PLENTY, if it happens to be ‘Taliban Khan’. The wit who bestowed the nickname on Imran Khan probably had no idea how lethally accurate this label would prove to be. He may have intended to be ironic, but turned out to be prescient. The TTP, in nominating the PTI chief to their negotiating team, recognised his services to their cause, and were clearly hurt when the politician declined the honour. A Taliban spokesman voiced his regret, saying that Imran Khan had been nominated for his good deeds. Now what would be those be? His consistent refusal to condemn the terrorist groups for their long campaign of slaughter and mayhem? His condemnation of the American drones that have been the only weapons the Taliban fear? Or his blockade of Nato containers in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the province his party governs? The confusion at the heart of Imran Khan’s worldview was exposed when the KP government refused permission to the well-intentioned folk who wanted to launch Malala Yousafzai’s autobiography at Peshawar University recently. Although his party runs the province, all the PTI chief could say was that he could not understand why the launch had been stopped. He could have overruled his ministers, but preferred to bleat a tweet. Considering that the PTI purports to be a party for all Pakistanis, including women and the minorities, its ambiguous stance towards the Taliban contradicts its own manifesto. Given that the jihadis want to lock women up; kill Shias and treat the minorities as second-class citizens, why should any of these unfortunate people wish to support Imran Khan? For years, the PTI chief has been demanding talks with the Taliban. In this, he is not alone. Politicians across the right wing have echoed this mantra. Thus far, the TTP has refused talks, or it has used negotiated local truces as tactical pauses in which they have regrouped. Time and again, they have broken their pledges and launched fresh attacks when it suited them. This time, too, members of the TTP have set off bombs in Peshawar in which many were killed and wounded. This has happened as negotiating teams from both sides gathered in the city for ‘peace talks’. Two members of the TTP team, Maulana Samiul Haq (‘father of the Taliban’) and Maulana Abdul Aziz (of the Red Mosque burqa fame), have declared that the Taliban will accept nothing short of the imposition of the Sharia. Obviously, this cannot be conceded without scrapping the Constitution. So what will the talks be about? Even though Nawaz Sharif has declared that the government negotiating team will have ‘full authority’, I doubt if this extends to handing over the state to the Taliban. The ruling party is far short of the two-thirds parliamentary majority it would need to make any significant constitutional amendments. Other TTP demands include the release of its prisoners and the withdrawal of the army from the tribal areas. Conceding either or both would not sit well with our security forces who have shed a great deal of blood in this war. While they have been restrained in their response by the government, the sight of hundreds of hardened killers walking free will be salt on the many wounds they have suffered. And a military pullout from Fata will be akin to surrendering the state’s shredded sovereignty to a bunch of mediaeval holy warriors. Although public memory is short, it wasn’t that long ago when the Afghan Taliban were flogging women for showing an inch of skin, and stopping their treatment by male doctors. Music and sports were banned, and education was limited to the scriptures. Girls could not go to school. Is this the kind of Pakistan we want? Over the years, the TTP has systematically destroyed schools and colleges, specially those institutions girls attended. They have attacked video shops and barbers who dared to shave men. Thus, they have made no secret of what they would do when they come to power. In fact, we have a Taliban blueprint for governance before us in the form of Swat Valley when it was briefly under their rule. Blood flowed in public squares, and people escaped if they could, or lived under a reign of terror. Maulana Fazlullah, better known as Mullah Radio in those days, was local commander of the Taliban then; since then, he has been elevated to the position of emir of the TTP. These, then, are the people Imran Khan, Nawaz Sharif and far too many others would have us negotiate with. Thus far, none of this talk-talk brigade has clearly said what these talks would be about. Until our leaders see the magnitude and true nature of the threat, I fear Pakistan is doomed to continue its slide into darkness.IRFAN HUSAIN
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
Friday, February 7, 2014
Pakistan's ‘Taliban Khan’ : What’s in a name?
Bahraini protesters rap regime crackdown on demos

Afghanistan: US to focus on drugs, rule of law beyond 2014
http://www.pajhwok.com/The United States will remain committed to Afghanistan on issues related to illicit drugs and rule of law post 2104, an Obama administration official said on Thursday. “We will remain focused on three issues related to drugs and rule of law in Afghanistan beyond 2014. The first is counternarcotics. The second is the justice sector and support for reform and professionalisation of the justice sector.” Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs William R Brownfield told reporters the third issue involved corrections to the detention system. "That is to say a prison and detention center system that can be brought more into the 21st century in terms of how it detains and handles those people within the system itself.” Brownfield, who was recently in Afghanistan, said his conclusion was tht a drug program, to be effective, must address all elements of the problem, starting at one end with cultivation; processing through production, transit and transportation; the system of selling the product; and eventually the process by which proceeds are laundered through a financial system. He stressed the strategy must address alternative development, eradication, investigation, interdiction, prosecution, incarceration and then the so-called soft-side programmes of awareness, treatment and rehabilitation. Brownfield said the US would attempt develop projects that were managed as much as possible by the government of Afghanistan itself and its own personnel. “The programmes will be flexible in terms of how many dollars are made available to support them so that if more resources are available, they can ramp up. If fewer resources are available, they can be ratcheted back... “Our programmes will be portable to the extent that they can be moved in response to changes on the part of the narcotics trafficking industry. In other words, if focus shifts from Province A to Province B, we have a strategy; we hope that will allow us to shift our efforts to where the narcotics traffickers are actually operating,” the US official concluded.
Karzai flies to Russia to attend winter Olympics opening ceremony
President Hamid Karzai at the invitation of his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, left for Sochi city of Russia to attend opening ceremony of winter Olympics.
A statement issued by the president’s media office here on Friday said that despite attending the ceremony, President Karzai will also meet Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping and UN Secretary General Bam Ki-moon.
Foreign Affairs Minister Zarar Ahmad Osmani and National Security Advisor Rangeen Dadfar Spanta were accompanying President Karzai on the trip.
It is worth mentioning that recently Russian Special Envoy for Afghanistan Zamir Kabulov during his visit to Kabul convoyed Putin’s invitation to President Karzai to attending opening ceremony of winter Olympics.
President Putin declares Sochi Winter Olympic Games officially open

Russian President Vladimir Putin opened the Winter Olympics in Sochi on Friday after a lavish opening ceremony showcasing Russia as a resurgent nation. “I declare the 22nd Winter Olympic Games officially open,” Putin said, raising the curtain on an Olympic Games that started as his pet project and has become the crowning moment of his third term as president.
The XXII Olympic Winter Games are oficially opened in Sochi on Friday, February 7. The opening ceremony started exactly at 20:14 at Sochi's Fisht Stadium (16:14 GMT). The Olympic flag with five rings symbolising the unity of athletes around the world is solemnly hoisted and the Olympic flame is lit.
Legendary sports celebrities of the 20th century, figure skater Irina Rodnina and ice hockey goalkeeper Vladislav Tretyak have lit the Olympic Flame that XXII Winter Olympic Games in Sochi. The lighting, which was staged in the form of a fiery pathway dashing from the a special torch installed on the ground up to the Olympic Cauldron, was preceded by a mini-relay race on the Fisht stadium, which brought together the mega-stars of Russian and international sports, Maria Sharapova, Yelena Isinbayeva, Alexander Karelin, and Alina Kabayeva.
The Olympic flag, which is turning a hundred years this year, has been raised over the Fischt stadium to the sounds of the Olympic Hymn sung by renowned Russian opera singer Anna Netrebko and played by the State Symphony Orchestra Novaya Rossiya (New Russia). Representatives of athletes, judges and coaches took an Olympic oath on behalf of all athletes, judges and coaches.
The official opening ceremony of the XXII Olympic Winter Games started at the Fischt sport stadium with a bright theatrical extravaganza telling the history of Russia through the dreams of a little girl called Lyubov.
The show began with excursions into the depths of Russian history followed by trips to the country’s future. “We want to tell the people on Earth about Russia and how we love it. We hope that spectators in various parts of Russia will be able to feel and share our love. You are Welcome! This is Russia!” the Games’ organizers said.The show titled “We are in Russia!” is divided in 13 parts. It started with a chapter called “Azbuka” (an A-B-C book), a style of writing which is different from other alphabets. The viewers heard voices from all parts of Russia: from twinkling Polar Lights over the Arctic Ocean to sub-tropical Sochi; from the hot gazers of the Kamchatka peninsula to the Urals.
A separate part of the show is devoted to the Russian tricolor. The spectators will get acquainted with the Russian Odyssey - a gallery of historical characters who took part in the construction of the Russian state and glorified the great Russia.
The two final parts are called “The Dove of Peace” and “The Olympic Gods”. The organizers explain that that a dove occupies an honorary place in the world of symbols, including the Olympic ones. That is why the breath-taking choreography of world famous ballet dancer Diana Vishneva combined with modern technologies will create an inimitable image of a magic dove, which will be replaced by a dynamic installation: a bright combination of two elements - space and sport.
The final scene called “The Olympic Gods” is devoted to the cosmic achievements of Russian athletes where the images of great athletes are associated with the images of great Olympic Gods.
2014 Sochi Olympics Open

The two-and-a-half hour show took us on a riveting 18-part rollercoaster ride through Russian history, from the times of Peter the Great to the modern era, focusing on major cultural events. It portrayed the path Russia took to become the country it is now. The actors on stage reenacted episodes from Russia’s most beloved folk tales as the colorful dream of little girl named Lyuba continues.
International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach took the stage to call on the athletes to compete in a spirit of fair rivalry. He then handed the microphone to Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, who declared the 2014 Sochi Olympic Games open. Piano virtuoso, Denis Matsuev, and opera soprano, Anna Netrebko, gave a rousing performance of the Olympic anthem. Of course, lighting the Olympic cauldron for the Games is one of the most crucial moments of the ceremony. Ice skating legend, Irina Rodnina and Soviet legend Vladislav Tretiak, now Russian Hockey Federation president, have carried the Olympic torch to light the cauldron, after the flame's unprecedented journey all across Russia and beyond, to the North Pole, the cosmos, and Europe's highest mountain peak.The cauldron and festivities will continue throughout the Games and the Olympic flag will remain raised at the top of the hill. The ceremony’s fiery finish featured over 3,500 fireworks. Surely an Olympian feat in itself! The average weight of the firecrackers was around 22.5 tons, while the heaviest weighed in at 4.8 tons! Athletes will compete in over 15 disciplines in seven sports. 12 new events have been shoe-horned into the crowded Olympic schedule, including the figure skating team event, slopestyle and half-pipe skiing (both men’s and women’s). Over the next 16 days a record number of Olympic medals will be presented – a total of 98 sets, that is 12 more than in Vancouver 2010. Each gold medal weights 531g, while silvers are 525g and the bronzes are 460g. Ten Sochi Olympics winners will get an out-of-this-world touch when they receive their gold medals on February 15. Each medal will be embedded with tiny fragments of last year’s Chelyabinsk meteorite.
Balochistan: Long March team reaches Okarra, the marcher visited tomb of Chakar-e-Azam
http://balochwarna.com/The long march of voice of Baloch missing persons for the recovery of abducted Baloch activists has reached to Okarra city of Punjab on Friday. Some activists of NFS and other social activists joined the long march but the public support for Baloch march in Punjab remained low as usual. The intrepid Baloch marchers also visited the grave of Baloch folk hero Chakar Khan Rind – also known as Chakar-e-Azam or Chakar the great. They lit candles in the hope of a better future for Baloch nation and Balochistan and observed two minutes silence in respect of Baloch leader. The Baloch sisters also sang the national song of Baloch of Balochistan at Chakar Khan’s tomb to renew their resolve for the struggle of Baloch national freedom. Meanwhile talking to media person Qadeer Baloch, the Vice Chairman of VBMP, said that Pakistani intelligence agencies continue to harass the marcher and those who come to welcome them. He said they stop the supporter and question them for several hours in an effort to compel them to distance themselves from the #VBMPLongMarch. Earlier on Thursday, despite of heavy rain and wind the long marchers continued their journey and crossed the city of Sahiwal. The #VBMPLongMarch team’s walk for justice, peace and freedom completed their 84th day of march from Quetta and 57 from Karachi to Islamabad. The courageous marchers set record in south Asia for the longest, peaceful and steadfast march for human rights and against state atrocities. Qadeer Baloch, Farzana Majeed Baloch, Sammi Baloch and 10 year old Ali Haider Baloch who are leading the march along with several other Baloch activists and family members of abducted Baloch are considered as heroes of contemporary Baloch struggle. Qadeer Baloch’s son Jaleel Raki was abducted and killed in 2011, Farzana Majeed’s brother Zakir Majeed Baloch was abducted in 2009 and he’s still in the custody of Pakistani forces whereas 15-year old Sammi and Ali Haider are walking in search of their fathers – Dr Deen Mohammad Baloch and Mohammad Ramzan Baloch, both abducted by Pakistani security forces in presence of several eye-witnesses. The first phase of VBMP long march was launched on 27 October last year and reached to Karachi after 27 days. After a short break in Karachi the VBMP launched the second phase of its march toward Islamabad on 13 December 2013. The marchers plan to organise a sit-in protest in front of United Nations headquarters in Islamabad to record their peaceful protest against state atrocities in Balochistan. It is pertinent to mention that as the long march was proceeding toward Islamabad, three mass graves were found in Tootak area of Khuzdar in Balochistan containing more than one hundred decomposed dead bodies of previously abducted Baloch activists. Three of the bodies were later identified but the identity of the rest could not be ascertained as they are mutilated and decomposed beyond recognition. The Baloch political parties and human rights organisations have been demanding for an independent international investigation into the issue of discover of mass graves. In a recent statement, after with members of US Congress & Senate, Baloch leader Hybyair Marri said that Pakistan army is busying removing the evidence from the site of mass graves that’s why the international community must react quickly and send a team of independent experts to conduct DNA tests of the bodies recovered from mass graves to ascertain their identity.
Balochistan Mass Graves :Amnesty International Describes Balochistan Mass Graves as “Violations Implicating the State”
The Baloch Hal

Pakistan: The shameless surrender
D Asghar
The people who have no respect, no desire and no regard for this constitution are being brought to the bargaining table. What a pathetic disgrace to the people’s right to elect their representativesLast week, there were plenty of rumours that the much-awaited operation against the terrorists was going into effect. The Prime Minister (PM) was expected to unveil the plan in front of the National Assembly. Unveiled however was yet another so-called peace initiative, which most senior analysts and sane voices called a plan dead on arrival. Yes, the word ‘peace’ has been given a new lease of life. Call it whatever, give it any fancy name you like, I will call it an absolute and shameless surrender. A country that flaunts its nuclear prowess and boasts about its military might has surrendered to a bunch of terrorists — all in the name of an imaginary peace process. Without going into the much talked about developments and the nomination of the members holding these ‘make believe’ peace talks, here is what boggles my rather curious mind: why is there so much confusion and the narrative and discourse so fluid on this subject? It sure looks like the government is being run by amateur representatives of the people who are unable to determine what a state ought to do to enforce its writ. What the is state obligated to provide to its citizen, which any and every citizen deserves, is the basic right of security and protection. All this military might and nuclear prowess is of no use if the state has to negotiate with the militias of banned outfits. The insane idea that any such talks will be fruitful is beyond insanity. Some elements in the shameless media are peddling the narrative of the terrorists as a plea to enact and enforce sharia law. One can see how brilliantly the soft image of these terrorists is being rehashed in the name of religion. The apologists are going the extra mile on both traditional and social media, painting a fantasy, which any sane person knows is a non-starter. At least the track record and history clearly demonstrate that it is such a waste of time. The poor public that is facing the brunt of this brand of sharia, one shrapnel at a time, is equally confused. One of the most repeated sentences has found yet another space to be repeated ad nauseam: ‘this country was established in the name of Islam’. All of us can witness what great contributions we have made in the final revealed religion of the divine. Make no mistake, this episode or any other narrative that is being peddled to sell a believable image, is nothing but a farce. It is total, dishonest distortion, which should be rubbished. This is all about power. The terrorists have established their power through fear. This is their weapon and they excel in it. The silly and inane defence that apologists offer in favour of this futile exercise is not even worth the time of toddlers, let alone grown up adults. Take, for example, the mantra that let us talk to the militants (read terrorists) who are willing to engage and isolate the ones who are not. Those idiots who peddle such fantasies and live in some fairyland tend to forget that, ideologically, all such terrorists are the same. All of these outfits have a unilateral agenda — to grab power through fear. When the outfits claim responsibility for any atrocity, has the government ever been successful in apprehension and conviction to set any kind of standards? Let us forget about all of this: has there been any successful prevention of any massive explosions? It sure looks ridiculous that Mr Musharraf is being dogged and dragged through the court for violating article six of the constitution (rightly so), yet when it comes to militias and terrorists, the same constitution’s article 256 is being completely ignored. The people who have no respect, no desire and no regard for this constitution are being brought to the bargaining table. What a pathetic disgrace to the people’s right to elect their representatives. What most people think is that once these talks will succeed, their lives will take a turn for the better as terrorism will recede. Once the US will vacate Afghanistan, there will be no drones and it will be peace and tranquillity. What if the US decides not to vacate Afghanistan completely and the drone strikes still continue, then what? Again for the reading or comprehension challenged, this whole show has nothing to do with what is being sold to you. This is about terrorists being elevated to the position of stakeholders. Just ponder on this thought for a few moments: what escalated their status to the level of ‘stakeholders’? What is their contribution to gain this position in the final say of this sorry nation? My followers on social media and some readers who e-mail me ask the reasons for my pessimistic tone. I am afraid because I see our looming demise, as a country, as a state and as a nation. It is just a matter of time. People who remind us about our roots and reasons for existence, every now and then, need to be reminded perhaps once that our end will also be in the name of the same religion. I sure hope that I am dead wrong but I am afraid the facts are quite self-evident and, yes, quite damning.
In Pakistan, pressure mounts to find way to end Musharraf treason prosecution

Pakistan: Leader of Lashkar-e-Jhanghvi global terrorist
The US State Department added Malik Ishaq, the leader of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, to the list of Specially Designated Global Terrorists today. Ishaq's group, which is also a designated terrorist organization, has been linked to numerous attacks on Pakistani and US citizens over the years, and is closely tied to al Qaeda. The State Department designation provided few details on Ishaq in today's designation, but noted that he is "a founding member and is the current leader" of the terror group. Previous designations of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi leaders have directly linked the group to al Qaeda. The Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is an anti-Shia terror group that has integrated with al Qaeda and the Taliban in Pakistan's tribal areas. The Lashkar-i-Jhangvi has an extensive network in Pakistan and its members often serve as al Qaeda's muscle for terror attacks. The group has conducted numerous suicide and other terror attacks inside Pakistan. In particular, the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is well known for carrying out sectarian terror attacks against minority Shia, Ahmadis, Sufis, and Christians in Pakistan. The group has released videos of executions of captured Shia prisoners. Ishaq has been in and out of Pakistani custody over the past three decades. He was detained in 1997 after admitting to murdering more than 100 Pakistanis, but was subsequently released by Pakistan's Supreme Court in July 2011. Ishaq has dodged numerous convictions by murdering and intimidating witnesses, and even once told a judge that "dead men can't talk." [See Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and the "lack of evidence," from Dawn, for more information on Pakistan's inability to convict Ishaq and his intimidation of witnesses.] Ishaq doesn't hide his disdain for the political system in Pakistan, and he made it clear at the time of his release in 2011 that he intended to continue to wage jihad. "We are ready to lay down lives for the honor of the companions of the Holy Prophet" Ishaq said after he was released from custody in 2011. He was met by "Kalashnikov-wielding supporters on a Land Cruiser motorcade," Dawn reported. Ishaq has also been accused of plotting numerous terrorist attacks while in custody, including the March 3, 2009 assault on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore. Ishaq would have plotted the attack and others from prison. The Pakistani government re-arrested Ishaq in February 2013, just one month after his group had gone on a rampage in Quetta and claimed credit for a series of bombings that killed scores of Pakistanis, mostly Shia. He is thought to be still in custody. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi's links to al Qaeda, Taliban The US designated the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in 2003. Two of the terror group's top leaders, Amanullah Afridi and operations chief Matiur Rehman, were added to the US list of Specially Designated Global Terrorists in 2010. In that designation, the Treasury Department described Afridi as "a key figure in directing terrorist-related activities of LeJ for several years" who had previously "prepared and provided suicide jackets for al Qaeda operations, trained suicide bombers and trained the assassin of Pakistani cleric Allama Hassan Turabi." Turabi, a prominent Shia cleric, was killed in June 2006 in Karachi by a 16-year-old Bangladeshi suicide bomber. Rehman is a top operational leader said to manage al Qaeda's 'Rolodex' of fighters who have passed through training camps and safe houses. Treasury has described Rehman as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi's "chief operational commander" and a "planning director" who has "worked on behalf of al Qaeda." Lashkar-e-Jhangvi operatives have also been implicated in attacks against US and Westerners inside Pakistan. In 2002, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi members conspired with Omar Saeed Sheikh, a senior al Qaeda leader, in the kidnapping and execution of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl [see LWJ report, New investigation into murder of Daniel Pearl released]. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi was also involved in a bombing in Karachi in May 2002 that killed 16 people, including 12 French nationals, and the bombing near the US Consulate in Karachi on June 14, 2002 that killed 12 people. In addition, Lashkar-e-Jhanghvi commanders have been killed in US drone strikes in Pakistan's tribal areas. In February 2010, the US killed Qari Mohammad Zafar, a senior Lashkar-e-Jhangvi leader as well as a leader of the al Qaeda and Taliban-linked Fedayeen-i-Islam, in a drone strike in North Waziristan. Zafar was behind multiple terror attacks in Pakistan and was wanted by the US for murdering a consular official in Karachi. Pakistan added the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi to its list of terror organizations in August 2001, yet has done little to crack down on the group. Read more: http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2014/02/us_designates_leader.php#ixzz2sex50tM6By BILL ROGGIO
Pakistani sectarian leader added to U.S. global terrorist list
The United States has added the founder of a banned Pakistani militant group to its list of global terrorists, blaming him for the deaths of hundreds of Pakistanis.
Malik Ishaq is the founding member and leader of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LJ), a banned Sunni Muslim organization dedicated to killing or driving out Pakistan's minority Shi'ite Muslims.
"In 1997, Malik Ishaq admitted his involvement in terrorist activity that resulted in the deaths of over 100 Pakistanis," the U.S. State Department said on its Web site in a statement posted on Thursday.
It noted he had also been arrested in connection with twin bombings in the western Pakistani city of Quetta that killed about 200 people last year.
"LJ specializes in armed attacks and bombings and has admitted responsibility for numerous killings of Shi'ite religious and civil society leaders in Pakistan," the State Department said.
The designations means anyone who supports Ishaq or Lashkar-e-Jhangvi could have their assets frozen by the U.S. government.
Ishaq's deputy and spokesman said the decision to list Ishaq was the result of a conspiracy between the United States and Iran, a majority Shi'ite country.
About 20 percent of Pakistan's 180 million people are Shi'ite.
"The U.S. administration took the step on Iran's instigation," said the spokesman, Hafiz Ghulam Rasool Shah.
"Malik Ishaq was acquitted by Pakistan's courts and he is leading the life of an honorable and peaceful citizen of Pakistan."
Ishaq has spent 14 years in jail on dozens of murder or terrorism charges and was in prison when some of the attacks happened. He was eventually acquitted.
"The U.S. made the decision in the wake of attack on Sri Lankan Cricket team in Lahore. When the incident occurred, Ishaq was in Multan district jail," he said, referring to a deadly 2009 attack on the sports team.
"Right now, Ishaq is in jail on the charges of making hatred speeches only."
In 2012, Ishaq told Reuters that Shi'ites were the "greatest infidels on earth" and that Pakistan should declare them non-Muslims.
"Whoever insults the companions of the Holy Prophet should be given a death sentence," Ishaq declared.
Bilawal Bhutto asks Altaf to call off day of mourning

Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) patron-in-chief Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has appealed to Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) Chief Altaf Hussain to call off day of mourning In a message issued on microblogging site, Bilawal asked Altaf Hussain to tell his party workers that threatening of people of Karachi traders and transporters live on television is not philosophy of the MQM’s chief. He expressed sympathy for the MQM’s legitimate concerns. “Lots of sympathy for MQM’s legitimate concerns. But they will loss all good will if they take Karachi hostage again with strike politics.” Bilawal said that he had warned about anti-Altaf forces within MQM, adding that he feared the strike would be part of a larger conspiracy against the party chief.
Former President Zardari reiterates Party position on talks with militants
Former President Asif Ali Zardari has said that the PPP government also first gave priority to holding talks with the militants in Swat and it was only after the strategy of negotiations failed due to the hard line taken by militants that force was used to drive them out and establish the writ of the state. Spokesperson Senator Farhatullah Babar quoted the former President as saying this today while commenting on the ongoing public debate over the negotiations undertaken between the representatives of the militants and the government. The former President said that the PPP was part of the All Parties Conference that endorsed the decision to hold talks with the militants to find a way out for peace and stability in the country and the region. The Pakistan People’s Party is therefore not against the proposed talks with militants and whished the process success, he said. He said that there may be differences of opinion on how to conduct negotiations and hold talks but it was important that the stake holders backed the policy of first seeking a negotiated settlement. He said it was particularly important for the political forces to be on the same page for the sake of democracy and also for keeping the initiative in the hands of political forces of the country. If past experience of the PPP is any guide it is clear that the use of force only after the talks fail is a viable and practical strategy for ending militancy and establishing the writ of the state, the former president said.http://mediacellppp.wordpress.com/
CM KP Pervez Khattak: Incompetence, corruption and appeasement personified
Riding on hollow sloganeering of change and with support from Taliban and the intelligence agencies, PTI got a chance to materialize the promises they had made to the people of Pakistan by governing Khyber Pakkhtunkhwa (KP) as an example. However, the start to their abysmal journey was characterized by two horrible decisions: an alliance with the obscurantist Jamaat Islami; and selection of Pervez Khattak, an incompetent and highly corrupt politician, as the Chief Minister. The performance of KP government led by Pervez Khattak has been abominable to say the least. The government has been plagued with poor governance, lack of direction and a spate of terrorist incidents that have killed scores of innocent civilians. Most of the casualties have been Shias, Barelvi Sunnis and religious minorities, although the list also includes law enforcement personnel. According to a report published by Pakistan Equality and Human Rights Commission (PEHRC), between 1 June 2013 and 4 February 2014, “in more than 93 terrorist attacks, at least 441 innocent people have been killed while 635 have been injured by radical Deobandi terrorists in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The province is currently ruled by Imran Khan’s PTI in coalition with Munawar Hasan’s Jamaat-e-Islami.” While on the one hand Pervez Khattak is seen as a highly corrupt and incompetent politician who thrives on nepotism, on the other, he is considered complicit not only in the infamous Dera Ismail Khan Jailbreak but also the general appeasement of Sipah-e-Sahaba/Taliban who have been allowed to operate freely from KPK and target the innocent Shias, Sunni Barelvis and law enforcement personal in the province. The latter policy of appeasement of Taliban and religious terrorists seems to be PTI’s party policy that enabled them to win the elections in the province. The party now hopes that it can neutralize the liberal parties in the province like ANP and PPP and continue to rule with support from the Taliban. Pervez Khattak has also been trying to wield maximum power ever since he has taken over. While he seems to be supine in front of the central party leaders from Islamabad, Khattak has been trying to appoint his favorites – and accomplices in crimes – on positions he deems necessary. The news of his tussle with Chief Secretary KPK Shehzad Arbab, who is considered an honest and competent civil servant, on rules of business and merit has been making headlines for months. Khattak has been trying to replace Arbab and instead appoint someone who he can easily puppeteer. Left with only Jamaat Islami as a major ally after Aftab Sherpao’s QWP broke the alliance with them, the future for Imran Khan and PTI – with their fate resting in Pervez Khattak’s hands, does not portend pleasant news. PTI’s government in KPK seems destined for the doom. - See more at: http://lubpak.com/archives/304055#sthash.ZMhJoZeb.dpufby Khan Mohammad
Saudi women’s university barred male paramedics from saving female student
http://www.nydailynews.com/Amna Bawazeer, a student at the women’s-only King Saud University, suffered a heart attack and died on Wednesday. The Okaz newspaper pinned the blame on university officials who reportedly hesitated for an hour before letting male paramedics into the campus. Thousands of Saudis vented their anger online over a report Thursday that staff at a Riyadh university had barred male paramedics from entering a women's-only campus to assist a student who had suffered a heart attack and later died. The Okaz newspaper said administrators at the King Saud University impeded efforts by the paramedics to save the student's life because of rules banning men from being onsite. According to the paper, the incident took place on Wednesday and the university staff took an hour before allowing the paramedics in. One staff member who witnessed the situation said paramedics were not called immediately. She said they were also not given immediate permission to enter the campus and that it appeared that the female dean of the university and the female dean of the college of social studies panicked. The staff member spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution from university management.
Her death sparked a debate on Twitter by Saudis who created a hashtag to talk about the incident. In the debate, many Saudis said the kingdom's strictly enforced rules governing the segregation of the sexes were to blame for the delay in helping Bawazeer. Saudi Arabia follows a strict interpretation of Islam. Sexes are segregated in schools and almost all Saudi universities. Women also have separate seating areas and often separate entrances in "family" sections of restaurants and cafes where single males are not allowed. The kingdom's top cleric has warned against the mixing of the genders, saying it poses a threat to female chastity and society. In a shocking tragedy in 2002, a fire broke out at a girl's school in Mecca, killing 15 students. Rights groups reported that religious police would not allow the girls to escape because they were not wearing headscarves or abayas, a traditional loose black cloak that covers the female body from the neck down.
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