families of the men killed get nothing unless Pakistan decides to compensate them. US-Pakistan relations nose dive and anti US sentiment gets a big boost.


Read Complete Article Here: http://www.area148.com/cms/?p=2508

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Acquitted terrorists regrouping in K-P

By Qaiser Butt


The Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government has blamed the lower judiciary for a rapid increase in terrorist activities in the province.





Cabinet alarmed that courts have sentenced only two per cent of the accused. PHOTO: APP


According to the government, terrorist activities in the province have increased because courts "honourably" exonerate 98 per cent of the terrorists that face trial.


The provincial cabinet met in Peshawar on Wednesday to discuss the situation, said provincial information minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain during a news conference. "Those terrorists freed by the courts become active again as they are given the opportunity to regroup," he reasoned.


Hussain said that the cabinet was astonished that courts sentence only two per cent of the terrorists that stand trial. "Terrorists deserve to be hanged. They should be awarded the death sentence," he rhetorically said.


Giving details of cases decided by courts in the last two years, Hussain said that 200 cases were registered during 2009 but the number fell to 101 in 2010. However, according to him, a 75 per cent increase was recorded in the last three months.


It is due to the government's efforts, he said, that only 96 per cent of those accused for terrorism were freed by courts and four per cent were sentenced.


"Those terrorists who were freed by the courts have been able to re-establish their networks," Hussain said. "The police and security forces have made massive sacrifices in arresting them but the terrorists have been given a licence to kill innocent people."


The Khyber-Pakhtunkwa cabinet also noted that those militants who were not sentenced were apparently responsible for more attacks on police and security forces.


"Almost all of them took shelter in Mohmand Agency and Malakand to re-launch attacks on civilians and security forces," Hussain said.


He said that senior leaders have allowed local commanders to make independent decision about terrorist activities. "Courts must discharge their responsibilities in accordance with the prevailing situation in the province," he said.

MPAs fear another ‘catastrophe’ if dykes are not repaired soon

By Hafeez Tunio


KARACHI: Sindh legislators are afraid of another "catastrophe" if the dykes on the Indus River are not repaired any time soon.





Damages to railway tracks in Sukkur after the 2010 floods. PHOTO: FILE


During the Sindh Assembly session on Wednesday, the MPAs discussed at length the pace of repairs on breaches and agreed that work must be completed before the flood season arrives.


Pakistan Muslim League-Functional MPA Nusrat Saher Abbasi raised this issue by pointing out that not a single breach has been plugged yet. She recalled that Pakistan Peoples Party MPA Dr Ahmed Ali Shah, who is the head of the parliamentary committee to review repair work, had earlier criticised government officials and the irrigation ministry for not working on the breaches.


"Your own committee has expressed concern on the issue. The people of Sindh cannot afford another calamity and we want to get a clear version from the government on it," she said.


Dr Shah replied that there was no "satisfactory" progress and, after visiting the site of several breaches, the committee had sent a report to the president. The repairs of these dykes should have started two months ago and there are multiple factors behind the delay, he said. "A group of dacoits is demanding extortion from the contractors," he said.


The Tori bund is located close to the katcha area, which is a hideout of the dacoits demanding bhatta [extortion] by sending "chits", Dr Shah said.


The process of plugging breaches has been completed in the Punjab because they received funds from the federal government on time, he explained. The Sindh government received Rs2.5 billion only a few days ago, he added.


"The tenders have been awarded and the work has started," he said. Dr Shah recommended the government hire irrigation and water consultants to review the plugging of the embankments. He hoped that the situation will be different in the next 15 days.


Speaker Nisar Ahmed Khuhro, who belongs to the same party as Dr Shah, refuted his claims and criticised the officials who claim to have started working on the breaches. "I visited Aqil Aghani Loop Bund near Larkana a few days ago and even the machinery has yet to be mobilised," he said. "The same situation prevails in Tori and other embankments as well."


Khuhro said that even though funds have been released and discussions have lasted for nearly two months, it seems as if no work has taken place on the ground. "The responsible person should properly inform the house why this is being delayed," he said.


Residents of flood-affected areas are afraid that the water will rise again in April, he said. "It is the government's responsibly to get rid of the extortion menace and establish the writ of the government," he added.


Revenue minister Jam Mehtab Dahar said that they have hired professionals, including former irrigation secretary and water expert Idrees Rajput and his team. Out of the Rs5 billion allocated by the government, only Rs2.5 billion has been released, he said.


Since three different committees have been formed to review the situation, the work will be completed before the kharif season, he promised.


Earlier, irrigation minister Jam Saifullah Dharejo said that his department has sent a summary to the chief minister to appoint a member of Indus River System Authority (Irsa) from Sindh. "We are looking for a water expert as an Irsa member," he said.


The government has also finished the feasibility study for a new barrage between Sukkur and Kotri, said Dharejo. Kalabagh Dam is a "dead issue" and the prime minister has assured that it could only be built after a consensus between the provinces, he added.

Courage has a face in Kunan-Poshpora

TABISH NASEER


Kunan-Poshpora (Kupwara): If courage had a face, it would resemble 50-year-old Bhakti's. In the North Kashmir hamlet of Kunan-Poshpora, where agony and adversity to women was forced upon, on the intervening night of 23rd and 24th February, 1991, through the "weapon of rape", she stood stoically against the perpetrators of the crime very few are capable of.





A grab from a video taken few days after the incident shows desolate Kunan village


The incident that is perhaps written as the night of "oppression and brutality" may also be inked as a night when a mother of six daughters showed unrelenting courage and braved "terror leashing men even when gods turned their shoulders and watched silently".


In Bhakti's words, the wintry silence was broken by the trampling noises as she was attending her ailing husband who had suffered a heart attack few days back. Then there were cries that cut through the heart of the dead night.


"I first thought there was some quarrel between neighbours and went out to see where the noise was coming from," she says.


It wasn't a duel between neighbours. Army's 4 Raj Rifles of 68 Brigade C/o 56 APO had launched a search operation in the two villages situated about five kilometers from the Kupwara Township. A section of troopers, who the locals claim were in an inebriated state, had gone on a rampage.


"Men held at gun points, women fleeing homes, open air interrogations" - all this happened away from the media glare on that cold wintry night. Women ran about as if chased by "wild animals", she exclaims.





A video grab shows villagers listening to heads during a meeting


Suddenly tentacles of fear gripped, for moments she remained unmoved. "None of my daughters were married then, they were young and when I discovered what had befallen Kunan, I became numb … my daughters were sitting around their father's bed," she says.


Her numbness was broken by a loud knock. A woman who was fleeing from the troopers stood at the gate shouting for help. "I could not sit and listen to her cries. Somehow I overcame fear and ran towards the door," she recalls.


Taja (name changed) stood at the door, breathless; she lived over a hundred yards away. "They (troopers) had barged into our house and caught hold of my sister-in-law and I managed to give them a slip through the door that leads to our kitchen garden," says Taja.


Sensing trouble Bhakhti dragged her in and bolted the door quickly. "I asked one of my daughters to get water for her and then she narrated the story. Instead of making me worried I somehow lost fear," Bhakti exclaims.


With fear written all over her face, Taja sobbed. She was restless till a thunderous bang at the main door made her stop. "She crouched in my arms as if she was dead," says one of Bhakti's daughter (name withheld).


The troopers had barged into the house compound. "My mother went to the door opened it and straight away asked for the officer heading the party of troopers, we could hear it from the room we were sitting in," says her daughter.


She stood at the door and "refused to move till she saw the officer". A call was made on the wireless. "He came and asked me why I wasn't allowing his men to conduct search and I sternly replied that I had six daughters and I doubted his men," says Bhakti.





Village heads during a meeting few days after the incident


An awkward silence followed and the officer asked his men to move away. Her courage grew and she ventured out to see if she could help more women. Her neighbour, Fahmida (name changed) recalls, "Many women were fleeing from the troopers and she dared to go out and give these women shelter," adding "she stood guard at the gate of her house and forced back the troopers while her daughters looked after their ailing father and women who successfully fled from the clutches of the troopers."


Her confrontation with the troopers ended only when they left at dawn. The night had passed witnessing the battle between "oppressor and oppressed". However, the day saw a battle between "courage and cowardice". "When the army left that morning, I went to a clinic to fetch a doctor. On my way, I noticed that the troopers had installed a video camera and were forcing men to record statements in their favour," she vividly remembers. The sight perturbed her and she yelled at the group of men who were giving out statements. "If I had a gun I would kill all of you right here and would hand your widows to the army, do you people have a slightest idea of what has happened to your wives and daughters in your homes," she recalls shouting angrily.


Ducking their chins in their cloaks in shame, the group of men grew uneasy. Her reminder prompted them to cut loose. Perhaps this was the moment that instigated the people to seek action. Rhate, her neighbour confirms, "People started to gather immediately after Bhakti shouted at them and they started to think of police action against the army."


It was noon, the village heads were in serious consultation thinking about the course of action. A senior official from the army walked into the village demanding clean chit. Speaking in front of the gathering, the official vouched for his men. While villagers listened carefully, Bhakti, who stood in the crowd shouted at the official, "You had 10,000 army men with you?" He nodded. She asked, "Where were they all night? You yourself were standing outside the village where our men were interrogated. How do you know what was your army doing in the village?"





Video grab shows a victim holding her baby


She gently moved an 80-year-old woman who was also a rape victim (The woman has passed away). "I bought her in front of the major and asked him, tell me isn't she your mother… look at her torn clothes…what explanation would you offer now? All of them put their heads down in shame," she recalls.


A few days later, the official came again, this time asking specifically for Bhakti, but she refused. Abdul Ahad Dar, the Sarpanch of Kunan while acknowledging says, "The officer came a few times probably to strike a deal and wanted to speak to Bhakti in person as she was at the forefront of the protest against the army."


She refused bluntly, but the officer persisted upon a meeting. "It was only after some village elders convinced her to meet the officer, she relented," Dar adds.


Bhakti says, "The officer had said to her that they had made an appeal which was granted and they were ready to pay compensation, provided villagers say that army has not done anything here."


"Even if you give me money equaling the length and breadth of this house even then I won't change my word. Till the judgment day the blood will ooze from our wounds," was Bhakti's reply.

Davis Case: Shumaila’s uncle poisoned in Lahore


LAHORE: Some unidentified outlaws have fed poisonous bills to the paternal uncle of Shumaila, the widow of Faheem, who was crushed to death in Lahore in Raymond Davis double murder case, Geo News reported early Thursday.



The discussed family also claimed to have received life-threats a week ago for following lawsuit against Raymond Davis, sources said.


According to details, some unknown gunmen broke into house of Shumaila's uncle Mohammed Sarwar and forcefully fed him poisonous pills besides brutally torturing the victim.


Later, the intruders succeeded to flee the crime scene while the victim, Mohammed Sarwar, was rushed to hospital in critical condition, sources said quoting hospital sources.


Meanwhile, the area SSP Sadiq Fogar claimed that their home is under police's constant observation.


It is pertinent to mention here that the Faheem's widow committed suicide at hospital in protest against unlawful act happened to her family and laziness of government in handing US suspect punishment. She also demanded justice of Pakistan government before suicide via television footages.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

India's coalition woes: Where did it all go wrong?

By Amit Baruah


Not very long ago, India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh could do no wrong - or so it seemed.





Prime Minister Manmohan Singh reshuffled his cabinet on Wednesday, hoping it would restore confidence in his beleaguered government


Long considered a man of unimpeachable integrity, Mr Singh coasted to a second term as the prime minister of the world's second most populous nation in May last year.


From 145 seats in the lower house of parliament, Lok Sabha, in 2004, his Congress party increased its share of seats to 206 in the May 2009 polls.


By current Indian electoral standards, it was an impressive performance.


With the opposition in disarray, the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government appeared to be on a roll.


An unshakeable understanding between Mr Singh and Congress President Sonia Gandhi ensured political stability in the country. Frequent meetings between the two suggested a neat division of responsibility between party and government.


'Mind-boggling'


In the past few months, the personal equation may have continued, but things have begun going horribly wrong for the Congress-led coalition.





Regular protests by Telangana activists are just one of the government's worries at the moment


Inflation, corruption scandals, a massive and ongoing agitation for a separate state of Telangana in southern India, apparent favours in the allocation of land, the abuse of discretionary powers by state leaders: everything seemed to go wrong at the same time for Mr Singh and his government.


A spate of court cases has given the government a headache.


The Supreme Court made some sharp observations of official decisions in what has come to be known as the 2G scandal - where the government is said to have incurred losses of billions of dollars in the sale of mobile phone spectrum.


And on Wednesday, hearing a case of unaccounted money being held by Indians in foreign banks, the court criticised the coalition for its reluctance to provide more information.


"It is a pure and simple theft of national money," said Justices B Sudershan Reddy and S S Nijjar. "We are talking about mind-boggling crime. We are not on the niceties of treaties."


Such comments have become a near-daily affair for the government in one case or the other.


And so far it has not been able to come up with convincing answers.


Government 'rudderless'


In what the Indian media has dismissed as a lame effort to energise his government, Mr Singh changed the portfolios of as many as 36 ministers on Wednesday, terming it a "minor reshuffle" and promising a more "expansive exercise" in the next few months.


But analysts believe that this may not help the image of the government as a performing entity.


Neena Vyas, associate editor of The Hindu newspaper, told the BBC: "More important is whether the government is able to break the logjam with the opposition, which prevented parliament from conducting any business in the recent session of parliament."


Ms Vyas was referring to the impasse in parliament, in which all sections of an often-divided opposition came together to demand a parliamentary inquiry into the 2G scandal.


Several officials who chose to remain anonymous told this writer that a sense of paralysis had gripped the government.


"No-one wants to take decisions in such an environment where everything is suddenly under question. The government appears rudderless," one of them said.


"It's sad, but this is true," confirmed a junior minister in Mr Singh's government, who told me he believed the prime minister had been extremely hurt by the personal allegations levelled against him by some opposition leaders.





The government is also struggling with spiralling food and fuel prices


Challenges ahead


It is an open question whether the reshuffle carried out by Mr Singh will mean anything in real terms.


There also appear to be divergences on key issues like a new Food Security Bill between the government and the National Advisory Council, a powerful lobby group within the establishment headed by Mrs Gandhi.


Mrs Gandhi has said publicly there should be "no tolerance" for corruption or misconduct.


At a Congress party conference in December, she suggested fast-tracking corruption cases against public servants, providing full transparency in public procurements and contracts, and reviewing the discretionary powers of state chief ministers.


She also called for an open and competitive system of exploiting natural resources.


Analysts are comparing Mr Singh's second tenure to the political crisis, linked to a corruption scandal, that former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi faced back in the mid-1980s, despite having a huge majority in parliament.


Eventually, Mr Gandhi lost the 1989 elections and a motley coalition of parties took power.


While there are similarities between then and now, Mr Singh and Mrs Gandhi still have the opportunity to retrieve lost ground.


A lot will depend on whether or not the government can check spiralling food inflation. Also, whether the Congress and its allies are able to blunt the opposition attack during next month's budget session of parliament will be critical.


Mr Singh and his government still have a little over three years to go before the May 2014 elections.


But the prime minister, Mrs Gandhi and the government have a tough job ahead if they fancy a return to power in Delhi.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The NYT's journalistic obedience

BY GLENN GREENWALD


Earlier today, I wrote in detail about new developments in the case of Raymond Davis, the former Special Forces soldier who shot and killed two Pakistanis on January 27, sparking a diplomatic conflict between the U.S. (which is demanding that he be released on the ground of "diplomatic immunity") and Pakistan (whose population is demanding justice and insisting that he was no "diplomat"). But I want to flag this new story separately because it's really quite amazing and revealing.





In this Jan. 28, 2011 file photo, Pakistani security officials escort Raymond Allen Davis, a U.S. consulate employee, center, to a local court in Lahore, Pakistan.


Yesterday, as I noted earlier, The Guardian reported that Davis -- despite Obama's description of him as "our diplomat in Pakistan" -- actually works for the CIA, and further noted that Pakistani officials believe he worked with Blackwater. When reporting that, The Guardiannoted that many American media outlets had learned of this fact but deliberately concealed it -- because the U.S. Government told them to: "A number of US media outlets learned about Davis's CIA role but have kept it under wraps at the request of the Obama administration."


Now it turns out that The New York Times -- by its own shameless admission -- was one of those self-censoring, obedient media outlets. Now that The Guardian published its story last night, the NYT just now published a lengthy article detailing Davis' work -- headlined: "American Held in Pakistan Shootings Worked With the C.I.A." -- and provides a few more details:


The American arrested in Pakistan after shooting two men at a crowded traffic stop was part of a covert, C.I.A.-led team of operatives conducting surveillance on militant groups deep inside the country, according to American government officials. . . . Mr. Davis has worked for years as a C.I.A. contractor, including time at Blackwater Worldwide, the controversial private security firm (now called Xe) that Pakistanis have long viewed as symbolizing a culture of American gun slinging overseas.


But what's most significant is the paper's explanation for why they're sharing this information with their readers only now:


The New York Times had agreed to temporarily withhold information about Mr. Davis's ties to the agency at the request of the Obama administration, which argued that disclosure of his specific job would put his life at risk. Several foreign news organizations have disclosed some aspects of Mr. Davis's work with the C.I.A.. On Monday, American officials lifted their request to withhold publication, though George Little, a C.I.A. spokesman, declined any further comment.


In other words, the NYT knew about Davis' work for the CIA (and Blackwater) but concealed it because the U.S. Government told it to. Now that The Guardian and other foreign papers reported it, the U.S. Government gave permission to the NYT to report this, so now that they have government license, they do so -- only after it's already been reported by other newspapers which don't take orders from the U.S. Government.


It's one thing for a newspaper to withhold information because they believe its disclosure would endanger lives. But here, the U.S. Government has spent weeks making public statements that were misleading in the extreme -- Obama's calling Davis "our diplomat in Pakistan" -- while the NYT deliberately concealed facts undermining those government claims because government officials told them to do so. That's called being an active enabler of government propaganda. While working for the CIA doesn't preclude holding "diplomatic immunity," it's certainly relevant to the dispute between the two countries and the picture being painted by Obama officials. Moreover, since there is no declared war in Pakistan, this incident -- as the NYT puts it today -- "inadvertently pulled back the curtain on a web of covert American operations inside Pakistan, part of a secret war run by the C.I.A. " That alone makes Davis' work not just newsworthy, but crucial.


Worse still, the NYT has repeatedly disseminated U.S. Government claims -- and even offered its own misleading descriptions --without bothering to include these highly relevant facts. See, for instance, its February 12 report ("The State Department has repeatedly said that he is protected by diplomatic immunity under the Vienna Convention and must be released immediately"); this February 8 article (referring to "the mystery about what Mr. Davis was doing with this inventory of gadgets"; noting "the Pakistani press, dwelling on the items in Mr. Davis's possession and his various identity cards, has been filled with speculation about his specific duties, which American officials would not discuss"; and claiming: "Mr. Davis's jobs have been loosely defined by American officials as 'security' or 'technical,' though his duties were known only to his immediate superiors"); andthis February 15 report (passing on the demands of Obama and Sen. John Kerry for Davis' release as a "diplomat" without mentioning his CIA work). They're inserting into their stories misleading government claims, and condescendingly summarizing Pakistani "speculation" about Davis' work, all while knowing the truth but not reporting it.


Following the dictates of the U.S. Government for what they can and cannot publish is, of course, anything but new for the New York Times. In his lengthy recent article on WikiLeaks and Julian Assange, NYTExecutive Editor Bill Keller tried to show how independent his newspaper is by boasting that they published their story of the Bush NSA program even though he has "vivid memories of sitting in the Oval Office as President George W. Bush tried to persuade [him] and the paper's publisher to withhold the eavesdropping story"; Keller neglected to mention that the paper learned about the illegal program in mid-2004, but followed Bush's orders to conceal it from the public for over a year -- until after Bush was safely re-elected.


And recently in a BBC interview, Keller boasted that -- unlike WikiLeaks -- the Paper of Record had earned the praise of the U.S. Government for withholding materials which the Obama administration wanted withheld, causing Keller's fellow guest -- former British Ambassador to the U.N. Carne Ross -- to exclaim: "It's extraordinary that the New York Times is clearing what it says about this with the U.S. Government." The BBC host could also barely hide his shock and contempt at Keller's proud admission:


HOST (incredulously): Just to be clear, Bill Keller, are you saying that you sort of go to the Government in advance and say: "What about this, that and the other, is it all right to do this and all right to do that," and you get clearance, then?


Obviously, that's exactly what The New York Times does. Allowing the U.S. Government to run around affirmatively depicting Davis as some sort of Holbrooke-like "diplomat" -- all while the paper uncritically prints those claims and yet conceals highly relevant information about Davis because the Obama administration told it to -- would be humiliating for any outlet devoted to adversarial journalism to have to admit. But it will have no such effect on The New York Times. With some noble exceptions, loyally serving government dictates is, like so many American establishment media outlets, what they do; it's their function: hence the name "establishment media."


UPDATE: From a few people in comments (and via email), there are several objections/dissents to some of the arguments here. My responses to them are here.


UPDATE II: At his news conference last week, this is what President Obama said about the Davis situation:


With respect to Mr. Davis, our diplomat in Pakistan, we've got a very simple principle here that every country in the world that is party to the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations has upheld in the past and should uphold in the future. And that is if -- if our diplomats are in another country, then they are not subject to that country's local prosecution.


This is how the New York Times characterized that statement: "Without describing Mr. Davis's mission or intelligence affiliation, President Obama last week made a public plea for his release."


It's one thing for a newspaper to withhold information because it genuinely believes its publication will endanger lives (and I'd love to hear the explanation about why this would). But this situation goes far beyond that. The NYT was regularly printing government claims like the one above ("our diplomat in Pakistan") which were at best misleading and likely false, and also including their own misleading claims in these stories ("the mystery about what Mr. Davis was doing with this inventory of gadgets"). But they had information in their possession -- and concealed it -- which undermined (if not entirely negated) the truth of these statements.


There's a big difference between simply withholding information to protect lives and actively enabling and publishing misleading propaganda. More to the point, there is simply no justification -- none -- for a newspaper to allow government officials to run around misleading the public, and to print those misleading statements, all while concealing information (at the Government's request) which reveal those claims to be factually dubious.

Fighting fanaticism

Elf Habib


The media has been lending almost tacit support to the currency of intolerance. The country, already battered by bloody terrorist onslaughts, is being further forced to fend off the fury and fanaticism of some hitherto apparently silent segments that have infiltrated into the most treasured security shields


The shock, sorrow and anger that stormed the nation after Salmaan Taseer's assassination brought home stark realities to highlight the unbridled intolerance, fanaticism and obsession that seems set to obliterate the slightest dissent from the obscurantist notions of faith, conduct and behaviour. The widespread condemnation, mourning, memorial messages, vigils, candle-lighting, processions and protest rallies to vent love, reverence, grief and concern were in perfect order. However, far more potent and concerted steps are needed to reorient the maverick mindset and the attitudes that have abysmally sunk into some circles to enable them to act as self-styled vigilantes, judges, jurists and executioners. Salmaan had committed no crime, but even if someone felt the contrary, the legal recourse for redress would have been the lawful option. Yet his assassin's reported outburst where he touted a premeditated, brutal murder as a holy feat and the tumult and bravura sweeping his congenital hordes, reflects the dread and design of a fanatic minority to derail the development of a tolerant and pluralistic society. A fatwa, for instance, was flung against Sherry Rehman, merely for suggesting some changes to the blasphemy law. The government and political parties, including some rather avowedly progressive ones like the ANP, have cowered under the hysteric outburst of some skeletal yet supercharged bigoted breeds. The media has been lending almost tacit support to the currency of intolerance. The country, already battered by bloody terrorist onslaughts, is being further forced to fend off the fury and fanaticism of some hitherto apparently silent segments that have infiltrated into the most treasured security shields. The widening gory gyre thus creates new challenges not only for the government but for all democratic forces, rights activists, intellectuals and commoners espousing a tolerant, interactive, pluralistic, peaceful and stable polity devoted to its industrial, economic and social development.


The government, political parties and judiciary in established democratic polities provide the mainstay, shield and stimulus to the diversity of thought, belief and harmonious debate and dialogue, leading to a broader multicultural and multi-faith spectrum. No attitudes, phenomena, beliefs or institutions in any democratic polity are precluded from the ambit of query, question, debate, review, revision and improvement. The repeated dictatorships here, however, stifled this surge, interrupted the political process and drove deeper divisions and distrust into various parties and regions spawning several regional, ethnic and sectarian outfits. Even our principal parties are now forced to stitch some quite disparate and cantankerous coalitions and submit to silly compromises even with the most dogmatic lobbies, hence sacrificing the most rudimentary steps to stem intolerance or promote debate and dialogue. The judiciary is also stymied by several similar constraints. Yet the government can certainly improve intelligence, the security apparatus, training and monitoring. Qadri's elite corps, evidently, was neither trained to sift and separate personal feelings from professional duties nor vetted for its emotional stability. The absence of an in situ reflex or rapid response from Qadri's companions to thwart his attack was an even more glaring professional failure. Such security lapses in a country where more than half the federal and provincial revenues are spent on the security sector cannot be condoned.


The security organs must strive to foster an essential professional ethos, extirpating the slightest propensity for fundamentalist notions and the cliques clamouring for vengeance against opponents, and must stop patronising the extremist factions. The other state organs, similarly, also have to cease appeasing intolerant thought or activities and work for the prevalence of an all-inclusive and all-enfolding sufi spirit and pluralism in line with thought and tradition in Islam. The existing legal recourse relating to the incitement of hatred and bigoted appeals to incriminate and annihilate individuals, apparently deemed to be deviant by some self righteous vigilantes, be faithfully implemented. The relevant rules required to mend the drawbacks must be explicitly formulated. The state can similarly initiate several effective steps to regulate the training and certification for various imams and preachers. This is actually an integral aspect of re-educating and re-orienting the mind, skill and outlook of our adult population and, evidently, also necessitates the revamping of the entire approach and mechanism of our religious instruction in schools and seminaries. Respect and tolerance for dissent, dialogue and pursuance, the poise and patience to pocket even the most provocative invectives or preferring a cool methodical legal procedure for redemption by curbing the instinctive impulse for instant vengeance have to be urged and imbibed at the earliest stages. This becomes unavoidable as the world rapidly shrinks to become an inevitable intermix of innumerable faiths, cultures, communities and ideas.


The state can certainly lead and stimulate these endeavours to a large extent but combating the intolerant mindset is more of a collective social responsibility involving efforts by institutions and organisations devoted to impart formal and informal education, influence and outlook. This necessitates the revamping of the syllabi and the mode of formal and informal instruction. But indirect impact and inspiration from the media, movies, theatre and literature is even more crucial. European societies have made some resplendent efforts in taming the fury, fire and free flow of the blood that soaked the Reformation and French Revolution The reaction to Darwin's iconoclastic theory and Marxist ideas was quite chaotic and contentious, yet it lacked those antecedents of violent, gory feuds. In the US, the state braced a protracted struggle to stem slavery and secession while visionaries, reformers, media and movie magnates orchestrated some really remarkable themes and crusades to transcend racial barriers and expose the futility of clinging to the bygone cotton culture. Now, even video games have joined the genre in tearing down totalitarian dogmatism. Even some African states have swamped the stranglehold of apartheid and racial superiority.


Our media, unfortunately, has miserably failed in exposing the futility of the force and fanaticism for the imposition of any particular idea. It has never portrayed the ravages of morbid monolithic passions and has persistently spurned literature, movies and documentaries, historic evidence, debates and analyses illumining the instructive fate of the ideas that were once considered celestial and immutable. Accounts of societies swallowed by the schism and the strife riled by their stubborn insistence on the supremacy and enforcement of obscurantism are scrupulously ignored. So are the realities to realise the receding role and limitations of religion in the state and global affairs. The enthusiasts and proponents of liberal, logical and realistic thought have a far greater onus to disseminate a dispassionate understanding of the diversity of human thought, rites and the consequent need for tolerance and reconciliation.


The writer is an academic and freelance columnist. He can be reached at habibpbu@yahoo.com

OUR DIPLOMAT IN PAKISTAN

By Ahsan Waheed


ZoneAsia-Pk"


Our diplomat in Pakistan' was how President Obama described Raymond Davis now uncovered as a member of a covert CIA team operating under cover inside Pakistan. The disclosure came after his cover was blown by British media and a gag order on US media that was to have facilitated Davis' extradition under diplomatic immunity was lifted because it no longer served any purpose.


The United States Department of State issues a Diplomatic Identity Card to all diplomats accredited to the US. This is what the card says front and back:


Read Complete Article Here: http://www.zoneasia-pk.com/ZoneAsia-Pk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3673:our-diplomat-in-pakistan&catid=70:free-talk&Itemid=84

We will motivate the masses for peaceful revolution: Nawaz

Ten-point agenda: PML-N rhetoric heats up


The Express Tribune


Balancing their opposition to the PPP-led administration with the support for democratic governance, leaders from the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) seemed to be gearing up for the next big political fight with the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).





"We will motivate the masses for peaceful revolution in streets, mohallahs and villages across the country."


"We will motivate the masses for peaceful revolution in streets, mohallahs and villages across the country," said PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif on Monday in a meeting with party workers belonging to Gujranwala and Rawalpindi divisions.


Sources in the party told The Express Tribune that Sharif, while addressing the participants, used strong language against President Zardari and asked the supporters to recall PML-N's long march which forced the president to restore ousted judges.


Ahsan Iqbal, the party's information secretary, said that while the country as a whole was moving in the right direction - with improving rule of law, an independent judiciary and media and a vibrant civil society - the PPP-led government was not delivering on its promises to lead the nation towards economic stability.


Member National Assembly Saad Rafique said that the PML-N will not use any underhanded tactics in Punjab. "Neither Punjab nor Sindh/Karachi are considered to be no-go areas for any political party," he said, adding that his party will devise a strategy on how to steer the county out of the crises.


So far the PML-N has not taken any drastic measures, though some PML-N leaders have talked about the possibility of expelling the PPP from the ruling coalition in Punjab. The PML-N can govern without any coalition allied in the province.


For its part, the PPP leadership seems to have kept up its end of the war of words. Babar Awan, federal minister for law, justice and parliamentary affairs, on Monday accused the PML-N of trying to bribe PPP legislators in the Punjab Assembly to switch parties.


Awan refuted the suggestion that the government had taken no action on the PML-N's proposals but bristled at the threats of ouster from the provincial government.


"A single party cannot decide the entire country's fate," said Awan, adding that the PPP neither gives nor accepts deadlines on matters of national importance.


According to Awan, the PPP does not have any plans of pre-emptively withdrawing from the Punjab cabinet.


"We believe in politics of federation, reconciliation and that is why we will not leave the provincial government," said Awan.


WITH ADDITIONAL REPORTING FROM APP

Monday, February 21, 2011

‘Unification Bloc can vote for the chief minister’

By Abdul Manan


LAHORE: The Unification Bloc can vote for the chief minister if a vote of confidence is called, according to a Law Department summary sent to the Punjab Assembly speaker.





Law dept summary advises speaker that he has nothing to worry about. PHOTO: TMN


A department official, talking to The Express Tribune on condition of anonymity, said that according to the department advice, sub article 8 of Article 63 A (the law against floor crossing) will take effect following the next general election. "It is a win-win situation since the law does not apply to the current situation. The Unification Bloc members can ignore the opposition leader's instructions," the official said.


The Law Department has told the speaker that since the 18th Amendment does not go into effect yet, according to Article 63-A, a parliamentary leader can only report a defection to the presiding officer (speaker) and ask him to declare the rebel members of his party as defectors. "The law is silent on what will happen if the speaker does not take any action," according to the official. He said that the department had told the speaker that he could hold on to the declaration - in case Chaudhry Zaheeruddin moves it -indefinitely.


Advocate Muhammad Azhar Siddique, when contacted by The Express Tribune, said that before the 18th amendment, Article 63 A gave the government the benefit of doubt. "Before the amendment, the parliamentary leader could only send a declaration to the speaker. It was up to the speaker whether or not to send it to the chief election commissioner," Siddique said.


However, if the article is read with the 18th amendment, the parliamentary leader as head of a party has now been empowered to refer the declaration to both the speaker and the chief election commissioner (CEC). "The PML-Q can then go to court where they will be required to prove that the speaker is not forwarding their declaration to the CEC."

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Mirza declares war on Sharifs


Sindh Home Minister Dr Zulfikar Mirza on Sunday announced an all out war against PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif during a charged address to a public rally in Lyari area of Karachi. "I am announcing war against Nawaz Sharif and [PTI chief] Imran Khan. Nawaz must avoid undemocratic attempts. I am not a thug, but can become one to protect my country. The numbers game of 'Takht-e-Lahore' is an old story," he said.


Mirza's comments have come days after PML-N leader and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif purportedly rejected a proposal to carry on with reconciliatory politics with the PPP. Warning the PML-N against "undemocratic attempts", he said the PPP would fight inside and outside the assembly and "will fight the war on motorway and no official of the PML-N from Karachi to Kashmore will be spared".


"The PML-N must keep it in mind that if the PPP was forcibly pushed, there will be dangerous consequences. We will not leave so easily," he said. "An enemy of the PPP is an enemy of the country. Those who are planning to break the PPP should not forget what happened to former Sindh chief minister Arbab Ghulam Rahim. The shoe throwing incident can be repeated at someone else too," Mirza said in a charged tone.


Mirza warned the PML-N that if it "attacked" the PPP in Punjab, "there will be no PML-N office left in the entire Sindh". If the long march can proceed towards Islamabad from Lahore, a similar long march can also be launched on Lahore from Karachi.


He said residents of Lyari had extended their support to the Bhutto family every time and "Bilwal Bhutto Zardari, Bkhtawar Bhutto Zardari and Asifa Bhutto Zardari were ready to serve the people of Lyari".

Pak, China enjoying exemplary relations: PEW


The Pakistan Economy Watch (PEW) on Sunday said Pakistan and China are natural allies enjoying exemplary relations beyond a shadow of doubt.


Issue of uneven growth in World's No 2 economy with GDP reaching $5.7 trillion should be taken seriously and resolved immediately, it said.


Dr. Murtaza Mughal , President PEW, said that in future, it may be not easy for China to maintain rate of progress without addressing the problem of inequality.


Visionary Chinese leadership should revisit growth-promoting reforms before it pose any risk to poverty reduction efforts at home and potential implications for the rest of the world, he said.


He added that China needed to pour more money in Xinjiang province to bring it at par with developed areas that will minimise chances of political unrest in future.


"It will also have a very positive economic impact on countries bordering Xinjiang including Pakistan. There will be dramatic growth in relations", said Dr. Murtaza Mughal.


He said government need to enhance efforts to implement decisions announced during historic visit of Chinese Premier to Pakistan.


Pakistan deserves enhanced share in China's eye-popping pace of growth and its foreign direct investment standing at $400 billion, he said.


Our economically under-developed country is looking forward for more Chinese-funded infrastructure projects with emphasis on energy as stable Pakistan is in the interest of Beijing, said Dr. Mughal.


Pakistan should try not to remain heavily dependent on US aid that results in additional pressure. Chinese investments that are always without strings but play a secondary role should be encouraged to strike a balance.

CIA Spy Captured Giving Nuclear Bomb To Terrorists


While all eyes in the West are currently trained on the ongoing revolution taking place in Egypt, Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) is warning that the situation on the sub-continent has turned "grave" as it appears open warfare is about to break out between Pakistan and the United States.



Fueling this crisis, that the SVR warns in their report has the potential to ignite a total Global War, was the apprehension by Pakistan of a 36-year-old American named Raymond Allen Davis (photo), whom the US claims is one of their diplomats, but Pakistani Intelligence Services (ISI) claim is a spy for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).


Davis was captured by Pakistani police after he shot and killed two men in the eastern city of Lahore on January 27th that the US claims were trying to rob him.


Pakistan, however, says that the two men Davis killed were ISI agents sent to follow him after it was discovered he had been making contact with al Qaeda after his cell phone was tracked to the Waziristan tribal area bordering Afghanistan where the Pakistani Taliban and a dozen other militant groups have forged a safe haven and former CIA agent Tim Osman (also known as Osama bin Laden) is believed to be in hiding.


Of the actual gunfight itself we can read as reported by the Time News Service which, in part, says:


"The scene could have been scripted in a Hollywood action thriller: For two hours at the end of last month in Lahore, U.S. diplomat Raymond Davis was closely pursued by two visibly armed men on a motorbike. He noticed them tailing him from a restaurant to an ATM, and through the crowded streets of Pakistan's second [largest] city. They were close by when, in a crowded intersection, Davis produced his own handgun and fired seven shots.


The diplomat was apparently a crack shot, and all seven bullets found their mark, killing his two pursuers. Davis then called for back-up, and a four-wheel-drive vehicle raced onto the scene, striking a Pakistani bystander who was killed by the impact. But the people in the vehicle, whose identities remain unknown, escaped from the scene having failed to retrieve Davis, who was later arrested nearby."


The combat skills exhibited by Davis, along with documentation taken from him after his arrest, prove, according to this report, his being a member of the feared American Task Force 373 (TF373) black operations unit currently operating in the Afghan War Theater and Pakistani tribal areas comprised of US Military Special Forces Soldiers, CIA spies and freelance mercenaries.


Further information about Davis discovered by the Times of India includes:


"According to records from the Pentagon, Davis is a former Special Forces soldier who left the army in August 2003 after 10 years of service. A Virginia native, he served with infantry divisions prior to joining the 3rd Special Forces Group in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. In 1994, he was part of the U.N. peacekeeping force in Macedonia. His record includes several awards and medals, including for good conduct.


Public records also show Davis runs a company with his wife registered in Las Vegas called Hyperion Protective Services, though it was not immediately clear whether the company has had many contracts with the U.S. government."


Since Davis's capture the US has exerted extraordinary pressure upon Pakistan to release him, including the American Ambassador warning President Asif Ali Zardari to release him "or else" and the cancellation of all talks between these two nuclear powered Nations.


Today, according to this SVR report, this most critical of situations became even worse when a Pakistani judge refused to bow to American pressure and ordered a further 14-day detention of Davis, and which sparked an immediate threat from US National Security Advisor Tom Donilon, who told Pakistani envoy Hussain Haqqani that the Obama administration will "kick him out of the US", close American consulates in Pakistan and cancel President Zardari's upcoming visit to Washington if their CIA spy wasn't released immediately.


Fearing that the conflict over Davis may lead to open warfare, the Pakistanis were quick to let the Americans know they would not come out any conflict unscathed with their firing yesterday of their new Hatf-VII nuclear cruise missile (also called Babur after the 16th-century Muslim ruler who founded the Mughal Empire) that Major General Athar Abbas said "…can carry strategic and conventional warheads, has stealth capabilities, is a low-flying, terrain-hugging missile with high manoeuvrability, pinpoint accuracy and radar avoidance features".


The United States Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) further reported yesterday that Pakistan appears to be building a fourth military nuclear reactor, signaling its determination to produce more plutonium for atomic weapons.


Most ominous in this SVR report, though, is Pakistan's ISI stating that top-secret CIA documents found in Davis's possession point to his, and/or TF373, providing to al Qaeda terrorists "nuclear fissile material" and "biological agents" they claim are to be used against the United States itself in order to ignite an all-out war in order to reestablish the West's hegemony over a Global economy that is warned is just months away from collapse.


Not known to the masses of the American people is that the $20 Trillion they have spent on their longest wars in history has bankrupted their Nation to such an extent that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) called yesterday for replacement of the US Dollar as the World's reserve currency.


More crucially that the American people are ignoring is the fact that their own government has unleashed against them a 21st Century update to the dreaded US Military "Operation Northwoods" campaign of terror designed to enrage them to accepting war as their main way of life.


Operation Northwoods was a series of false-flag operation proposals that originated within the United States government in 1962. The proposals called for the CIA, or other operatives, to commit acts of terrorism in US cities and elsewhere. These acts of terrorism were to be blamed on Cuba in order to create public support for a war against that nation, which had recently become communist under Fidel Castro. One part of Operation Northwoods was to "develop a Communist Cuban terror campaign in the Miami area, in other Florida cities and even in Washington."


Operation Northwoods proposals included hijackings and bombings followed by the introduction of phony evidence that would implicate the Cuban government. It stated:


"The desired resultant from the execution of this plan would be to place the United States in the apparent position of suffering defensible grievances from a rash and irresponsible government of Cuba and to develop an international image of a Cuban threat to peace in the Western Hemisphere."


Several other proposals were included within Operation Northwoods, including real or simulated actions against various US military and civilian targets. The plan was drafted by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, signed by Chairman Lyman Lemnitzer and sent to the Secretary of Defense. Although part of the US government's Cuban Project anti-communist initiative, Operation Northwoods was never officially accepted and the proposals included in the plan were never executed.


James Bamford summarizes Northwoods as follows:


"Operation Northwoods, which had the written approval of the Chairman and every member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called for innocent people to be shot on American streets; for boats carrying refugees fleeing Cuba to be sunk on the high seas; for a wave of violent terrorism to be launched in Washington, D.C., Miami, and elsewhere. People would be framed for bombings they did not commit; planes would be hijacked. Using phony evidence, all of it would be blamed on Castro, thus giving Lemnitzer and his cabal the excuse, as well as the public and international backing, they needed to launch their war."


Though Operation Northwoods had the "approval" of the Chairman and every member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, it did not have the approval of their boss, President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963), but who barely one year after his outright rejection of this monstrous plan to kill thousands of innocent Americans was gunned down as an example to any future US leader what would happen to them if they dared go against the wishes of the Military-Industrial Complex (MIC).


Today, as the US Department of Homeland Security has just issued a grim warning that the threat of terror strike on America is at a higher level than it has been since September 11, 2001, and the WikiLeaks release of secret US government cables reveals that al Qaeda is on the brink of using a nuclear bomb, a new President stands between his people and the CIA warmongers with the only question being will he protect them like Kennedy did?


The answer to that question, sadly, appears to be "no" as new information recently obtained by US journalists show that not only has Obama failed to discipline those CIA officers who have led the United States to near total collapse, he has promoted them in numbers never before seen in history.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

'Shiv Sena to decide if Pakistan can play final in Mumbai'

The right-wing Shiv Sena on Thursday declared that party chief Bal Thackeray will decide if Pakistan can play in Mumbai if the team makes it to the final of World Cup 2011.



According to a report published in The Hindu, party leader Manohar Joshi has said that the Shiv Sena chief will make the final decision of allowing the Pakistani team to play in Mumbai.


"You all know Sena chief Bal Thackeray's views. If the Pakistan team reaches the final (scheduled in Mumbai), whether to allow them to play, the Sena chief will decide"


The statement comes after Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi had said that a Pakistan-India World Cup final would be ideal.


"We're going through a very tough situation," said Afridi. "But I'm very happy because we're trying to rebuild the team and keep the morale high.


"We all know how important the World Cup is for our country. The message for other teams is that no one should underestimate us."


The final is scheduled to be held on April 2 at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. The stadium is also the site of the 1991 pitch defacement by Shiv Sena activists in protest of a proposed one-day series between India and Pakistan.

Fauzia Wahab Angers Her In-laws By Defending American Mercenary

President Asif Zardari's aide Fauzia Wahab, reviled in Pakistan for her blunt defense of an American spy who killed two Pakistanis in broad daylight, while his colleagues killed a third passerby and caused the young wife of one of the killed, in her mid twenties and married only for six months, to commit suicide.



  • One of them didn't like her coming out to defend killer-of-two Raymond Davis

  • 'Her Party Will Face Defeat In Next Elections If It Releases That Murderer'



Fauzia Wahab, a parliament member and aide to President Zardari, came out this week publicly defending Raymond Davis, an American hired-gun contracted by the US military or intelligence who spied in Pakistan under diplomatic disguise. Her pro-US government is desperate to release the spy under US pressure. But her in-laws are so disgusted with her, like most Pakistanis, that a 90-year-old relative of her late husband, Mr. Khaleel Siddiqi who resides in Canada, has publicly asked her to drop her former husband's name. Mr. Siddiqi posted this comment, along with his full name, age, email address and telephone number, at PressPakistan, an Internet group of Pakistani journalists. PakNationalists.com reproduces this comment from the source without any major modifications.




President Asif Zardari's aide Fauzia Wahab, reviled in Pakistan for her blunt defense of an American spy who killed two Pakistanis in broad daylight,


while his colleagues killed a third passerby and caused the young wife of one of the killed, in her mid twenties and married only for six months, to commit suicide.


KHALEEL Y. SIDDIQI | Case Of American Mercenary Raymond Davis


WWW.PAKNATIONALISTS.COM


I AM ASHAMED TO DISCLOSE THAT FAUZIA WAS THE WIFE OF LATE WAHAB SIDDIQI, A NEPHEW OF MY LATE WIFE. WAHAB WAS A FAMOUS JOURNALIST IN KARACHI, PAKISTAN, WHO NEVER COMPROMISED WITH ANY NON-SENSE.



  • WILL FAUZIA BE KIND ENOUGH TO REMOVE THE NAME OF "WAHAB" FROM HER NAME ?

  • WILL SOME ONE MAKE HER AND PPP LEADERSHIP UNDERSTAND THAT AMERICA CAN NOT AFFORD TO DISPLEASE OR ANNOY PAKISTAN.


Pakistan can:



  • BLOCK AND STOP ALL SUPPLIES GOING BY ROAD TO US & NATO ARMIES IN AFGHANISTAN;

  • CANCELS ALL PERMISSIONS GIVEN TO US ARMY / INTELLIGENCE, TO OPERATE FROM FAKISTAN;

  • HANDOVER GAWADER PORT TO CHINA THUS ENDING US CONTROL ON THE PERSIAN GULF AND ARAB OIL; AND

  • [END] ARMY OPERATIONS AGAINST AL-QAEDA & TALIBAN FROM ITS NORTH-WESTERN BORDER.


US WILL FACE DEFEAT IN AFGHANISTAN, HER ECONOMY WILL COLLAPSE, HER REPUTATION AS A SUPERPOWER WILL BE [GONE].


CAN USA AFFORD IT FOR THE SAKE OF ONE OF ITS CIA AGENTS WHO HAS , IN FACT, KILLED TWO INNOCENT PAKISTANIS IN LAHORE?




PLEASE TELL FAUZIA THAT IF THAT MURDERER OF TWO PAKISTANIS IS RETURNED TO USA, PPP WILL NOT RETURN TO POWER IN THE NEXT ELECTIONS. IT IS THEREFORE AN IDEAL OPPORTUNITY FOR PPP TO REGAIN ITS LOSING POPULARITY AND PUNISH THAT SON-OF-A-BITCH ACCORDING TO PAKISTAN PENAL CODE.




" IN-NA A'LI-NA LUL HUDA" (AL-QURAN) "OUR RESPONSIBILITY IS TO SHOW YOU THE RIGHT PATH" .


Khaleel Y. Siddiqi


B.A., LL.B., D.S. & B.M.(LONDON, UK)


khaleel@rogers.com


Phone: 647-628-1933


Reproduced from the Google group PressPakistan.

 
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