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, March 21, 2014
Bahrainis stage new anti-government protest


Saudi Arabia cracks down on Twitter
Turkey: We tech-savvy Turks are more than a match for Erdogan's Twitter ban

Ancient censorship mechanisms are no longer a problem for the young Turks who co-ordinate anti-government dissent

Indian Ocean search for missing Malaysia airliner comes up empty again
Despite better weather conditions Friday and the use of some of the world's most advanced surveillance aircraft, an Australian-led search operation came up empty on its second day of scouring the south Indian Ocean for possible debris from Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. Several military aircraft, a commercial jet and two merchant ships combed a large area about 1,500 miles off the coast of Perth, Australia, where two objects had been spotted on satellite imagery. Australian officials reported the images Thursday and said they could be related to the missing jetliner. The weather was fair Friday, making for much better visibility than on Thursday, said the Australian Maritime Safety Authority. Though the search efforts in the area are intensifying, with a number of aircraft, ships and helicopters from China, Japan and other countries heading toward the vicinity, the absence of early success provided a kind of reality check after hopes rose Thursday of a possible breakthrough in the mystery of the Boeing 777 that vanished after departing Kuala Lumpur en route to Beijing on March 8. "This is going to be a long haul," said Malaysia's acting transport minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, at a news conference. Among other things, he said, he would ask U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel on Friday for additional help, including deep-sea salvage vehicles. Thus far, the aircraft search operations in the area have included four Australian air force P3 Orions, one U.S. Navy P8 Poseidon and a New Zealand P3 Orion. On Thursday, rain and clouds largely limited the search to radar, but aircraft crews Friday were able to make visual inspections flying over the area. Still, it is "a big area when you're looking out the window trying to see something by eye," said John Young, general manager of the Emergency Response Division at the Australian maritime agency. The search area is about 8,900 square miles, slightly smaller than the size of New Hampshire. What's more, because of the long distance to fly to that section of the ocean, the aircraft have only about two hours of actual search time before needing to return for refueling. "Tomorrow's plan is to do the same thing," Young said Friday. "The plan is we want to find these objects because they are the best lead to where we might find people to be rescued." There was some speculation, however, that the objects spotted on satellite could have submerged since the pictures were captured Sunday. Australian officials said it wasn't until Thursday that the images were reported to authorities because of a large volume of films and time needed for analysis. Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Friday defended his decision to announce the satellite imagery. He said he had a duty to pass on the information to families of the missing passengers. At the same time, Abbott reiterated that the two objects detected on the film, one of them about 79 feet long, may have nothing to do with the missing jetliner. "It could just be a container that has fallen off a ship, we just don't know," he said. With the investigation of the missing airliner entering its third week this weekend, there were still many unanswered questions. Malaysian officials Friday said they had no update on the log data that were deleted from the flight simulator made by Flight 370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah. Asked about reports that Shah made a phone call before takeoff, Malaysia Airlines' chief executive, Ahmad Jauhari Yahya, who has been a regular at the daily news conference by Malaysian officials, said Friday without elaborating that the information was being passed on to authorities. But now more than anything else, the big question is whether the floating objects captured on satellite are from the missing plane -- and if so, how long it will take to find them. Cho Byungjae, South Korea's ambassador to Malaysia, is one of a number of foreign diplomats staying on top of the search efforts. South Korea is sending two aircraft to the south Indian Ocean. After coming out of a meeting with Malaysian officials Friday afternoon, Cho spoke in somewhat sobering terms. "It could take some time," he said. http://www.latimes.com/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-indian-ocean-search-for-missing-malaysia-airliner-comes-up-empty-again-20140321,0,6870824.story#ixzz2wcLjMihtBy Don Lee
World T20: India avenge Asia Cup humiliation, maul Pakistan in Mirpur
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

Ukraine’s political failure stems from selfish elite

Putin Signs Final Crimea Reunification Decree


Michelle Obama meets Chinese president Xi Jinping on Beijing visit

Afghanistan: Nine Killed in Taliban Attack on Kabul Serena Hotel

PPP Consider Minorities As Equal Citizen Of Pakistan
After PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari condemned the incident against Hindu minorities in the strongest terms, the Punjab PPP president also talked about the dreadful incident.
The Punjab PPP president, Mian Manzoor Wattoo said that their party considered the minorities as equal citizens of Pakistan and give power to them whenever the PPP came to power in the country. He mentioned that the PPP previous government increased the seats of minorities in the Senate and was also seriously considering moving a bill for representation of the minorities in the Parliament on the basis of their population.
He further added that the PPP government declared August 11 as Minorities Day, adding it was the day when Quaidi-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, addressing the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan, told the minorities categorically that they would be equal citizens of the country. He said PPP would not let the extremists succeed in making the minorities a second-class citizens living in a state of timidity and liability.
- See more at: http://www.christiansinpakistan.com/ppp-consider-minorities-as-equal-citizen-of-pakistan-mian-manzoor-wattoo/#sthash.QYaexIhu.dpuf
Carlotta Gall's Interview : A New Book's Explosive Claims About Pakistan and Osama Bin Laden
http://www.newrepublic.com/
BY ISAAC CHOTINERCarlotta Gall's blockbuster story in The New York Times Magazine this week claims that the Pakistani intelligence service (ISI) had knowledge of Osama Bin Laden's hiding place in Abbottabad. According to Gall, the ISI and Pakistan's military establishment also supported the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto. The piece is an excerpt from her new book, The Wrong Enemy: American in Afghanistan, 2001- 2014, which argues that the failing American mission in Afghanistan is largely the result of Pakistani duplicity, which has consisted of the country taking American aid dollars while still covertly supporting the Taliban and other extremist groups. Gall has reported extensively from Pakistan and Afghanistan for The New York Times, and is currently the newspaper's North Africa correspondent. We spoke by phone this week about the details of Pakistan's relationship to Bin Laden, the war in Afghanistan, and the long, depressing history of U.S.-Pakistan relations. Isaac Chotiner: What is the newest or biggest revelation about Bin Laden and his relationship with the ISI? Carlotta Gall: The ISI was actually running a special desk within the organization to handle Bin Laden, which meant hide him and talk to him. They knew he was there and protected him. That has never been said before by anyone. I only have one source but it’s very convincing source and it had to be said and put out there. IC: You took some criticism for the single source but there were two other interesting revelations. The first is that when you brought the issue of Pakistani knowledge up with American of icials, who don’t want to criticize a nominal ally, they were sympathetic to what you had heard. CG: Yes. IC: And the second point, which I found the most convincing, was that Bin Laden was communicating with ISI assets, such as Hafiz Saeed, who is the head of a Pakistani extremist group. The point, I think, is that he wouldn’t be communicating with these people if he was concerned about the ISI finding him. CG: Yes, he was communicating with people that the ISI talks to and is in close touch with. IC: Do you have any sense of the substance of those communications, for example how much Bin Laden was revealing about where he was or what he was up to? CG: There was a cell phone in the compound that revealed numbers to other connections in Pakistan. There were letters between him and Mullah Omar and him and Hafiz Saeed, and those are two people very close the ISI. It is inconceivable to anyone who follows all this that the ISI did not know he was corresponding with them. IC: But do you think he was communicating where he was? CG: We know from the Americans that his courier was going to Peshawar and talking to people and bringing black flash drives with news and email for Bin Laden. IC: When, in the past, you brought up the idea of Pakistani knowledge of Bin Laden, you got similar, stone-faced responses. CG: Yes there was a moment after the raid where they were talking quite a lot and we had some complaints about the Pakistanis. And then everything went quiet because I think Pakistan must have complained. One official said they were all walking on eggshells to mend the relationship and try to repair things and bring them back to normal. I don’t agree with this idea. I think it is a huge mistake. It should be openness. That can change Pakistan, and I don’t have any qualms revealing what I have got. More recently, when I took all this information about ISI knowledge and an ISI desk to American officials, there was this feeling that this is what they always suspected and knew and that it makes complete sense. But no one would say precisely what they knew. IC: For over 40 years we have been paying part of Pakistan’s military bill, and thus in a way we were paying for them to hide Osama Bin Laden, or at the very least to aid groups sympathetic to him. CG: Yeah, it is like the relationship with Saudi Arabia. IC: The devil’s bargain hasn’t worked out. CG: It really doesn’t work. And it deceives the people of both countries, even Congressmen. It is angering. But there is a real division between the military in America who would say that we were on the right track in investigating these things, and the diplomats who don’t want to admit what is going on or don't know what is going on. There is a big divide here between the departments. That is where everything goes wrong IC: Your colleague Mark Mazzetti has written about that divide well. A colleague of mine said something interesting today, which is that in a way it is shocking that no one has been protesting this today at the Pakistani embassy or wherever. People are so used to this. And Congressmen are not shouting about this. CG: Yes, yes. IC: The broader argument of your book is that the war in Afghanistan has largely been sabotaged by Pakistan. If this hadn’t been the case, do you think things would be much better in Afghanistan? CG: 100%. Without Pakistan or with a cooperative Pakistan that strove to demobilize the Taliban, it would have been all over. It was all over in 2002. They were defeated, the people had turned against them. Without Pakistan it wouldn’t have happened. I really do think they did a callous and misguided thing to support the Taliban and bring them back. It is a military-led policy which is not in the interest of Pakistan either. IC: Yes, Pakistani civil society and even the military have been completely degraded by this choice. Tens of thousands of Pakistani are dead. CG: They are in a cycle and can’t stop. They need the civilians to get ahold of the military. IC: I thought the most shocking part of your story concerned Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister who was assassinated in 2007. It has always been assumed that it was the Pakistani Taliban and Al Qaeda who did this, and you note that Al Qaeda ordered the attack, but you also put more blame on the military government. They didn’t just provide inadequate security. You argue that they willed her death as well as covered it up. CG: That is a good choice of words, “willed.” The subject is a difficult one to read. But there was a meeting where the military heads discussed it and there was some suggestion that they wanted it to happen. Many people who know this stuff believe the Pakistani Taliban and the ISI and Al Qaeda are all one thing. They all work together. Whichever way you look at it, I think they have a great deal of guilt. IC: You seem to be saying that we have made too many excuses for Pakistan, but what would full-on confrontation look like? That is very scary. CG: I hope I am not suggesting that. Some people think I have it in for Pakistan. I don’t. I think the right course is diplomacy and pulling out of Afghanistan but still supporting both those countries and trying to move them to a better place. More openness with their people is required. You have to run a better government with more democracy and more openness. You have to discuss this. They need civilians to come in and get a grip on the country. Source URL: http://www.newrepublic.com//article/117074/osama-bin-ladens-hideout-and-pakistan-and-american-knowledge
Pak-Saudi-Bahraini Affair : Behind closed doors
The visit from the King of Bahrain is yet another indication of Pakistan being knee-deep in the affairs of the Gulf States. No one is going to believe that $1.5 billion from Saudi Arabia was just handed to us without any strings attached. No statements from the PM are going to change this, unless he is more forthcoming about what was actually promised, if not troops to fight the war in Syria. Nawaz Sharif’s comments also do nothing to explain the unprecedented visit of the King of Bahrain to the JSHQ. Safe to say, a military deal might be on the cards, but just what has been agreed remains unclear.
Maintaining our age-old alliance with Middle Eastern countries must not be prioritised over matters of internal security. At a time like this, with the uncertainty surrounding the question of terrorism in Pakistan, everything that is beyond our borders should take a backseat with the exception of trade of course. The government has failed to clarify exactly what is meant by “increased military cooperation” with both Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. Involving the people would put all of our collective fears to rest, and would allow the opposition in Parliament to raise any arguments against the proposed agreement. That is how a democracy functions, after all.
The Pakistan Army is not an army-for-hire. Our country has enough concerns of its own, without looking for new ones far beyond our borders. Misguided advice based on self-interest should not prompt us into action in Syria, Bahrain or wherever else guns are needed. Be it weapons or personnel, Pakistan should abstain from involving itself in the active conflicts of the Middle-East for the sake of preserving the tenuous sectarian balance in this country. Pakistan is anything but united, and the divisiveness is also permeated in the deep-seated religious differences of the various sects. Sectarianism is the biggest bone of contention in the Middle East, and we find ourselves in the middle of the Saudi-Iran nexus, with the recent addition of Bahrain to the equation. History should teach us that getting mixed up in the affairs of other countries is only counter-productive to Pakistan’s interests.
The example of Afghanistan is there for all to see, and the resultant inflow of militancy in our own country should encourage our leaders to think twice before involving us in somebody else’s war which we have no reason to fight. God knows we’ve got enough battles of our own.
http://www.nation.com.pk/editorials/21-Mar-2014/behind-closed-doors
Pakistan: Rehman Malik criticizes Taliban
Former interior minister Rehman Malik has said that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan is a terrorist organization and how can it be transformed into a political party.
Speaking to media at the Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport here on Friday, he said though Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s intention should not be doubted, the Taliban had earlier broken agreements with the government. He also questioned Taliban’s sources who were providing them heavy weapons.
The former minister said that Pakistan should not enter an agreement that could vilify the country.
He termed Pakistan People’s Party’s talks with the Muttahida Qaumi Movement.
Pakistan: Damaging NYT report
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/Carlotta Gall covered Afghanistan and Pakistan for The New York Times (NYT) from 2001 to 2013. Amongst her other accomplishments, she was deported from Pakistan for being ‘undesirable’. Now Ms Gall has written a book, The Wrong Enemy: America in Afghanistan, 2001-2014. Excerpts from the book have been published by the NYT, some of which make sensational reading. For example, the article alleges that ex-president Pervez Musharraf and ISI chief Lt-General Ahmed Shuja Pasha knew of the presence in Pakistan of Osama bin Laden (OBL) at his sprawling compound in Abbottabad. Further, that the ISI had established a special desk to handle OBL, manned by an officer who was empowered to make his own decisions and did not report to a superior. He allegedly handled only one person: OBL. The report cites an unnamed Pakistani official alleging that the US had direct evidence implicating Pasha. The report goes on to allege that evidence found in OBL’s residence in Abbottabad showed he was in correspondence with Hafiz Saeed of Jamaat-ud-Dawa and Mullah Omar of the Afghan Taliban, amongst other extremist leaders. Further allegations paint a picture of cells in the ISI working against and fighting the Taliban, while others were supporting them. OBL, the report suggests, travelled to the tribal areas for a meeting with Qari Saifullah Akhtar, the latter blamed by a Pakistani intelligence source of planning to assassinate Benazir Bhutto on her return to Pakistan in 2007 and that General Musharraf was aware of the plan. Sensational as some of these allegations and accusations are, it comes as no surprise that top intelligence officials, ISPR and the Foreign Office, not to mention sources in Pakistan’s Washington embassy, have flatly rejected the report as ‘fabricated, baseless’ and even a ‘pack of lies’. These institutions reassert that no one in Pakistan knew of OBL’s presence in Abbottabad. Ms Gall stands accused in turn by these spokespeople as interested in maligning Pakistan and its secret agencies, especially the ISI. Hafiz Saeed for his part has flatly denied ever knowing or corresponding with OBL. Mullah Omar, it seems, has left the building and is not available for comment. It may be recalled that after the 2011 Abbottabad raid by US SEALS that ended with the killing of OBL, the military and ISI were hugely embarrassed by the debacle. General Pasha attempted to take responsibility for the intelligence failure and offered to resign, but parliament granted him and all the top brass a reprieve and a clean chit of at best incompetence rather than being complicit in harbouring OBL. The resurrection of allegations of complicity in the NYT, and perhaps even more embarrassingly in the detailed account in the forthcoming book, has put everyone in authority at the time in an uncomfortable place. Perhaps only when the book is available and can be perused for any evidence the author can muster for her serious allegations will objective observers be in a position to judge the veracity of the bombshell accusations. However, irrespective of that outcome, what may be triggered even further by such accusations is the strengthening of an increasingly vocal caucus in the US Congress that refuses to accept Pakistan as a US ally, arguing for a cut off of aid to Pakistan. That argument is unlikely to be settled only on the basis of Ms Gall’s ‘revelations’. Washington has many concerns about maintaining the relationship with Islamabad going into a future that has several critical markers. One is the withdrawal of western forces from Afghanistan by the end of the year and the subsequent fallout in Afghanistan, handling which will require the cooperation of Pakistan. Pakistan’s own internal terrorism problem too is on the US’s radar, recognising as it does the risks of a nuclear-armed state under terrorist siege. US aid is an investment in the stability, prosperity and peaceful development of Pakistan, a goal considered very important given the experience of Washington taking its eye off the regional ball after 1989, which opened the door to 9/11. So, while looking forward to a good read of a book that promises thrills and spills but whose truth will only be judged on whatever evidence is produced, the US and Pakistan have already turned a corner from 2011 and the estrangement that followed to forge a relationship that hopefully looks forward, not back.
Pakistan:No breakthrough in unblocking YouTube
There is no possibility that the internet users in Pakistan will be able to access YouTube in the near future.
At least this was the message conveyed to the Senate standing committee on information technology which met on Thursday.
Though the unblocking of the site was not on the agenda, it was discussed before the 12 items were taken up by the committee members. However, the subject ended as soon as it was taken up.
Senator Zahid Khan, the chairman of the committee, said a negative impression was sent out about the nation that it could not decide if the site was to remain blocked or not.
“We are getting tired of the confusion. People are being denied access to a vital information-based website. We want to know if the government is unblocking the site or not,” Senator Khan said. However, there was no clear answer.
The site was blocked in September 2012 after a blasphemous US film, Innocence of Muslims, was uploaded on it.
Dr Ismail Shah, the chairman of the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), repeated before the committee what he has been saying: “The controversial film cannot be blocked 100 per cent.”
He also said YouTube could not be unblocked until the Supreme Court and the inter-ministerial committee were satisfied about the removal of the blasphemous contents.
“The blasphemous video can still be viewed on secure websites. It cannot be blocked no matter how many state-of-the-art filters are installed. Until the objectionable contents are removed completely, the site is likely to remain blocked,” said Mr Shah.
Coming to his rescue, State Minister for Information Technology Anusha Rehman read out the Supreme Court order of September 17, 2012: “We direct the chairman PTA to immediately block the offending material on YouTube and on any other website.”
An official in the Ministry of IT told Dawn after the meeting that the ministry had explored all possible options to block links that carried the controversial film. “There is no way to block the film completely. Unblocking YouTube is a political decision,” he added.
PTCL: Similarly, there was little hope that the government would get the $800 million that Etisalat owed to it since 2007.
Ms Anusha Rehman told the committee that there were some 50 properties that still had to be handed over to the company.
Ms Rehman has been critical of the entire sale agreement between the government and the Emirates-based telecommunication company.
She argued that the sale agreement did not contain termination clause and that it benefited Etisalat more than the interests of Pakistan.
She was also critical of giving 26 per cent share of the PTCL and transferring over 3,200 properties in Pakistan to Etisalat. Etisalat purchased the PTCL in 2004 and paid up front $1.2 billion.
A representative of the ministry of law informed the committee that his ministry was not taken on board while drafting the PTCL sale agreement.
Senator Zahid Khan and other members of the committee were surprised how the ministry of law could be excluded from such an important transaction.
While a member from the Privatisation Commission tried to convince the committee that all the properties would be transferred to Etisalat and that the telecommunication company would pay the remaining $800 million before the end of the financial year, the committee was reluctant to believe it.
Nonetheless, the chairman of the committee gave both the ministry of law and the Privatisation Commission two weeks to prepare a complete report on the sale agreement, particularly informing the committee about the termination clause if Etisalat failed to pay the remaining $800 million.
Turkish Twitter users defy Erdoğan’s ban
Hours ago, Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan said in an election rally that he wanted to “root out” Twitter, no matter what the “international community” thought. An Ankara court then shut down the site to some 12 million Twitter accounts in Turkey.
The official reason from the PM’s press office was shown as the number of court cases opened by Turkish citizens against Twitter on the basis that they had been insulted.
The real reason could be quite different. Erdoğan has been getting more upset because of leaks of telephone tapped records of conversations between him and his family members, Cabinet members, media figures, and business figures, with lots of claims of corruption. This has been so ever since the graft probe started on Dec. 17, 2013, which has cost the resignations of four ministers to Erdoğan so far.
Instead of opening the judicial path to investigation of the corruption allegations, Erdoğan started to bash judges, prosecutors, policemen and social media for trying to stage a “coup” against him with manipulation from his former close ally Fethullah Gülen, the U.S.-resident moderate Islamist scholar. It was then that the leaks started to cause so many headaches for the prime minister.
As Turkey approaches the March 30 local elections, Erdoğan and his close aides have started to worry about more leaks, which could affect the ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AK Parti) votes. Erdoğan first introduced more political control over judges and prosecutors, and then passed a law restricting the use of Internet, taking advantage of the AK Parti’s domination of Parliament.
But nobody expected that he would act so quickly and so strongly as to shut Twitter down completely.
Erdoğan had once promised to take the Turkish people into the European Union, or at least to the democratic standards of the EU, but with the latest ban he has put Turkey in the same league as North Korea, China and Iran.
However, hours after the ban most Turkish users were back on Twitter, using the ways and means of digital technology.
What’s more, to Erdoğan’s dismay, those rejoining Twitter and breaking the ban included Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç and Ankara Mayor Melih Gökçek (a genuine Twitter addict).
President Abdullah Gül, who had “unwillingly” approved the recent Internet law, also broke the law, saying via his own Twitter account that he was against the ban.
Immediately after the ban went into effect, millions of Turkish Twitter users hit back, defying the restrictions and demonstrating that the walls of fear that Erdoğan is trying to build have started to fall apart.
Turkey Shuts Down Twitter
In the run up to the March 30 municipal elections, the government of Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has closed down Twitter in the country. On March 20, Erdogan made an election speech in the western city of Bursa in which he threatened to “eradicate” what he called “Twitter Schmitter”. Then his office complained in a statement that Twitter had failed to abide by Turkish court orders calling for the removal of links in some tweets and that this might necessitate closure of the whole site. Shortly afterwards, at around midnight local time, the Telecommunications Communication Directorate went ahead and closed down Twitter’s website in Turkey. The page that appears on the Twitter website states that the Directorate has applied a “protection measure” (closure order) on the basis of a March 20 Ankara prosecutor’s decision. Three earlier courts orders are also mentioned and represent decisions to remove particular content following complaints without providing any detail. This is another fundamental blow to freedom of expression in Turkey and the right to access information, and the closure order should be immediately lifted. The move further signals that the Turkish government has taken an anti-democratic turn which significantly sets back its human rights record. If in practice it is easily possible to get round the ban and access Twitter by using proxy servers, that should not be regarded as a comfort. Prime Minister Erdogan’s move spells the lengths he will go to censor the flood of politically damaging wiretap recordings circulating on social media. These implicate his family and government ministers in corruption, reveal his willingness to press media bosses to censor news coverage, and show one of his close aides ordering the arrest of a journalist. Such material has been surfacing as links on Twitter accounts such as @haramzadeler333 and @başçalan in the wake of a corruption scandal that broke on December 17, 2013, and led to the resignation of four ministers. The government has dismissed the corruption allegations and wiretaps as part of an “international conspiracy,” involving the US-based cleric Fethullah Gülen and his followers inside the judiciary and police, to overthrow the prime minister. Conspiracy or not, limiting freedom of speech is no way for the Turkish government to tackle a political crisis.By Emma Sinclair-Webb
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