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Hashmi says Pasha hurled threats at him

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MULTAN: Veteran politician Javed Hashmi said on Saturday he was not aware of the audio tape of ISI’s former chief Lt Gen Zaheerul Islam Abbasi as mentioned by PML-N Senator Mushahidullah Khan in an interview on Friday.

Addressing a press conference, Mr Hashmi said he, however, had received a phone call from another former ISI chief Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha after he left the sit-in of the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf.

“Gen Pasha threatened me that he would not spare me, Nawaz Sharif and Khawaja Asif, despite the fact that I had nothing to do with him over the issue,” he said

Mr Hashmi said PTI Chairman Imran Khan had informed him before the long march left for Islamabad that a technocrat government would be formed even if Nawaz Sharif did not resign as the chief justice would dissolve the assemblies.

He said he was told that the technocrat would hold the elections within three months and the PTI would come to power.

Mr Hashmi said he left the sit-in and returned home after his differences with the PTI chief as party’s core committee in the presence of Mr Khan had decided not to move the sit-in from D-Chowk as Army Chief Gen Raheel Sharif had held out the assurance that Nawaz Sharif would resign if rigging in elections was proved.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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It must be determined if MQM legislators quit willingly or not: experts

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ISLAMABAD: As long as the Senate chairman and the speakers of National and Sindh assemblies did not satisfy themselves whether legislators belonging to the Muttahida Qaumi Movement had resigned willingly or not, the resignations would be considered “unaccepted”, according to legal experts consulted by Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the JUI-F chief.

“After consultations with his party’s legal team, Maulana Fazl has reached a conclusion that there is no legal hindrance in starting a process to persuade the MQM leadership to review its decision,” Jan Achakzai, the spokesman for JUI-F, told reporters here on Saturday.

Maulana Fazl also held meetings earlier during the day with Ashtar Ausaf Ali, the Prime Minister’s Special Assistant on Law, to discuss legal questions arising after tendering of resignations by the Muttahida legislators.

In reply to a question, Mr Achakzai cited a decision of the Islamabad High Court on a petition filed by Zafar Ali Shah that resignations by legislators could not be accepted if they were not given willingly.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has requested the JUI-F head to hold talks with the MQM leadership in an attempt to bring them back to parliament and the Sindh Assembly.

Maulana Fazlur Rehman spoke to Muttahida supremo Altaf Hussain by phone on Saturday and, according to Jan Achakzai, the two leaders had agreed to begin a process of dialogue to thrash out a solution. “The MQM leader has accepted Maulana Fazl as a negotiator to resolve this issue.”

(Television channels reported late on Saturday night that Altaf Hussain had asked his party’s coordination committee in Karachi to keep in touch with the authorities concerned so that the “resignation matter is resolved soon”).

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Petition to unseat MQM, PTI lawmakers filed in SC

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KARACHI: A petition was filed on Saturday in the Supreme Court seeking court’s order to the respondent authorities for accepting the resignations of the lawmakers belonging to the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf and Muttahida Qaumi Movement.

The petition was filed by Advocate Maulvi Iqbal Haider, who impleaded the PTI amd MQM lawmakers, federal law secretary, Senate chairman, National Assembly speaker and Sindh Assembly speaker as respondents.

The petitioner said the seats of MQM legislators had become vacant and the Election Commission of Pakistan was bound to announce the schedule for by-elections on the vacant seats of the Senate, National Assembly and the Sindh Assembly.

However, he said, that the speakers of the National and Sindh assemblies and Senate chairman instead of accepting the resignations of the MQM lawmakers were not unseating them.

The petitioner said the PTI legislators totally boycotted the National Assembly sessions without leave of the house and remained absent for more than 40 consecutive days.

He said the NA speaker was bound to notify the vacant seats of the house in terms of Article 64 of the Constitution.

He asked the court to declare that the respondents speakers of the assemblies and Senate chairman were bound to declare the seats of the parliamentarians had become vacant.

The petitioner prayed to the court to declare that the federal government had no right to negotiate with the MQM legislators to bring them round to withdraw their resignations.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Businessmen community seeks FIR against SHO

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HYDERABAD: A meeting of over 60 trade organisations held in the office of the Hyderabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (HCCI) on Saturday demanded registration of an FIR against the SHO of the Lakhra Coal Mines police station under the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) claiming that he was issuing threats of dire consequences to the HCCI chairman subcommittee on law and order chairman Mahmood Ali Rajput.

HCCI president Mr Goharullah, senior vice president Turab Ali Khoja and members of its executive committee, as well as the FPCCI’s regional subcommittee on law and order chairman, also attended the meeting.

The meeting was informed that the SHO had issued threats in the presence of the Hyderabad DIG and Jamshoro SSP.

Speakers at the meeting said that the police were supposed to protect the life and property of citizens, including members of the businessmen community, but the SHO was, instead, issuing threats of dire consequences to them and such an attitude could not be tolerated.

The meeting urged the governor, chief minister and highups of the police and Rangers to order registration of an FIR against the SHO.

The meeting also demanded an end to “forcible occupation of certain industrialists’ land” by Aug 17 failing which a protest drive would be launched.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Indus in high flood at Guddu, Sukkur, Kotri

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LAHORE: River Indus was in high flood at Guddu, Sukkur and Kotri and river Kabul in low flood at Nowshera on Saturday.

The level in river Sutlej at Ganda Singhwala was 18.9ft (55,000 cusecs) and was expected to rise to 19.5ft (56,000 to 63,000 cusecs) in the next 24 hours.

River Indus was in medium flood at Taunsa and in low flood at Chashma and Kalabagh.

The Flood Forecasting Divisions (FFD) said moist current was penetrating upper parts of the country and gave rain in some cities in league with a shallow westerly wave.

Sialkot received 41mm of rain, Islamabad (Golra 35mm, Zero Point 29mm, Saidpur 27mm, Airport 21mm, Bokra 20mm, Shamsabad 17mm, Marala 34mm, Mangla 26mm, Tarbela 14mm, Gujrat 13mm, Rawalakot 9mm, Kotli and Murree 5mm (each).

It forecast moderate rainfall activity with isolated heavy falls over the upper catchments of rivers Jhelum, Chenab, Sutlej and Ravi along with Rawalpindi, Gujranwala, Sargodha, Faisalabad, Lahore, Dera Ghazi Khan, Kohat, Bannu, Dera Ismail Khan and Peshawar divisions in the next 24 hours.

Isolated thundershowers were expected over Northeast Balochistan and upper catchments of river Indus and Bahawalpur division.

The swelling Sutlej is threatening dozens of villages and hamlets, while thousand of acres of land with standing crops and vegetables had already been inundated, our Kasur correspondent adds.

The villages facing immediate flood threat include Hakowala, Nagar, Gati Kalanger, Maboki, Bhikhiwind, Sahjra, Ratnaywala, Chanda Singh, Mastayki and Bangla Desh.

The floodwater has entered the primary school at Bhikhiwind village.

Rescue 1122 had so far transported some 10,000 people across the Sutlej.

According to sources, the district administration may start evacuation from the threatened villages on Monday. In this connection announcements have already been made through mosques in these villages.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Tariq Arain sworn in as minister

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KARACHI: Tariq Masood Arain, a member of the provincial assembly from Nawabshah, was sworn in as a minister at Governor House on Saturday evening. Sindh Governor Dr Ishratul Ibad administrated the oath to Mr Arain in the presence of Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah.

As no department has yet been assigned/ notified to the new minister, he has been accommodated in the cabinet on the seat of provincial minister for Katchi Abadis that fell vacant after Javed Nagori resigned on health grounds.

Mr Arain, a Sindh University graduate and a businessman, has been representing Nawabshah in the Sindh Assembly since 2002.

The 42-year-old lawmaker is also serving on various sub-committees of the provincial assembly overseeing various departments including excise, taxation and narcotics, information and archives, home affairs, services, general administration and coordination department.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Sindh plans to step up security at major shrines

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KARACHI: The provincial government has planned to step up security in and around major shrines in Sindh by setting up control rooms and hospitals on the shrines’ premises, officials said on Saturday.

Though militant attacks on shrines, mosques and public places have substantially subsided in the province and the rest of the country, the danger had not gone away completely, which was why the government was taking steps to tighten security at the shrines, said the officials.

“A similar plan was partly implemented a few years ago but the danger remained and now the government has decided to execute it in full,” said a senior official at the home department.

The government had earlier claimed that it had installed mobile phone jammers, walk-through gates and security barriers at all major shrines in the wake of attacks on various shrines but no such thing was seen on ground and the shrines remained as unguarded and open to attack as ever.

Officials admitted that after the attack on a shrine in Shikarpur five years ago, the government had put in place some security measures at a number of shrines but because of lack of follow-up action the walk-through gates and security barriers did not see light of the day.

However, after fresh intelligence reports the government received lately, it decided to reinforce security measures in and around all major shrines.

Senator Qayyum Soomro, adviser to the chief minister on Auqaf and religious affairs, said the government would soon install close-circuit TV cameras and build a 10-room mini-hospital equipped with ambulances etc on the shrines’ premises.

However, officials said the plan did not include the installation of CCTVs alone, but purpose-built control rooms would also be set up there to make the places safe.

They said that lists of shrines declared sensitive earlier were being updated and in addition to it, certain mosques and imambargahs were also being included in separate lists for similar security measures.

Sources said that at present the security provided to major shrines, like that of Shah Abdul Latif Bhitai, was extremely poor. The custodians of the IdargahI had been complaining that just three or four out of a dozen policemen posted at the shrine could be seen performing their duties. The shrine’s two entrances were not properly manned and no frisking of devotees was carried out.

Similar scenes may be witnessed at other shrines, where security arrangements are pathetically scarce.

An official in the Auqaf department admitted that they could not make the shrines safe, which fetched large sums in terms of donations, because of red-tape and also because the subject of security fell under the purview of the home department.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Indian coast guard officer to be court-martialled

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NEW DELHI: The Indian coast guard officer who claimed blowing up an alleged Pakistani boat when the Modi government blamed the crew for setting it on fire will be court-martialled, the Times of India said on Saturday.

It said Coast Guard DIG B.K. Loshali, who had contradicted government’s version of events in connection with the interception of the mystery boat in January, will face court-martial proceedings from September after being indicted by a Board of Inquiry (BoI).

The BoI was instituted in February after Coast Guard found “unsatisfactory” Mr Loshali’s reply to the show-cause notice issued to him over remarks that he had ordered the Pakistani boat to be blown up off the Porbandar coast.

The BoI had submitted its report to the Coast Guard headquarters in late April after which it was studied at various levels.

“The BOI had called for strict action. The General Court Martial Proceedings against DIG B.K. Loshali will start in September,” the newspaper quoted a defence source as saying.

Asked about the content of the report, sources said that unedited video showed that Loshali did make the assertion that he had ordered the boat to be blown up, contrary to the denial he made later.

They added that he would face strict action.

Mr Loshali had contradicted the government’s claim that the crew of the intruding Pakistani boat had themselves set the vessel ablaze, leading to an explosion that caused the vessel to sink.

Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar and the Coast Guard have consistently maintained that the occupants of the boat had “self-destructed” after being chased by Coast Guard ships on the intervening night of December 31 and January 1. Notwithstanding Mr Loshali’s claims, Mr Parrikar had said his ministry stood by its version and hinted at disciplinary action against him.

“Let me tell you. I hope you remember 31st December night. We blew off that Pakistan... We have blown them off. I was there at Gandhinagar and I told at night, blow the boat off. We don’t want to serve them biryani,” Mr Loshali had bragged in the video before backtracking and claiming that he was misquoted.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Over 100,000 flee Thatta areas to escape flooding

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THATTA: Mounting pressure of floodwater in the Indus River caused wide breaches in the dykes of the Right Bank Outfall Drain (RBOD) at four places within the limits of Thatta district on Saturday causing inundation of several thousand acres of farmland and over two dozen villages.

The breaches occurred in the dykes between the Hillaya and Chillaya points. Strong currents overtopping the Indus embankments hit the RBOD dykes with immense pressure causing the breaches, local residents said, adding that the pressure was constantly mounting and more weak points along the dykes were feared to sustain damage.

Officials of the Sindh Irrigation and Drainage Authority (Sida) closely monitoring the flow of floodwater downstream Kotri via Thatta said that around 100-foot-wide breaches at the four points had already caused considerable damage to the vital drain. Although they blame the damage to the unexpectedly heavy discharge at these points, local agronomist insist that the dykes could not withstand the pressure due to the use of substandard material and poor quality work for the strengthening of the protective bunds. Such breaches, though not so wide, used to occur frequently even during the low-pressure flows, they argued.

As soon as the deluge started flooding the farmlands next to the Hillaya and Chillaya points on Saturday, Kalri Baghar circle chief engineer Abdul Qadir Palijo ordered dismantling of ‘zamindari bunds’ (the dykes raised by growers to protect their own lands) in order to prevent heavier losses. Some of the zamindari bunds were raised by the most influential growers of the district.

Mr Palijo told Dawn that the floodwater currently passing through the area spilled over its designated route partly due to obstruction in the flow. Thick silt deposits, garbage etc had reduced the depth of the course, he said, adding that the 115-mile Thatta section of the Indus embankments would remain under immense pressure over the next 24-36 hours.

A strict monitoring of the officially declared vulnerable dykes — Sonda, Hillaya, Ali Bahar, PB Bund, Aghimani, Indo and Gulail — was being done by public and private stakeholders to avoid any eventuality. in the district.

Meanwhile, it was reported that 15 villages were inundated soon after the dismantling of a zamindari bund in the katcha area of Garko Forest.

Media personnel present around the affected landscape reported that an estimated 100,000 villagers managed to move out of the flooded areas during the day and take refuge on highlands. They mostly belonged to the Thatta and Ghorabari areas.

Some of them speaking to the media said neither the Provincial Disaster Management Authority nor the relief department had so far reached them to offer relief and assistance. They said they needed tents, food, water and other essential commodities for survival.

Reports from the marooned villages said that more than 300 families were trapped due to sudden arrival of floodwater in their villages near Tando Hafiz Shah town.

At the Thatta-Sujawal bridge, locally known as Doolah Darya Khan bridge, a discharge of 575,000 cusecs was recorded on Saturday afternoon. Located in a safe area, the bridge has become a recreational spot these days providing a rare sight of high-flood discharge to the visitors.

Floodwater hits 20 Dadu villages

DADU: Twenty villages were inundated when around 100-foot-wide breach in the dyke of a water course along Shah Awais Qarni link road caused flooding near Manjhand town on Saturday.

Road communication between surrounding towns and villages was blocked by the flooding on the western side of the Indus Highway and the entire Pako area was cut off with the rest of the district.

Floodwater damaging the irrigation channels in the district was picking up intensity further threatening the highway, after washing away the rail track near Lucky Shah Saddar, Amri and Manjhand.

The villages affected by the flooding included Abra, Detha, Bajora, Qurban Tanghyani, Lutif Ali Khoso and Chara.

Some of the affected villagers said that floodwater had already caused six smaller breaches at various points in the dykes of irrigation channels in the Pako area. Floodwater in the area is passing through 30 small bridges built over the waterway serving as stormwater drain.

They said they were in dire need of food, drinking water, medicines and boats to cope with the eventuality.

Manjhand Assistant Commi­ssioner Muzaffar Hussain Katpar, when contacted, said that four boats were already sent to the affected areas to shift the affected villagers to safe places. Four more boats would be sent to the areas soon, he added. He said that Indus Highway would not sustain heavy damage by the flooding as all bridges in the affected areas were closed.

Engineer Ghulam Sarwar Sahar posted at the Sehwan-Shahbaz division said that a discharge of around 500,000 cusecs at the Manjhand section of the Indus River was recorded on Saturday.

Meanwhile, it was reported that the 7,000-year-old historical site of ‘Amri Remains’ was affected by the flooding which also hit Amri town and the low-lying areas of Lucky town.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Altaf urges army chief to give audience to MQM team

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KARACHI: Muttahida Qaumi Movement chief Altaf Hussain has asked the army chief to provide an opportunity to an MQM delegation to meet him in order to remove ‘all misunderstanding’ between his party and the armed forces for the sake of the country.

Mr Hussain was speaking by phone from London to a large number of people, including women, who gathered at the Jinnah Ground in Karachi to attend the Independence Day celebrations late on Friday night.

He congratulated Chief of the Army Staff Gen Raheel Sharif, officers and personnel of the armed forces, law enforcement agencies, leaders of political and religious parties, including Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf Chairman Imran Khan and his wife Reham Khan, and people of Pakistan on the Independence Day.

Mr Hussain said his recent speeches had drawn severe criticism, but added, “What I said yesterday, I am saying it today that I refuse to accept an oppressive government or rulers whether civil or military”.


Muttahida leader stresses the need for removing ‘all misunderstanding’ between his party and the armed forces


He said many politicians had criticised the army even in parliament, but only he had been targeted and a ban imposed on his speeches.

He said MQM did not cancel celebrations despite the arrest of its workers and office-bearers in Landhi on the eve of the Independence Day.

Expressing concern over “illegal arrests and enforced disappearances of party workers”, he alleged that MQM was being targeted in the garb of an action against criminal elements.

The MQM chief said “Haqiqi terrorists” had occupied parts of Landhi under what he called protection of Rangers, recalling a similar situation on June 19, 1992, the start of an operation against the Muttahida.

He recalled that in 1992 PML-N leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan had phoned him in London and assured him that the government would stop the army operation against the MQM. However, he did nothing when intelligence agencies started following him, he added.

“Now, he [Chaudhry Nisar] is blaming me, but is not ready to utter a single word of condemnation against those Rangers personnel who are involved in extrajudicial killings of my workers.”

He urged the army chief to give an opportunity to an MQM delegation to meet him so that they could remove all “misgivings and misunderstandings” with the armed forces for the sake of the country.

He appealed to Gen Raheel to “ensure justice” to MQM.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Imran urged to expel ‘mafia’ from PTI

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KARACHI: Justice (retd) Wajihuddin Ahmed, whose party membership has been recently suspended, has expressed the hope that Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf chief Imran Khan will expel the ‘mafia’ comprising ‘corrupt elements’ from the party.

He was talking to reporters at the Karachi airport after returning from Lahore on Saturday.

Rejecting reports of differences with the PTI chief and the impression that he was creating a faction in the party, he said PTI was the party of ideological members and it had no room for “corrupt elements”.

The retired justice of the Supreme Court accused Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Pervaiz Khattak, PTI central organiser Jahangir Khan Tareen, Sindh former PTI president Nadir Akmal Leghari and Abdul Aleem of running the PTI like a “mafia”.

He said efforts were being made to put the party on a right path. He said the PTI might lose the next general elections if action was not taken against the “mafia”.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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PML-N leader accuses Rana Sanaullah of ‘killing 20 people’

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LAHORE: About three months after regaining the Punjab law minister’s portfolio, Rana Sanaullah is embroiled in another controversy. And this time around, a senior leader from his own party has accused him of ‘killing 20 people’.

The allegation came from Chaudhry Sher Ali, the father of Minister of State for Water and Power Abid Sher Ali, who is said to be heading the PML-N group in Faisalabad which is against Rana Sanaullah and a few others.

Chaudhry Sher Ali said the other day Rana Sanaullah was involved in the murder of 20 people.

“I have on me SMS of former district police officer Sohail Tajik confirming the involvement of Rana Sanaullah in the killing of 20 people. I had brought the matter to the notice of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif who asked Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif to take action against Sanaullah. But no action has been taken against him so far,” Mr Ali said.

The former PML-N MNA demanded strict action against the ‘killer of 20 people’ and also sought an ‘operation’ in Faisalabad so that the ‘killers’ could be apprehended.

Reacting to the allegation, Rana Sanaullah, who is considered a close aide to the chief minister, said there was a ‘motive’ behind these allegations. “Sher Ali wants his son to be appointed as mayor of Faisalabad. If I support him, he will start praising me,” he said, adding he would not take up the matter legally. “I would rather take up it with the party leadership,” he said.

The Pakistan Awami Tehreek endorsed Mr Ali’s allegations and urged the prime minister and the Lahore High Court chief justice to look into the matter.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Former ISI chief Hamid Gul dies of brain hemorrhage

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RAWALPINDI: Former chief of the Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) General (Retd) Hamid Gul died of a brain hemorrhage in Murree late on Saturday, DawnNews reported.

The former ISI chief suffered a brain hemorrhage and was shifted to the Combined Military Hospital in Murree in critical condition.

Born in Sargodha on Nov 20, 1936, he joined the army in 1954 and was commissioned in the army in 1956.

During the 1965 war he was a tank commander and was awarded Sitara-i-Jurat for bravery.

He received training from the Staff college Quetta during 1968-1969. He then served as a battalion commander from 1972 to 1976 following which he was promoted to the rank of brigadier in 1978.

In 1980, he was promoted to First Armoured Division Multan Corp's Commander and also served as martial law administrator in Bahawalpur.

He was also awared Hilal e Imtiaz (Military) and Sitarah e Basalat for his services.

Gen Gul remained ISI chief during 1987 and 1989 when the US-backed Afghan Jihad against the then Soviet Union was at the last stages. He continued working in the spy agency in the post-stages of the Afghan war.

Tweet by journalist Ansar Abbasi

He retired from service in 1992.

Journalist Hamid Mir tweeted

During an interview on DawnNews in October 2012, the former ISI chief had said that politicians in the country were corrupt, and at the same time admitted responsibility for creating the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI), a political alliance that was allegedly created to prevent Benazir Bhutto’s PPP from winning during the 1990 general elections.

Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf Chairman Imran Khan tweeted, "Sad to learn of Gen Hameed Gul's death. Whether one agreed with his views or not, he was a patriot. Condolences & prayers go to the family."
Gen (r) Hamid Gul (R) on stage with leaders of the Difa-i-Pakistan Council during a rally in Lahore. -AFP/file
Gen (r) Hamid Gul (R) on stage with leaders of the Difa-i-Pakistan Council during a rally in Lahore. -AFP/file

He frequently attended rallies of the Difa-i-Pakistan Council or Defence of Pakistan Council (DPC), a coalition of around 40 religious and political parties.

Two killed in firing by Indian troops

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MUZAFFARABAD: Indian troops shelled a border village in Azad Jammu and Kashmir from across the Line of Control (LoC) on Saturday, leaving two people dead and six others wounded.

Causalities occurred in Dabsi Narr village of Nakyal sector in the Kotli district when the victims were going to attend a wedding ceremony, Senior Superinten­dent Police Kotli Mohammad Amin said.

The deceased were identified as Mohammad Shafi, 75, and Shapal, 45. Mohammad Imran, Rashid, Shakila Bibi, M. Tasheed, Saeed and Nazeer suffered injuries after being hit by shrapnel, he said.

The SSP said intermittent shelling had been going on since last night. “They (Indians) are using light weapons but in between also fire mortar shells,” he added.

The latest casualties came a day after Pakistan said a woman was killed and her husband and daughter, and a third female relative, were wounded by shelling in the Nezapir sector.

On Aug 9, a woman was injured in Goi Deri village of Nakyal after the Indian troops targeted a wedding ceremony. She succumbed to her wounds in a Rawalpindi hospital on Tuesday.

On Thursday evening, a 12-year-old boy fell victim to Indian shelling in Dharamsal village of Poonch district.

AP adds: Meanwhile, officials in Srinagar said three Indian civilians were killed and 20 injured in firing from across Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

Police Inspector General Danish Rana said the civilians were killed after their car was hit by a shell fired by Pakistani troops in the Balakote sector. The dead included a village headman.

Mr Rana said 20 civilians were wounded in the fighting at different places in the region.

Each side blamed the other for the violence.

Indian army spokesman Lt Col Manish Mehta said Pakistani soldiers fired mortars and gunfire without any provocation and that the fighting was ongoing.

In a statement, Pakistan’s army blamed India for “unprovoked” firing and added that “Pakistani troops befittingly responded”.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Colonel (retd) Shuja Khanzada​: Military man and politician

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Deceased Punjab home minister Colonel (retd) Shuja Khanzada, son of Yousaf Khanzada, hailed from Shadi Khan Village in Hazro near Attock.

Khanzada was born into a Pakhtun family belonging to the Yousufzai clan. His grandfather, Captain Ajab Khan had served as a member of the Indian Legislative Assembly. His uncle, late Captain (Retd) Taj Muhammad Khanzada had served as Member of the National/Provincial Assembly, Majlis-e-Shura.

After graduating from Islamia College Peshawar in 1966, Khanzada joined the Pakistan Army in 1967. He later took part in the 1971 war that led to the creation of Bangladesh.

In the military, Khanzada served as Instructor/Staff Appointment during 1974-78 and 1982-83. He also commanded the 13 Lancers Regiment from 1983-85 and was awarded the “Tamgha-e-Basalat” gallantry award in 1988. Khanzada was also among the first few soldiers to reach the Siachin Glacier in 1983.

He later moved on to serve as military attaché at the Pakistan embassy in Washington from 1992-94.

Following his retirement from the military, Khanzada entered politics and was elected as a member of the Punjab Assembly in 2002. He served as special adviser to the chief minister and also held a ministry portfolio.

He was then elected to the provincial assembly in the 2008 and 2013 elections.

Currently, he was serving as the Punjab home minister and was a key player in the province’s fight against terrorism, to which he fell victim.

Information obtained from the Punjab Assembly website.


Analysis: Militants still have support base in Punjab

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THE assassination of Punjab Home Minister Shuja Khanzada in a suicide attack in Attock could be an indication of the expansion of the infrastructure and support base of the Punjab-based militant outfits even to areas of the province ‘largely considered free from their influence until now’.

“The attack has taken place in that part of Punjab that is generally not associated with militancy and extremism,” contends a security analyst who has written extensively on sectarian/terrorist groups in Punjab.

“It underlines that the (Punjabi) militants have the ability to carry out such attacks anywhere in the province any time,” he argued, not giving his name because of personal reasons.

Recounting a suicide attack on an Air Force bus in Sargodha back in 2007 and a few other events in northern region of the province, he said these groups had the networks all over the province.

That would expose those long hiding behind the common defence. “You can’t say now that the militant and jihadi infrastructure is restricted to south Punjab alone; they are virtually everywhere. Those who deny presence of thousands of sleeping cells of militant groups in Punjab are not capable of realising the gravity of the situation.”

Punjab, especially its southern districts, has for long been considered as an ideological sanctuary and recruitment ground for extremist organisations involved in sectarian killings, and Kashmir and Afghan Jihad.

“Punjab is the source of terrorism. The main leaders of all major militant and jihadi groups are from Punjab that also houses the headquarters of these outfits,” said a Lahore-based analyst on condition of anonymity. “These groups have branched out of Punjab to the rest of the country as well as outside it.”

According to the South Asia Terrorism Portal database, there has been a considerable and increasing presence of at least 57 extremist and terrorist groups in Punjab alone. It quotes Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan as having disclosed during a briefing on the implementation of the National Action Plan (NAP) in January this year that the number of proscribed organisations actively engaged in terrorism and extremism in the province had reached 95.

Former additional Inspector General of Police (AIG), Malik Mohammad Iqbal, who had headed the CID for two years before his retirement, agrees that a very large number of militant outfits like Lashkar-i-Jhangvi (LJ) and Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) and myriad of splinter groups were based in Punjab.

The murder of the man in charge of the campaign against militant organisations under the National Action Plan in Punjab is generally being interpreted as a reaction to the killing of the leader of the outlawed LJ, Malik Ishaq, in a “shootout” on the outskirts of Muzaffargarh late last month.

This view was reinforced after the LJ reportedly accepted the responsibility for the attack.

“It is most probably a revenge killing,” security analyst Asad Munir, who has served the ISI and MI during 1999-2004, said.

“This is in line with the pattern. If it were part of a blowback of the ongoing Zarb-i-Azb, then the militants would have targeted military officials or installations. The blowback of the Zarb-i-Azb was far less than many had expected when the military operation was launched.”

Some analysts warn against viewing the Sunday terror attack in the context of any ‘particular, single event’. “If you think that those who have carried out the attack wouldn’t have done so, you are gravely mistaken,” argued the Lahore-based analyst.

“Those who have killed Khanzada have constantly been doing this. They are in this business of killing people. Only their targets keep changing.”

Malik Iqbal agrees. “It’s difficult to say that the minister has been killed in a revenge attack,” he said. “It could be an attempt to demoralise the public at large as the government implements the NAP. He was a very brave man and had vigorously been pursuing the militants. Any (militant) group could have targeted him.”

He was of the view that the ongoing action against extremism should be implemented “indiscriminately across the country instead of a specific region or group with equal intensity” if the safe havens available to the militants were to be destroyed.

Asad Munir insists that the killing of Malik Ishaq underscored the military’s intent to implement NAP across the board and clean up the cities as well in order to destroy the terrorist infrastructure from the country.

“The death of Khanzada will not reduce the intensity of the drive against militancy in Punjab; it will rather intensify it. The Shawal airstrikes (following the suicide raid on the minister’s place) that killed 40 militants is but evidence of that (resolve on the part of the military leadership),” he argued.

Munir said the sectarian groups operating out of here had substantially weakened.

“Their power and capacity to retaliate has greatly diluted. They did not target Khanzada in Lahore because they do not have the ability to carry out such attacks there anymore. They do not control any area (as they did in the tribal backyard of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa). Police with the help of intelligence agencies like the ISI can easily deal with them. You only have to locate them and take them out.”

There is a school which says the clean-up in Punjab must start with its political leadership publicly pledging that they would not seek political support from the individuals and groups known for sectarian/extremist links.

Moreover, the theory goes, the madressahs known for their sectarian/extremist links must face some kind of action; so far the Punjab government has avoided taking any action even when some madressahs have been very directly linked to a number of acts of terrorism.

And, finally, the proponents of the strategy say, the state and media will have to stop jealously protecting and even promoting the militant mindset.

Published in Dawn, August 17th, 2015

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Dissenting voices from Kasur: ‘Long march if SP is not transferred’

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KASUR: Despite establishment of the Joint Investigation Team (JIT) to probe the Hussain Khanwala scandal and removal of four police officers, the affected people have threatened that they will go for a long march, if the SP investigation is not transferred.

The villagers and their supporters including Mobeen Ghaznavi and Advocate Latif Sara on Saturday held a press conference at the Kasur Rest House, where the JIT is holding an inquiry and recording the statements of victims and witnesses.

Instead of sympathising and dispensing justice, they alleged, police were raiding the houses of the affected people and their relatives and asking them to withdraw their cases. They said SP Investigation Nadeem Abbas was protecting the accused and harassing the victims. They demanded that SP Abbas should be suspended till Monday otherwise they would march on Islamabad and reject the JIT.

More than two dozen people got their statements recorded with the JIT which provided shuttle service to facilitate the villagers. The JIT also sent 45 video clips to the forensic lab for verification.

On Saturday, 10 of the victims got their medical certificates from the DHQ hospital. The Ganda Singh police registered 10 cases earlier on Thursday and claimed to have arrested 18 accused including a lawyer.

A few days earlier, delay in giving findings of the first seven FIRs in a JIT headed by the SP investigation (established by the RPO on July 7) prompted the villagers to take to the street. Several police officials including two DSPs and some of the protesters were injured in a clash.

During the visit of IG Mushtaq Sukhaira, the villagers had demanded the removal of the DPO and the SP investigation.

RPO: Regional Police Officer Shahzad Sultan also held a press conference at the DPO Office later in the day, saying he had recommended inclusion of a cyber crime expert in the JIT to technically support the case of the victims. He said the inquiry was under way regarding the corruption of certain police officials in the child abuse case and those found guilty would be punished.

The RPO denied any victim was being pressured to withdraw or reconcile. He said the cases had been registered on all the applications received so far.

Published in Dawn, August 16th, 2015

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Heritage protection

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BUREAUCRATIC lethargy and political disinterest have both contributed to the deterioration and neglect of heritage sites in Pakistan, especially in Sindh and Balochistan.

While major sites in Sindh such as Moenjodaro and Makli do make it to the news, usually when they face threats, other lesser-known but potentially equally important sites do not get the same attention.

Know more: Footprints: Mysterious Agham Kot

Take Agham Kot, for example. As reported on Saturday in this paper, the site in Sindh’s Badin district, which is estimated to be several centuries old, is in precarious condition, with the brickwork of certain monuments falling apart, while there is no protection from thieving visitors who walk away with artefacts.

The lack of protection is attributed to the fact that Agham Kot is not on the Sindh government’s list of protected monuments, though it can be argued that even ‘protected’ sites — such as Makli in Thatta district, which has Unesco recognition — have not been spared by encroachers.

Experts say there are hundreds of sites in the province that should be on the list of protected heritage, which would bring funds and official attention towards their maintenance and upkeep. Balochistan’s archaeological heritage is in dire straits due to a paucity of official attention.

And while there are some relatively successful stories — the Punjab government is doing a relatively better job, while the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa administration gets high marks for being the most active in preserving heritage — much remains to be accomplished.

Perhaps the first step towards protecting heritage would be passing legislation that provides legal cover; following the 18th Amendment this is now a purely provincial concern.

However, in Sindh’s case, the draft antiquities law is still reportedly sitting with the law department. Perhaps this reflects the priority the bureaucracy and politicians give to promoting historical heritage.

Along with passage of the law, all historical sites need to be listed and documented. If need be, the state can ask students and volunteers to help complete this essential process, which would feed into creating a reliable database of historical sites.

Also, the Sindh and Balochistan administrations could consult the KP authorities to see what best practices can be applied in their respective cases. There are a variety of threats Pakistan’s heritage sites face, most notably encroachments, deterioration and relic hunters.

Unless the provinces craft robust responses in their individual capacities that address the preservation of heritage, it will continue to be eroded, brick by brick.

Published in Dawn, August 17th, 2015

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PML-N's Babar Anwar wins NA-19 by-poll: unofficial result

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HARIPUR: According to unofficial results compiled from all polling stations, Pakistan Muslim League – N's Babar Anwar won the race for the National Assembly seat from Haripur's NA-19 constituency, with Dr Raja Amir Zaman of the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) coming in at second place, DawnNews reported.

Per consolidated unofficial results from all polling stations, Babar Anwar bagged 116,624 votes with PTI's Zaman accumulating 78,512 votes.

Voting for the by-election in National Assembly constituency NA-19, Haripur, ended peacefully at 5pm Sunday with no reported disruptions.

While nine candidates are contesting for NA membership from the constituency, the real contest is between Babar Anwar of the PML-N and Dr Raja Amir Zaman of the PTI.

The by-election garnered attention after it was announced that biometric machines will be tested at 30 polling stations. An official of the Election Commission of Pakistan told Dawn that biometric machines would be used to authenticate voters before issuing ballot papers at polling stations as part of a pilot project.

Read: Biometric machines to be tested in Haripur by-poll today.

He said the success of biometric machines would determine if it was viable to spend billions on introducing the device in the next general election.

The official said the National Database and Registration Auth­ority (Nadra), Pakistan Tele­communi­cation Authority (PTA) and a cellular network provider (Ufone) would render technical assistance in this regard. The pilot project, he added, was in line with suggestions of political parties as had been conveyed by the Electoral Reforms Committee of Parliament.

To ensure a peaceful environment during polling, soldiers of the Pakistan Army had also been stationed in the constituency in addition to policemen, while the local administration had imposed section 144 to ban exhibition of weapons.

In the May 2013 general election, Dr Raja Amir Zaman was declared the returned candidate from the NA-19 constituency after securing 116,979 votes against PML-N’s Omar Ayub’s 114,807. A recount was ordered, but Dr Zaman remained the successful candidate, though his original victory margin of 2,172 was reduced to 1,304.

Consequently, Ayub challenged the result before an election tribunal, which, in its judgement on Dec 31, 2013, ordered re-polling in seven stations instead of declaring the election void.

The tribunal’s order was challenged by Dr Zaman before the apex court, which dismissed the same. Consequently, he filed a review petition against the judgement, which was accepted and his opponent was de-seated.

Take a look: SC orders re-election in Haripur's NA-19.

Omar Ayub later announced he would not contest the by-poll, saying he was looking after his mother who was seriously ill.

“My mother is not well. She is bed-ridden and it is my prime duty to look after her. It is difficult for me to participate in the by-elections.”

Read: Omar Ayub to stay away from NA-19 by-election.

Note Book: Changing face of Saddar

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Every city evolves and Karachi too has evolved from being the federal capital to a metropolis that controls whatever happens in the country, at least economically. But there is one area in the former capital that, despite having much historical value, is fast deteriorating: Saddar.

A trip to Saddar is like a trip down memory lane; old streets, old shops and sometimes even old vendors in front of very old buildings. The names of the markets also remind one of the British era — Empress Market, Preedy Quarters, Bohri Bazaar — where one can still find everyday items at wholesale rates. But Saddar has changed considerably in the last 40 years or so. The overcrowded roads, the dirty surroundings and the uninterested authorities contribute to making it one of the most unpleasant places to visit in the city. Rickshaws and buses will make manoeuvring impossible and pedestrians will ensure that they use every possible space left on the road, which makes driving hazardous. The overhead bridges are populated by vendors with weighing machines, Chinese ‘dentists’ who might never have been to China as well as drug addicts.

The eateries in the area are known throughout the world; be it the hot-cross buns from a famous bakery located in the area, to the delicious chillou kebabs in the vicinity and many other delicacies. But the open sewers and the unhygienic living conditions make people think twice before they decide to visit their favourite food joints. There was a time when Karachi’s streets were washed daily with water. But it seems more like a fairytale now because the city has grown tremendously since the ’50s and not much has been done in order to preserve the buildings of the past. Even the opening of malls in the area hasn’t helped because the malls might be clean, the outside certainly isn’t.

Gone are the days when Saddar was the centre of activities in the city; be they literary ones at the coffee houses (now gone) or entertainment-related at clubs (mostly defunct). Even many cinemas in the area have been taken over by shopping malls and apartment complexes. It was sad to see a ‘for sale’ sign at the site of the once-famous Nishat Cinema. But that’s the truth — standalone cinemas don’t stand a chance in front of cineplexes. There is one in Saddar and it seems to be doing well; its biggest competitor is not a cinema but Rainbow Centre, the headquarters of pirated films and other related items. The remaining cinemas on and near M.A. Jinnah Rd seem to be doing satisfactory business thanks to the cinema revival through multiplexes, otherwise they would have closed shop for good as well.

Saddar was not always the big dump it has now become. There was a time when people used to travel safely in the area in trams and it was considered one of the cleanest parts of the city. There was hardly a dull moment in the vicinity. For safety measures, there were water hydrants round every corner for fire engines in case a building caught fire. All that is now gone and the authorities, as well as Karachi’s residents, are to blame for the destruction of one of the most beautiful and historic parts of the city.

The old part of Lahore has been well-preserved by the local government and that’s why the Punjab capital gets tourists from all parts of the world, including Karachi. Karachiites have a heritage, but it seems to have been ruined by carelessness.—Omair Alavi

Published in Dawn, August 17th, 2015

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