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
Saturday, October 4, 2014
China : Hong Kongers' free will shall not be held hostage to protestors

China - Firmly safeguard rule of law in :Hong Kong People's Daily

Anti-corruption drive to boost Afghan president's credibility
In a bid to keep his promise of tackling corruption, President Ghani has reopened a probe into a massive banking fraud scandal. Experts say the new leader is seeking to prove himself to Afghans and the global community.President Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, who has promised a fight against rampant graft, reopened an inquiry into the notorious Kabul Bank case on Wednesday, October 1. The commercial bank collapsed in 2010 after media reports exposed massive high-level corruption and the misappropriation of more than 900 million USD - most of which was deposited by international donors. In a presidential decree, Ghani ordered Afghanistan's Supreme Court to launch a new investigation into the case within 45 days. He also ordered the Attorney General's Office to arrest all the suspects within three days and keep them in detention until the court investigation is fully concluded. "We promised to combat corruption comprehensively, on a full scale and in a principled manner and it is time for action," Ghani said after signing the decree. The new president wants to prove himself to Afghans and the international community by taking on what is known as the biggest corruption scandal in the country, said Said Massud, economics lecturer at Kabul University, who was present during the signing of the decree. "It is a very interesting move by the president and a test for the new government. If the administration can solve this case and track the missing money, it will gain credibility and international prestige," Massud told DW. Lingering doubts Many of those who are suspected to be involved in the scandal are related to former or current high-ranking Afghan officials, including brothers of former President Hamid Karzai and his then first vice-President Mohammad Qasim Fahim. In total, 21 people were convicted in the case, including the bank's founder Sher Khan Fernod and chief executive Haji Khalil Ferozi, who were sentenced to five years in jail. However, Karzai's brothers and one of his vice-presidents were not sent to jail due to a presidential decree that granted immunity to shareholders who returned stolen funds. Massud expresses concern over the 45-day deadline set for the Supreme Court to carry out an investigation into the case, as he doubts the capacity of institutions that will execute President Ghani's decree. The analyst believes the powerful people behind the scandal will be another big challenge for the new president. "It is to be seen if the Afghan government is powerful enough to put the people involved in the Kabul Bank case behind bars because many of them belong to very powerful families," Massud stressed.

Decisive move
Many experts believe success in the fight against corruption will give Ghani's new government the support and the credibility it needs from the people, particularly after the country's disputed presidential election and a controversial political agreement between Ghani and his former electoral rival Abdullah Abdullah. Abdullah is now the Afghanistan's Chief Executive.Massud says the new president should deliver results as a failure to do so would put his future plans at risk. He is of the view that Abdullah's support will be crucial to achieve success.
"If Ghani wants to govern well in the coming five years, he should make sure that the probe into Kabul Bank scandal succeeds. Otherwise, he will face huge problems as people will question his authority," Massud said.
Afghan Watchdog Says Ex-Leaders' Brothers Owe In Bank Scandal

Pakistani Taliban Declares Allegiance To Islamic State

http://www.rferl.org/content/pakistani-taliban-islamic-state-allegiance/26620750.html
Pakistan : Developing a counter-narrative
Pakistan: More blood in Balochistan
Pakistan: Blast in Quetta Hazara town; several reported injured
A large explosion occurred in Quetta's Hazara Town area on Saturday, with initial reports suggesting several people were injured in the blast. According to DawnNews, the blast took place near a girls' school in the Aliabad area of Hazara Town, a locality populated mainly by the ethnic Hazara Shia minority which has been targeted by extremist militant groups in the past. Initial reports suggested several people were wounded in the blast. Emergency was imposed at all hospitals in Quetta following the blast. Police and rescue teams were on their way to the site of the explosion.
Pakistan - Terrorists Strike Back
Bomb blasts in Peshawar and Gilgit Baltistan on Thursday serve to remind that the problems Pakistan faces today are in no way restricted to North Waziristan Agency (NWA). The militant network is vast, ranging from the hills of FATA to the shores of Karachi, and there is no doubting the fact that it is still very much intact. They have incurred losses, abandoned certain strongholds, but they have not been decisively degraded. Old alliances have broken to give birth to fresh partnerships, some opting out and others uniting for their survival.
As Operation Zarb-e-Azb continues absent transparency and accountability in NWA, the bomb squad in Peshawar defused no less than six bombs on Thursday alone. The one that they couldn’t get to in time went off in a coaster leaving at least seven people dead and several injured. AIG Shafqat Malik described it as the “worst day” in his “professional career” and warned of the “tough days” that lie ahead. He also revealed that the bombs were of “advanced quality”, and “a pipe-bomb had the expertise only possessed by al-Qaeda”. These observations are not to be taken lightly.
Is this the backlash that everyone had expected in major urban centers in Punjab? How much space and material do the militants occupy in Peshawar allowing them to plant seven advanced bombs in a single day? Have efforts been made to identify suppliers, supply routes and buyers? Isn’t this what you call an intelligence failure? Is al-Qaeda enhancing its role in Pakistan by collaborating with other factions such as the Mohmand Taliban and Jundullah? Also, is it not an assumption that the military has completely abandoned terrorists or “assets” and decided to take them all on to remove the sword forever hanging over our heads? Its dealings with the Haqqani network, sectarian terrorists operating in Quetta and wider Balochistan as well as Punjab-based militants suggest otherwise. Can things be anything but ugly as long as this dangerous game of good terrorists and bad terrorists continues? Where does the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government come in all of this? Is KP Chief Minister Pervez Khattak doing anything to deal with terrorism?
A recurring theme in the nightmare that is Pakistan’s security situation is the consistent victimisation of minority communities. Once again, a passenger van en route Haramost valley in Gilgit Baltistan (GB), a predominantly Shia locality, was targeted by a roadside bomb, killing at least three people and injuring another ten. There seems to be no end in sight for the horrific sectarian violence in GB. Are the security forces doing anything at all to prevent the bloodshed? Or are they too busy strategising and accommodating assets in Parachinar against the will and interests of existing clans including the Turi tribe? Operation Zarb-e-Azb will prove to be an epic failure and a complete waste of time if the larger problem of militancy and extremism is not addressed and flawed strategies revised.
Bilawal Bhutto is a reflection of ZA Bhutto and Benazir Bhutto
Sindh Minister for Information and Local Government Sharjeel Innam Memon has said Bilawal Bhutto like his grandfather and mother has a program to alleviate poverty from this country. "Benazir Bhutto introduced computer education and following her footprints Bilawal Bhutto is committed to provide employment opportunities to everyone irrespective of his cast, creed and religion,"
Sharjeel Memon added, on October 18 hundreds of thousands of people would turn up in Karachi to welcome PPP Chief Bilawal Bhutto Zardari who is going to kick off his political career from Mazar-i-Quaid and he will address to the largest public gathering. The jalsa will be the one of the largest in the history of Pakistan, he said. This he said while reviewing the arrangements of participation of the people of his constituency in the public gathering of his young leader here at his residence, Civil Line. He said that the Chief Minister Sindh has constituted a committee of senior leaders of PPP from all over four Provinces as well as Azad Jamo Kashmir and Gilgit Baltistan to oversee the arrangements of public
Gathering.
He said "Bilawal Bhutto Zardari like his grandfather Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and mother Mohterma Benzir Bhutto is brave, energetic and a capable politician. His political farsightedness and commitment would be helpful to strengthen democracy." Information Minister said the reflection of Shaheed Bhutto and Shaheed Benazir Bhutto was very much visible in Bilawal Bhutto during his visit to the flood affected areas of South Punjabt . "This is why young, elders and women are committed with Bilawal Bhutto and would strengthen him to steer the country out of poverty and political unrest," Sharjeel said.
The meeting was attended by PPP workers and leaders of different union councils of PS-50 from where Sharjeel Memon was elected with big majority. The participants were keen to attend the rally to be addressed by Bilawal Bhutto Zardari.
Pakistan _ Explosion in passenger van kills six in Kohat
Six people were killed and several injured in an explosion that took place in a passenger van in Kohat’s Peshawar Chowk area on Saturday.
Police confirmed the death toll, adding that at least 13 others were also injured in the blast which damaged two vehicles.
“The blast occurred at a small bus stop in Kohat city. At least two vehicles were damaged in the explosion,” Salim Khan Marwat, district police chief in Kohat, told AFP.
“The explosion has left six people dead and 17 injured,” he added.
Fazal Khaliq, head of the emergency department at Kohat's main government hospital, also confirmed the toll.
The explosion occurred along a roadside, police said, adding that it appeared to have been caused by an improvised explosive device.
No group has claimed responsibility for the blast as yet.
Also read: North Waziristan operation — daunting challenge ahead
Today’s was the second attack on a passenger bus in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in the recent past with the first that took place in Peshawar killing seven people. The province is witnessing what appears to be a blowback from the military operation in the North Waziristan tribal region.
The provincial capital of Peshawar has also seen a sudden rise in attacks that have targeted police and military officials as well as civilian interests.
Pakistan: Thousands of govt schools in KP without electricity, potable water, washrooms
Some 10,000 government schools in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa lack electricity, 7,500 are without drinking water, 5,000 working without boundary walls and 4,000 have no washrooms.
According to Provincial Minister for Education, Mohammad Atif, 2005 earthquake had destroyed about 3,365 schools, 1,008 schools ruined or demolished by floods and militancy and currently have no building at all and are referred to as shelter less schools while 30 percent of the total of 28,500 schools have no boundary walls.
Some 46 percent of the existing schools lacked electricity, 48 percent had no washrooms and water was missing in 36 percent of the schools.Enrolment figures in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were slightly worse in comparison with years 2011 and 2012 when nine percent girls and six percent boys were not enrolled in educational institutes.
According to Deputy Director of Education Sector Reform Unit, Farid Khattak, the problem with enrolment in secondary schools is their inaccessibility.“We have more primary schools and fewer higher schools, a problem we are trying to fix. It’s a lack of access to secondary schools.” Of the 84 percent children (aged six to 16) in schools, 29.4 percent were in private schools, 1.6 percent enrolled in Madrassahs and 0.2 percent in uncategorized non-state institutions.
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