M WAQAR..... "A man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties; no religious basis is necessary.Man would indeed be in a poor way if he had to be restrained by fear of punishment and hope of reward after death." --Albert Einstein !!! NEWS,ARTICLES,EDITORIALS,MUSIC... Ze chi pe mayeen yum da agha pukhtunistan de.....(Liberal,Progressive,Secular World.)''Secularism is not against religion; it is the message of humanity.'' تل ده وی پثتونستآن
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
85% say Mao's merits outweigh his faults: poll


U.S: Demand for food stamps soars as cuts sink in and shelves empty

Egypt arrests Morsi's prime minister

Aseefa Bhutto Zardari felicitates Christian Community on eve of Christmas
http://mediacellppp.wordpress.com/Aseefa Bhutto Zardari has warmly greeted the Christian Community on the eve of Christmas falling on Wednesday December 25. She further said that the teachings of Jesus Christ (May Allah be pleased with him) who always spread the message of love remind us of peace, tolerance and brotherhood. She added more that the PPP has always raised voice for the rights of minority and will continue to uphold the rights of the Christians, indeed of all minorities, to be treated as the equal citizens of the state. On this auspicious occasion, she deeply lauded the great contributions of the Christian community towards the development and prosperity of Pakistan. She once again felicitated Christians all over the world particularly Christian brothers and sisters in Pakistan on the occasion of Christmas.
Bilawal Bhutto's Message on Quaid-e-Azam’s Birthday
http://mediacellppp.wordpress.com/Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, Patron-In-Chief, Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) said the best way to pay homage to Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah is to protect Pakistan from the followers of extremist elements who vehemently opposed his struggle for independence and mounted attacks on his personality, during and after the independence. In his message on 137th Birthday anniversary of Founder of Pakistan, PPP Patron-In-Chief pointed out Quaid-e-Azam’s ideology for a plural Muslim country following the ideals of democracy and equal rights to its citizens was under attack again by the same forces. “Those who opposed the independence of Pakistan are once again out to hijack the country and impose their own rejected ideology on our society,” he added. Bilawal Bhutto Zardari urged the people of entire Pakistan to rise and regain Quaid’s Pakistan and ensure that his vision is not drifted away through guns, bombs and terrorism by their sponsors. “Pakistan is here to stay and progress into a developed country as per vision of Quaid-e-Azam truly followed by Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto & Shaheed Benazir Bhutto,” he pledged. He pointed out quotes from Quaid-e-Azam “If we want to make this great State of Pakistan happy and prosperous we should wholly and solely concentrate on the well-being of the people, and especially of the masses and the poor… you are free- you are free to go to your temples mosques or any other place of worship in this state of Pakistan.” Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said with poverty and illiteracy eroding our nationhood, country needs again needs to implement Quaid’s words and vision into reality so that his dream about a State of Pakistan with happy and prosperous citizens is accomplished. “PPP has always been struggling and sacrificing lives of its leaders and workers to achieve the dream of Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah,” he concluded.
Policeman killed, several others injured in Mansehra blast
http://dunyanews.tv/A policeman was killed and several others including two police officials were injured when in a blast near police vehicle at Chakrali Road. According to police, the bomb was planted by roadside that killed police official Aurangzeb and injured others. The injured were shifted to Abdullah Hospital for treatment. The police vehicle and windowpanes of nearby building of an educational institution ware also damaged in the explosion. Police and Bomb Disposal Squad were busy in search operation when the blast occurred. According to Bomb Disposal Squad, the bomb weighed five kilograms and it was locally made. Police cordoned off Chakrali Road and put security on high alert.
Shia Under Attack : Seven dead from blasts as Chehlum observed across Pakistan
The Express Tribune
Clash between Police and the Protester in... by TheExpressNews As Pakistanis observed the Chehlum of Hazrat Imam Hussain (RA) on Tuesday, a total of seven people were killed and at least 25 injured in multiple bomb explosions in Karachi and Mansehra, Express News reported. The Chehlum is an observance that occurs 40 days after Ashura and is marked by processions. The government suspended mobile services in 56 cities to ensure tightened security, but that did not stop two explosions going off in Mansehra. The first one injured four people while the next one on Chakrali Road killed three near a school. Earlier, in Karachi, blasts in Orangi Town took four lives and injuring 21. In Rawalpindi, a clash broke out between between a group of protesters and security personnel the Pirwadhai area, which borders Islamabad. Five people were injured in a firing incident in Raja Bazaar area of Rawalpindi, too. A heavy contingent of security officers was present in the area when unidentified armed men opened fire. It was reported that processionists in Rawalpindi tried to enter Islamabad but the police stopped them, which led to clashes.
Shia Under Attack: Five wounded in Rawalpindi firing
Afghanistan: we treat women like animals
According to Oxfam International, some 87 percent of Afghan women have experienced violence in the form of forced marriages, physical, sexual or psychological abuse Last year, a former Afghan warlord told me that women were treated like dogs in his province. Being an Afghan journalist, I have authored two books about the mistreatment of women in my country. Violence against women and teenaged girls in Afghanistan is growing. A UN report recently claimed that there was a 20 percent increase in violence and mistreatment. The annual report on the Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict says more than 300 women and girls were brutally killed and 560 injured by their husbands and parents in 2012. On December 14, 2013, the BBC reported that an Afghan official confirmed that a man had incised the nose and lips of his 30-year-old wife, Setara, in Herat province. According to preliminary reports, Setara had been stabbed several times in her face as well. On November 28, 2013, two innocent women were hanged from a tree in Logar province. On December 13, 2013, a group of unidentified gunmen raped a 12-year-old girl in Baghlan province of northern Afghanistan. In another incident, a 15-year-old girl from Herat province told a human rights reporter that her husband and father-in-law beat her three or four times a day. In recent months, Afghan women have experienced horrific cases of abuse and violence but Afghan authorities support criminals instead of protecting young girls. Last month, a government official in northern Afghanistan admitted that a man had strangled his wife after she gave birth to a girl. She was dragged outside her room and brutally killed. In 2012, the international community ranked Afghanistan as the most dangerous country for women. Human Rights Watch, in its 15-page report, highlighted the health and economic consequences of marriage for those under 18 years and violence against young girls. Recently, the police arrested two men in northern Afghanistan for slitting the throat of a 15-year-old girl after her parents refused a marriage proposal. The Independent Commission on Human Rights in Afghanistan has compiled numerous cases of the sexual abuse of boys and girls in various parts of the country. On October 24, 2013, Khaama Press reported the heartbreaking story of a teenage girl sexually abused by her father. A local security official in Nimroz province said that the man accused of sexually abusing his teenage daughter for the past eight years had been arrested. Fourteen-year-old Moniza admitted that her father had sexually abused her. Violence against women, girls and teenage boys remains one of the most under-reported abuses. Bacha bazi (sodomy) and sexual abuse are old traditions in the country. According to the Afghan NGO RAWA, 90 percent of Afghan women are abused by their parents, relatives and husbands. In northern Afghanistan and in parts of the southern provinces, the same story is repeated. In various districts in the northern provinces, poor and poverty stricken girls and children are being kidnapped and sold into prostitution. Unemployed and poor young boys have also been subjected to trafficking for male prostitution, forced labour and the ‘playboy’ business. The tradition of child marriage has long been practiced in Afghanistan. Afghanistan’s civil war has left thousands of women widowed and young girls orphaned. Matrimonial ceremonies are expensive in the country, specifically in Paktika and Paktia provinces; the price for a young girl has been fixed at more than three million in Afghan currency. Education for girls in these provinces is considered to be a great sin while sports and other hobbies are not allowed. The majority of Afghan girls became pregnant before they reach physical maturity because they do not know about the law of the country. The Afghan civil law sets the minimum age for marriage at 16 for girls and 18 for boys. According to Oxfam International, some 87 percent of Afghan women have experienced violence in the form of forced marriages, physical, sexual or psychological abuse. Of the 42 married women interviewed by the NGO, 22 had been arrested as a direct result of running away from abusive husbands or family members. However, in interviews with prosecutors, the report could find just one instance where a man had been arrested for perpetrating such abuse. In 2012, the Taliban forced the closure of 600 schools in the eastern provinces. Recently, in Takhar province, 125 girls from the Bibi Hajra School were admitted into hospital after being poisoned by terrorists. A week later, another 40 girls from the same school were poisoned again and from Ahan Dara, a girl’s school in Taloqan, 160 girls were admitted to hospital after being poisoned by unknown terrorists. The illegal market of selling and buying of women and young girls in some districts of Jalalabad province is an age-old practice. Women are treated like animals in the Shinwari Pashtun tribe where they are sold like goats or sheep. Director Women Rights Sabrina Hamidi confirmed to news reporters that women are sold like animals in different districts of the Shinwari area of Jalalabad. Sabrina revealed that the price depends on the beauty of the girl and can range from around 80,000 in Afghan currency to 2,000 US $. NGOs and rights groups have registered numerous complaints with government authorities about the mistreatment of women by the police force. In 2009, Karzai’s government passed a Shia family law under which women must not refuse the sexual demands of their husbands; they must comply with demands for intercourse every four days unless they are sick. Most controversially, Article 132 specifies that women are required to sexually satisfy their husbands. The UN, US, NATO, Canada and Germany asked the Afghan government to review this controversial law as it will harm women physically. Article 132 says that a refusal to do the above would be against the law and husbands are allowed to stop feeding them: “If women say no, the husband has the right not to feed her.” Legal experts termed the law as a brutal way of treating women and say that this law has brought shame to the country. The future of women, according to Afghan human rights groups, is bleak in Afghanistan.Musa Khan Jalalzai
Pakistan: Polio: 400 volunteers turn back on vaccination drives
The Express TribuneChances that the polio vaccination campaign will take place in Khyber Agency as per schedule are looking slimmer after each development – 400 volunteers have now refused to take part in the drive. And, if earlier most of the hesitation came from daily wage volunteers, this time health department employees are also threatening to throw in the towel, The Express Tribune learnt on Monday. Eight polio paramedics have decided to quit. They have informed health department officials about their resignation. The rest are threatening to stay away till their demands are met. One of employees requesting not to be named, said all eight have handed in their notice to the relevant department. Khyber Agency Paramedics Association (KAPA) President Abdul Haleem confirmed the development and said they will not back down. Agency Surgeon Sameen Jan told The Express Tribune things have become difficult for them as far as conducting anti-polio drives is concerned. He also corroborated reports of volunteers pulling out and employees quitting. Volunteers have shared their apprehensions with him, said Jan. “We cannot force them to work; eight paramedics have submitted their premature resignation letters.” Jan went on to share field supervisor medical officer (FSMO) Dr Usman Afridi was also taking steps to get transferred from Khyber Agency. According to the agency surgeon, the anti-polio drive planned for January included 328 teams, which, by the looks of it, will be missing 400 workers and a FSMO. More security, compensation The agency’s paramedics held a meeting on Monday in which they decided to refrain from participating in the vaccination drive until their demands are fulfilled. These include better security and a financial compensation package for families of slain polio workers. The meeting was chaired by KAPA President Abdul Haleem. Two polio workers have been killed in the past 10 days, emphasised Haleem. “Vaccinating children against polio in Jamrud tehsil has become an uphill task,” he said. The government should provide a financial package to heirs of the martyred workers, insisted the KAPA president. “It is shocking that the government is yet to take solid steps to provide security to polio workers in the face of growing threats to vaccinators, even when they know the next drive is right round the corner in January. The government should also announce employment for family members of those killed, and an amount for compensation.” Security to paramedics and volunteers is only provided during polio inoculation campaigns. They are left in the lurch once the drive ends, leaving them exposed to threats, explained Haleem. Polio workers have formed a negotiation committee for talks with the administration, he added. An official of the health department confirmed these developments came to the fore after recent killings of polio workers in Khyber Agency.
Pakistan: Tide of hate surges ahead

Merry Christmas: Is that Santa at the door? No, its the Shia community of Multan

Pakistan: Countrywide load shedding to increase from today
The government announced on Monday revival of electricity loadshedding for ‘about two hours’ per day throughout the country because of an increased gap between power generation and demand arising out of annual canal closure and diversion of gas to textile industry.
“The Indus River System Authority has reduced indents for annual canal closure due to which loadshedding of about two hours will start on Tuesday,” a statement issued by the ministry of water and power said. “Inconvenience to be caused to the people due to loadshedding is regretted,” it added.
An official, however, told Dawn that loadshedding could go up to four hours on an average, but it would be kept at two hours in big cities and maximum loadshedding would be done in the rural sector and areas with lower recovery of bills. As a result, some consumers may complain of more than 10 hours of loadshedding.
He said the government was engaging with Irsa to persuade it to make higher water discharges from Tarbela dam to enable Wapda reduce electricity supply gap. At the same time, consumers have been advised to adopt energy conservation measures to minimise electricity shortage.
But Irsa had not accepted the water and power ministry’s demand because of the absence of its chairman, an official said. He said Irsa had been asked to ensure at least 15,000 to 20,000 cusecs of water releases from Tarbela dam against usual discharges of about 8,000 cusecs for drinking purposes during annual canal closure. Discharges from Tarbela dam stood at 35,000 cusecs on Monday.
The official said the Irsa chief would be back in town on Dec 26 and preside over a meeting to consider the government’s demand. He said the government had not asked for higher discharges from Mangla dam because Punjab had availed higher discharges from them and further depletion of storage could create operational difficulties.
An Irsa official said members of the authority appeared to be inclined to accept the government demand for higher water releases for more power generation, but for genuinely different reasons. He said the industrial sector was mostly releasing its waste into the river system and causing higher contamination. “Even though the drinking water was properly treated before use, there should be higher flows in rivers to enable filtration and treatment.”
A power ministry official said the electricity shortage had been caused not only because of canal closure but a sudden drop in temperatures beyond freezing point in many parts of the country. On top of that, the diversion of 100 million cubic feet of natural gas per day from the power sector to textile sector had generated an additional shortfall of about 450MW.
The official said Sindh would close down Kotri canal on Dec 26, followed by Sukkur on Jan 6 while canals in Punjab would remain closed for annual maintenance between Dec 25 and Jan 31. As a result, the hydropower generation would fall drastically to 1,000MW for about 35 days.
Coupled with the canal closure, the production from Wapda’s thermal stations will remain static at 1,500-2,000MW because of the ongoing rehabilitation programme.
Maximum reliance will, therefore, shift to IPPs. As a result, the cost of electricity will go up in view of more reliance on furnace oil and diesel for power generation.
Karachi: Blast hits route of Chehlum procession

Karachi: Blast near Numaish Chowrangi
http://www.thefrontierpost.com/
A blast occurred near Numaish Chowrangi Tuesday morning when the city is already on high alert on the occasion of chehlum of Hazrat Imam Hussain (RA) and his companions, Local TV reported.
According to initial reports, no casualty occurred in the explosion while security forces have cordoned off the area to ascertain details about the nature of the blast.
Bomb disposal squad also reached the spot immediately after the blast was reported.
Miscellaneous reports suggested that it was a tyre blast but on the contrary, police told that the bomb was triggered remotely.
However, further details are yet be ascertained.
With cell phones off the grid and pillion riding on motorcycles banned, the government has put in place strict security measures for the chehlum today.
Under the comprehensive security plan, 10,000 police and Rangers personnel have been deployed for security of the main mourning procession in Karachi. The procession route would be monitored through aerial surveillance and through a network of 150 closed-circuit television cameras.
Cellular phone services in major cities of the province, including Karachi, Hyderabad, Sukkur and Khairpur was suspended from 7am till 10pm. The government has also barred pillion riding for a day across the province.
The ban would remain in place from Monday midnight till Tuesday midnight. All weapon carrying permits have also been suspended for 10 days.
Fourteen mourning processions scheduled in Karachi have been declared highly sensitive. Additional Chief Secretary Home Mumtaz Ali Shah said troops would be deployed at all sensitive positions to avoid any untoward incidents.
Most parts of Rawalpindi have been sealed for fear of untoward incidents. Cellular services will be suspended in various cities, with the government taking strict measures to ensure security for the mourners.
Thousands of police personnel and Rangers have also been deployed in the city, with entry and exit point of the troubled Raja Bazar sealed.
Similarly, strict security arrangements have been made in other major cities including Lahore, Peshawar Multan and tribal agencies.
Imran Khan the ‘economist’
Sindh: Public holiday on Dec 27 to pay homage to late Benazir Bhutto
The government of Sindh has announced a public holiday on December 27 to pay homage to former prime minister Shaheed Benazir Bhutto on her sixth martyrdom anniversary.
The provincial government Monday night issued a notification to this effect.
According to details, Chief Minister Sindh, Qaim Ali Shah, issued directives in this regard.
All office, ministries, departments including schools, colleges and other educational institutes will remained closed on Friday, December 27th, 2013.
In Pakistan discussing religion is a punishable offense for Ahmadis

Pakistan: Not much to celebrate this Christmas
On September 22, two suicide bombers blew themselves up in the courtyard of Peshawar's All Saints church, killing 82 people and leaving as many injured. The attack on the church in the northwestern Pakistani city is believed to be the deadliest ever against the Christian community, which makes up about two percent of the 180 million people in Pakistan. For decades, Peshawar's All Saints church symbolized religious harmony in the Islamic Republic, and was revered by Christians and Muslims alike. But in the past four or five years, Pakistan has witnessed an unprecedented surge in Islamic extremism and religious fanaticism. Islamist groups, including the Taliban, have repeatedly targeted religious minorities in the country to impose their strict shariah law on people. Not only that, many a time, Christians and other minorities have been attacked and mistreated by common Pakistanis for allegedly insulting Islam or the prophet Muhammad. According to the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), 2013 was one of the worst years for religious minorities in the country: Several people were charged with blasphemy, many places of worship were burnt down and houses were looted all over the country. 'How can we celebrate Christmas?' Pakistani Christians say there is not much to celebrate this Christmas. Fifty-three-year-old Anwar Khokhar, who lost six members of his family in the All Saints church attack, told AFP that as Christmas got nearer, he missed his deceased family members more and more. Nasreen Anwar, a housewife, told the media that most Christian families in Peshawar were affected by September's carnage. "In every family, one or two people were killed, so how can we celebrate Christmas? There will be no happiness," she said. Living in fear But more than attacks on their places of worship and houses, Pakistani Christians fear the controversial blasphemy laws. Blasphemy is a highly sensitive topic for the majority of Pakistanis. The blasphemy laws were introduced by the Islamist military dictator General Zia-ul-Haq in the 1980s, making it a crime punishable by death to speak ill of Islam and Muhammad. Although hundreds have been convicted of blasphemy, nobody in Pakistan has ever been executed for the offence. Most convictions are retracted after the accused makes an appeal. However, angry mobs have killed people accused of blasphemy. Activists say the laws have little to do with blasphemy and are often used to settle petty disputes and personal vendettas; they say the Christians are thereby often victimized. Farzana Bari, director of Center for Women's Studies at Islamabad's Quaid-i-Azam University, believes discrimination will persist unless there is radical change. "It is high time that the government reform these blasphemy laws," she told DW. "These laws are against the spirit of Islam and are a cause of notoriety for the country." Mohsin Sayeed, a journalist in Karachi, however, does not only blame the government. He told DW that what used to be comprised of a small section of society had now become mainstream. "The days are gone when we said it was a small group of religious extremists, xenophobes, hate-mongers and bigots who commit such crimes," he said. "Now the venom has spread to the whole of Pakistani society." He added that those who condemned such "barbaric crimes" had become a minority. He also criticized the Pakistani judiciary for its "sympathetic" behavior toward the right-wing. "Don't forget that Asia Bibi is still in jail," he reminds. A forgotten case Asia Bibi, an impoverished 48-year-old farmer, was sentenced to death in 2010 after her neighbors accused her of insulting the prophet Muhammad. According to Bibi, she was involved in a dispute after some women laborers she was in the fields with said they would not drink water from the same bowl because she was not a Muslim. She said they slapped her and pulled her hair. They apparently later went to the police and accused her of making derogatory remarks about Islam's prophet. Bibi's sentencing triggered an outcry among human rights groups and the international community. Pakistani rights organizations took up her case and campaigned for her release. Several Pakistani politicians also criticized Bibi's sentencing and imprisonment under the blasphemy laws. But now Bibi's case seems all but forgotten. The media has stopped mentioning it, and the rights groups have ceased to follow it proactively. "The attention of rights organizations got diverted to other cases of minorities' persecution," Zohra Yusuf, chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, told DW. "There have been several cases similar to Bibi's in the past two or three years." The veteran human rights activist expressed her dissatisfaction over the human rights situation of religious minorities in Pakistan. "Prime Minister Sharif hosted a Christmas reception at the prime minister's house but it was part of the tokenism," Yusuf said, adding that the government needed to take steps to change the situation on ground.2013 was not much different for Pakistani Christians than previous years. This year too, they celebrate Christmas amid growing fear of persecution and widespread discrimination in Muslim-majority Pakistan.
Pakistan’s Persecuted Christians

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