Saturday, February 28, 2009

NATIONAL ANTHEM


PAKISTAN'S NATIONAL ANTHEM
Blessed be the sacred Land Happy be the bounteous realm
Symbol of high resolve Land of Pakistan Blessed be thou citadel of faith

The order of this sacred land Is the might of the brotherhood of the People
May the nation, the country, and the state Shine in glory everlasting
Blessed be the goal of our ambition

This Flag of the Crescent and Star Leads the way to progress and perfection

Interpreter of our past, glory of our present Inspiration of our future
Symbol of Almighty's protection

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Tanks, APCs deployed in Khyber Agency‘s Bara

Tanks, APCs deployed in Khyber Agency‘s Bara

Wednesday, 25 Feb, 2009 | 09:33 PM PST |
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Troops patrol in Khyber Agency.-File photo
Troops patrol in Khyber Agency.-File photo

LANDI KOTAL: The Khyber Agency administration deployed tanks and armoured personnel carriers at important points in Bara sub division of Khyber Agency on Wednesday as volunteers of Lashkar-i-Islam (LI) abandoned their armed patrols in the area.

Security forces were seen patrolling the Bara roads, while Bara traders took out a protest procession against airstrikes against Lashkar-i-Islam base in Speen Qabar on Monday.

A local resident, Saeedullah, told Dawn that the entire band of LI volunteers had gone into hiding after the airstrikes on their base. LI chief Mangal Bagh had reportedly urged Bara residents to rise against security forces and warned the Khasadar and security personnel to abandon their duties.

Security forces were deployed at all entry and exit points in Bara tehsil.

Bara bazaar remained shut on Wednesday as it was announced by the Tajir Ittehad to express solidarity with Lashkar-i-Islam. Dozens of traders wearing black bands on their arms and carrying placards inscribed with anti-government slogans started their protest procession from Minara Chowk and converged at Market Chowk.

The protesting traders also chanted slogans against the ANP and JUI-F leadership and accused them of anti-tribal policies. They held the ANP cheif, Asfandiyar Wali Khan and JUI chief, Maulana Fazal Rehman, responsible for the Monday attacks and accused them of killing innocent people.

Head of Bara Peace Committee Haji Shaukat Khan Afridi also addressed a press conference at Bara Press Club and condemned the Monday airstrikes on the LI base in Speen Qabar. He disputed the government’s claim of targeting LI chief Mangal Bagh and contended that innocent people were targeted in the attacks.

Shaukat Afridi urged the Khyber Agency political administration to resolve the issue through negotiations and refrain from use of force.

Meanwhile, Tehrik-i-Taliban Khyber Agency leader Hamza Afridi has announced his full support to Lashkar-i-Islam and said that his armed supporters in Khyber Agency would fight side by side with the LI against security forces if any attack was carried against LI in future.

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Govt rejects peace agreement in Bajaur

Govt rejects peace agreement in Bajaur

Thursday, 26 Feb, 2009 | 03:05 AM PST |
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Govt. decides to continue operation in Bajaur as militants lose ground amidst heavy damages. - File photo.
Change of mind by the taliban has been forced by circumstances as they are no longer in a dominating position. - File photo.
PESHAWAR: The government on Wednesday denied that any peace agreement had been reached with militants in Bajaur and said that security forces would continue to conduct operation in the restive tribal region.

‘There is no peace deal between the militants and the government,’ Fata secretariat said in a statement issued here. ‘The operation is continuing as originally planned,’ it said.

The official strongly denied media reports of a possible deal with the militants, insisting that the Inspector General of the Frontier Corps, Maj. Gen. Tariq Khan had in fact gone to Bajaur on Tuesday to discuss operational matters with his officers on the ground.

The statement comes in the wake of a unilateral ceasefire by militants in Bajaur tribal region.

Subsequent follow-up negotiations between tribal elders from Mamoond tribe and the political authorities fuelled speculations of a possible peace agreement between the two sides.

A senior security official told Dawn that unilateral ceasefire by the Taliban in Bajaur had in fact been prompted by a surprising occupation of two dominating heights overlooking militant stronghold of Omari in Mamoond area late Sunday night.

‘We literally caught them napping,’ the official closely involved with the operation in Bajaur said.

The move exposed militants to snipers and also put them under a virtual siege. Officials and local residents say militants had vacated Inayat Kalli, another of their strongholds, anticipating advance of paramilitary forces in the area.

Hours later, Haji Muhammad Omar not only announced a unilateral ceasefire, he also said that militants would not attack security forces and government installations and would in fact help security forces in the search operation to prove that there were no foreign militants in the area.

The official said that the government wanted militants to lay down their arms and surrender. ‘The forces will move regardless whether the militants choose to fight or not to resist. As far as the government is concerned, it will not hesitate to use force if the advance parties of the security forces were fired at or any of the posts attacked,’ the official said.

‘This sudden change of mind by the Taliban does not mean that they have had an overnight change of heart and have become good guys. This change of mind has been forced by circumstances of events. They are no longer in a dominating position. They are losing territory and their stronghold is no longer safe to ensure their security. That’s why the tribal elders they used to despise for being pro-government have now become their saviors,’ the official commented.

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Taliban kill Afghan ‘US spy’ in North Waziristan

Taliban kill Afghan ‘US spy’ in North Waziristan

Thursday, 26 Feb, 2009 | 12:47 PM PST |
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The man was kidnapped one week ago and his body found in Razmak some 65 kilometers south of Miramshah. — Reuters
The man was kidnapped one week ago and his body found in Razmak some 65 kilometers south of Miramshah. — Reuters

MIRAMSHAH: Taliban militants beheaded an Afghan in Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal region after accusing him of spying for the United States, local police said Thursday.

The 35-year-old man was kidnapped one week ago and his body found Thursday in Razmak some 65 kilometers south of Miramshah, the main town in North Waziristan, an official said.

'He was slaughtered overnight. His headless body was put on the roadside,' police official Munir Khan told AFP.

A note found on the body of the man, identified as Shafiq Gul, said he was 'spying for the US.'

'Whoever spies for the US will face the same fate. This is a gift to (US President Barack) Obama,' the note said.

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Hangu school bus ambushed, children kidnapped

Hangu school bus ambushed, children kidnapped

Friday, 27 Feb, 2009 | 11:44 AM PST |
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‘Unknown gunmen fired at the school van carrying Shia students,’ local police station chief Saeed Khan said. — AFP
‘Unknown gunmen fired at the school van carrying Shia students,’ local police station chief Saeed Khan said. — AFP

PESHAWAR: Gunmen on Friday ambushed a minibus carrying children to school in northwest Pakistan, killing the driver, wounding two children and apparently kidnapping six others, police said.

The bus was ambushed outside the town of Hangu in the country's troubled North West Frontier Province, which borders Afghanistan and is plagued by sectarian violence as well as Taliban and al-Qaeda-linked militants.

'Unknown gunmen fired at the school van carrying Shia students. The driver was killed, two children were injured, while six appear to have been kidnapped by the attackers,' local police station chief Saeed Khan told AFP.

'Police are searching for the attackers in the nearby mountains,' he added, saying he had no further details about the missing students.

Hangu, which has been a flashpoint for sectarian violence in the past, is located about 175 kilometres west of Islamabad.

Shia and Sunni Muslim groups signed a peace accord in Hangu last month after days of sectarian clashes in which at least nine people were killed.

Shias account for about 20 per cent of Pakistan's 160-million-strong, Sunni-majority population.

The groups usually coexist peacefully but outbreaks of sectarian violence have claimed more than 4,000 lives across Pakistan since the late 1980s.

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Taliban kill two police in Khyber

Taliban kill two police in Khyber

Saturday, 28 Feb, 2009 | 04:02 PM PST |
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Police sit atop an armoured vehicle after clashes between two religious groups in the Bara area of the Khyber Agency, March 3, 2008. — Reuters
Police sit atop an armoured vehicle after clashes between two religious groups in the Bara area of the Khyber Agency, March 3, 2008. — Reuters

PESHAWAR: Taliban militants attacked a checkpoint in a Pakistan's Khyber tribal region and killed two tribal policemen, an official said Saturday.

The militants raided the checkpoint near the town of Jamrud in the restive tribal district overnight and took three tribal policemen with them, local administration official Fida Mohammad Bangash told AFP.

'The bullet-riddled bodies of two were found in the morning, while one is still missing,' Bangash said, adding that a search operation had been launched to find him.

The checkpoint was on the main highway linking Khyber with Afghanistan and a key transit route for trucks carrying supplies for the NATO forces stationed across the border.

Taliban and al-Qaeda-linked insurgents have carried out a series of attacks on NATO vehicles and terminals outside the northwestern city of Peshawar.

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Taliban ‘lost’ border region: Maj. Gen. Tariq Khan

Taliban ‘lost’ border region: Maj. Gen. Tariq Khan

Saturday, 28 Feb, 2009 | 12:47 PM PST |
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Khan told reporters that a drop in militant activity in the tribal region is not simply seasonal. — APP
Khan told reporters that a drop in militant activity in the tribal region is not simply seasonal. — APP

KHAR: Pakistani has cleared a troubled tribal district of Taliban militants near the border with Afghanistan after a military operation lasting nearly six months, a commander said Saturday.

Heavy artillery and gunship helicopters have pounded Bajaur, one of Pakistan's seven federally-administered tribal areas (FATA) along the Afghan border, in a bid to flush out militant bases, killing hundreds.

'We think that we have secured this agency,' said major general Tariq Khan, the commander of forces fighting in Bajaur, using a local word to refer to the district.

'They have lost. They have lost their cohesion out here,' he told reporters flown by helicopters from Islamabad.

Khan said some troops may be withdrawn from Bajaur but the bulk would remain for some time.

'There will be a gradual reduction of the army but the army is not going to pull out for some time,' Khan said and added that in other five tribal districts the forces would more or less finish military operations soon.

The operation has seen the deaths of 97 soldiers from the Pakistan army and the paramilitary Frontier Corps, while 404 troops were injured, he said.

Tariq said about 50 per cent of the militants were Afghans and some Sudanese and Egyptians had been killed in Bajuar in the initial stages of operation.

To prevent the cross-border movement of Taliban militants Khan recommended fencing the rugged and porous border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

He described a unilateral ceasefire declared by Taliban on Monday as 'a face-saving statement.'

'We have not accepted that ceasefire. There was no question of ceasefire, the resistance has melted, dissolved. It is not there,' he said.

Shafirullah, the chief of the Bajaur civil administration, said 1,600 militants were killed and more than 2,000 were injured while some 150 civilians also died and about 2,000 were injured in the fighting.

The pitched battles and bombardment had destroyed about 5,000 homes in an area covering 80 per cent of the combat zone, Shafirullah said.

Pakistan's northwestern tribal belt has become a stronghold for hundreds of extremists who fled Afghanistan after the US-led invasion toppled the hardline Taliban regime in late 2001.

Islamabad says the Bajaur offensive is proof of its commitment to crushing insurgents, despite heavy criticism from US and Afghan officials who say Pakistan is not doing enough to stop militants crossing into Afghanistan.

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PML-N workers protest in Quetta

PML-N workers protest in Quetta
By Amanullah Kasi
Wednesday, 25 Feb, 2009 | 09:14 PM PST |
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The Sharif brothers.-AFP
The Sharif brothers.-AFP

QUETTA: PML- N activists on Wednesday protested against the apex court's decision against the Sharif brothers.

They cautioned that the decision would push the country towards political confrontation which was not in the interest of nation.

The workers were led by Ayaz Swati, general secretary of the Balochistan chapter of PML-N.

The protestors holding placards raised slogans against President Asif Ali Zardari and the 'PCO judges'. They alleged that the verdict had the blessings of the Presidency, adding that the products of NRO and PCO judges could not disqualify the Sharif brothers.

Mir Hasil Bizenjo, senior vice president of the National Party, Habib Jalib Baloch, secretary general of Balochistan National Party (Mengal) and Nasrullah Zeray, deputy general secretary of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party claimed that the decision would have serious repercussions on the existing uncertain political situation in the country.

They said the country was facing violent turmoil in Balochistan and Fata on top of the unprecedented price-hike, unemployment and lawlessness situation. In such an environment, they said, the government and political parties after eight long years of military dictatorship should adopt a realistic approach to resolve the problems of the people. They said the court's verdict today would divide the political groups which would be detrimental for political stability.

The leaders called for cooperation and better understanding amongst the political leadership to take the nation out of present impasse.

Meanwhile, Amanullah Baloch, president of the Balochistan Bar Association announced that lawyers had never accepted the judges that who took oath under the Provisional Constitution Order and Wednesday‘s decision of the Supreme Court was also unacceptable for the lawyers.

He said the general body of the BBA would meet on Thursday to determine its future line of action.

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