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Thursday, October 23, 2014
What China should do in present world

Saudi female drivers dare to drive despite ban
http://fusion.net/Saudi Arabia is one of the most restrictive countries in the world when it comes to women’s rights. Women must have a male guardian to accompany them in public, grant permission to travel, attend school or marry. Gender segregation is also common in public areas — from swimming pools to restaurants. The country is slowly making strides toward some form of gender equality. Women will be allowed to vote in 2015 and may even be able to run for municipal elections then. But it is still the only country in the world where women are strictly prohibited from driving. Saudi women there have campaigned for the right to drive since 1990. The campaign continued in 2011 and reignited on the social media scene more recently last October with a small handful of women getting behind the wheel and sharing videos of their daring drives on YouTube. Today, many of these women are pushing forward in their demand to drive despite the risks and punishments they may face. “In my sixth attempt I was stopped by traffic police. And I signed a pledge not to not drive again,” Saudi blogger and columnist Tamador Alyami told Fusion Live. “The car is my car and the registration is under my name, but they still made my husband sign the pledge. And they towed my car away for eight months without a ticket.” Supporters of the ban say women driving can lead to more car accidents, low birthrate or even the spread of adultery. Still, women like Tamador are pushing forward with their campaign to end the driving ban. “The campaign is worth every risk because it’s one right, a lot of rights that we are missing and we are asking to have a good life. And all our rights, not only this right because standing passive and just waiting for your rights to come to you will not work.”
Fascist Saudi regime warns women against violating driving ban

As Islamists Seek to Fill Ranks, More Western Women Answer Their Call
The young Western Muslims trying to join radical Islamist groups in Syria and Iraq now include increasing numbers of young women who are seeking to fight or to become the wives of fighters. It is a new twist on a recruitment effort that has led to several thousand men from Europe and beyond flocking to the battlefield. In the past week alone, the authorities reported two instances of women and girls trying to get to Syria or take part in jihad. On Wednesday, the British police arrested a 25-year-old woman north of London on suspicion of preparing “terrorist acts” related to the fighting in Syria. Over the weekend, three teenage girls from the Denver suburbs — two sisters of Somali descent and a friend of Sudanese descent — were intercepted as they tried to travel to Syria. Those were the latest in a series of cases of young Muslim women from the West trying to join militant groups like the Nusra Front or the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, which is waging a campaign to create a caliphate in Iraq and Syria. The largest numbers of recruits have come from France and Britain, but others have come from Austria, Belgium and Spain.By STEVEN ERLANGER
For several months, the Islamic State has been making a concerted effort to enlist women and girls. It is deploying female recruiters, producing new publications and creating online forums.
The precise number of women seeking to join the groups is unclear, but some analysts estimate that roughly 10 percent of recruits from the West are women, often influenced by social media networks that offer advice, tips and even logistical support for travel. These networks often portray life under the caliphate as a kind of Islamic paradise that offers a religious alternative to what can often be a second-class life of struggle and alienation in the West.
While some women are attracted to the idea of marrying a fighter, others “are joining I.S. because it provides a new utopian politics, participating in jihad and being part of the creation of a new Islamic state,” said Katherine E. Brown, a lecturer in defense studies at King’s College London who studies the phenomenon.She cited images on social media of female recruits cooking, chatting, caring for children and meeting for coffee. At the same time, there are images of women carrying automatic rifles, wearing suicide belts and even displaying severed heads. The “combination of violence and domesticity” is important, Ms. Brown said, adding that the women were politically engaged and often felt alienated by Western life, mores and politics. Just 10 days ago, an all-woman jihadist group calling itself Al Zawraa announced its establishment on the Internet, saying that it sought to prepare women for jihad by teaching them Shariah, weapons use, social media and other online tools, first aid, sewing and cooking for male fighters (“the heroes of the religion”). Al Zawraa appears to be affiliated with the pro-Islamic State group Al Minbar Jihadi Media Network, according to SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors extremist activities. Continue reading the main story Historically, women make up about 25 percent of the members of terrorist organizations as diverse as the Irish Republican Army, Chechen fighters and the Tamil Tigers, Ms. Brown said. But in the case of the Nusra Front and the Islamic State, the figure is about 10 percent, more in line with the gender makeup of far-right movements, she added. Over the past two years, “a maximum of 200 women” have traveled to Syria or Iraq from Europe, she said. At least a quarter of those women traveled with members of their families — husbands, brothers or fathers. While figures vary, at least 60 of the women are believed to be British, and more than 70 are French. A majority are thought to be 18 to 25 years old. Kamaldeep Bhui, a professor of cultural psychiatry and epidemiology at Queen Mary University of London, said that young Muslim women were as likely to be radicalized as men. “There is an increasing epidemic of girls” wanting to join jihad, he said at a briefing organized by the Science Media Center in London. He found that women with the highest risk of radicalization were most angry about injustice and most tolerant of even violent forms of protest against it. “The group who sympathized were younger, in full-time education” and more middle-class, Professor Bhui said. “They were more likely to be depressed and socially isolated.” Recent migrants who were poorer and busier were less likely to have radical sympathies, he said, in part because they remembered the problems of their homelands. Dounia Bouzar, a French anthropologist, is the founder of the Center for the Prevention of Sectarian Excesses Linked to Islam. In most cases, she found, young women who seek jihad do not come from particularly religious families but are good students who want to go to Syria to marry a devout Muslim or provide humanitarian aid. “There is a mix of indoctrination and seduction,” Ms. Bouzar said. “They upload photos of bearded Prince Charmings on Facebook.” The propaganda and messaging of the Islamic State is positive, a contrast to the negative message coming from anxious governments, Ms. Brown of King’s College London said. “The Islamic State offers a positive image and says: ‘You’re welcome here. Come join us in the formation of an ideal state.’ But from Western governments, it’s very negative, so they feel demonized constantly and alienated.” Some of the British women are reportedly running a sort of all-female religious police force to monitor un-Islamic behavior in Raqqa, a Syrian city held by the Islamic State. Other women have been posting on Twitter images of food, restaurants and sunsets clearly intended to lure more recruits. In Colorado, friends and relatives of the three teenagers who were detained over the weekend were struggling to understand why, according to federal officials, they left the Denver suburbs to join Islamic State fighters in Syria. Last Friday, the two sisters stayed home from school and told their father that they were heading to the library. The parents soon discovered that the girls were gone, with their passports and $2,000 in cash. The reality of life inside the radical groups is often different, of course, from the cheerful images on screens. The Islamic State is run by men and is strictly patriarchal, with recruits separated by sex. Ms. Bouzar said some young women had found themselves confined to the home. “Some see the massacres, the bombs, and understand that they’ve been had,” she said. Others, Ms. Brown pointed out, “find that life there is as mundane as in Birmingham or Glasgow — except for the electricity blackouts and communal toilets and beheadings.”
Once inside Syria, they are married off to jihadists. Several who have tried to return have found themselves prisoners, analysts said. They are forced to wear head-to-toe robes with a niqab, a head scarf that covers the face.According to numerous interviews with Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria over electronic services including email and Skype, women play an important role, with wives — Syrian, Iraqi or foreign — often accompanying their husbands as they move from post to post. Married fighters receive higher pay and holiday bonuses, members say.
There have been cases of men taking multiple wives, as well as accounts of rape, of forced marriage and of women sold into slavery. In an article in Foreign Policy, Aki Peritz and Tara Maller wrote that male jihadists were “committing horrific sexual violence on a seemingly industrial scale,” citing reports from the United Nations and Amnesty International.
The Syrian government has long said that women are being recruited for “jihad al-niqah,” or “sex jihad,” as some sheikhs argue that it is religiously permitted to have sex with fighters to help them in their duties. Several female Islamic State supporters said that was a myth, and that women were joining the group to provide substantive help such as medical treatment, social media advice and cooking.“I know some sisters who emigrated to Syria a couple of times to help the holy warriors,” said Umm Fatimah, a Tunisian woman who said she hoped to join two brothers fighting with the group. “And not for jihad al-niqah.” The family of one young French girl in Syria, Nora el-Bathy, 15, said she was desperate to come home. Her brother, Fouad, said that she had expected to work in a hospital but that instead she was babysitting the children of jihadists. The family, which lives in Avignon in the south of France, had no idea that she had become radicalized, or that she would leave her home dressed as usual, only to change into a full-length covering on the way to school. “We were completely unaware,” said Fouad, who has since seen pictures of Nora fully veiled that were taken by her friends. “We did not know that she had a double life.”
CANADA - Shooter had ties to jihadists, sources say

Pakistan: Former President Zardari condemns Quetta terror attacks
Former President Asif Ali Zardari has strongly condemned terror attacks on a bus, on a military convoy and on a rally on Thursday in Quetta killing 12 people and injuring many more and called for effective measures to stop continuing bloodshed of innocent men, women and children. Three terror attacks were carried out today in Quetta by terrorists. In first attack nine Hazara were killed by gun shots in Hazar Ganji area of Quetta city. In second terror attack a blast took place near a convoy of security forces at Qambrani road Quetta killing one person and injuring five. Third terror attack took place at a rally of JUI-F in Quetta reportedly killing two people and injuring many more. Maulana Fazlur Rehman was miraculously remained unhurt in this attack. In a statement former President said that the attacks on citizens and security forces and the bloodletting of innocent people cannot and must not be allowed to go on with impunity. He called for immediate, decisive and credible measures to stop this barbarism. He prayed to Almighty Allah for eternal peace to the departed souls and early recovery for the injured. He also sympathized with the bereaved families.http://mediacellppp.wordpress.com/
Bilawal Bhutto condemns terrorist attack on Maulana Fazalur Rehman
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, Chairperson Pakistan Peoples Party has strongly condemned terrorist bomb attack on JUI-F chief Maulana Fazalur Rehman rally in Quetta, which resulted in loss of innocent people. In a press statement, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari termed the attack an attempt by terrorists who want to impose their agenda through the power of bullets and bombs. “Attacking a national political and religious leader is tantamount to admission by terrorists and extremists that their narrative has completely failed and they want to destroy everything in the country,” he added. PPP Chairperson thanked God for protecting Maulana Fazalur Rehman and he prayed for his long life. He assured the nation and political leaders that PPP will continue to support war against the terrorists without any discrimination stressing unity among all the political forces for complete elimination of the cancer of terrorism from the country.http://mediacellppp.wordpress.com/
MOVING BEYOND THE NEW DEAL IN AFGHANISTAN – ANALYSIS

The establishment of a national unity government in Afghanistan last month was a political deal, but was perhaps the only way out of the protracted electoral dispute in which both presidential candidates claimed victory amid allegations of fraud which had the potential of fracturing the country on ethnic lines. The sense of relief among many countries including India, however, might be short-lived. A new set of challenges confront New Delhi, compelling it to revisit its Afghan policy to ensure that the decade long gains are not frittered away. The first peaceful democratic transition in Afghanistan has cobbled together a rare concoction of sorts, with the reformists and technocrats sharing power with the raditionalists/conservatives. While the deal between Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah brings a shift from the earlier centralised mode of executive government, its potential to usher in long-term stability remains unknown. For now, New Delhi seems content to work with the new political dispensation in Kabul. Post-2001 New Delhi has invested $2 billion in various infrastructure, capacity-building and economic reconstruction projects. Bilateral relations have grown exponentially. By delivering most of the aid through the Afghan government, New Delhi had developed considerable clout with the Karzai regime. Whether this investment will yield returns under the new dispensation remains to be seen. The protracted dispute over the presidential elections underlined the challenges to the Afghan political sector. Despite the decade-long international intervention, the lack of attention to political sector reforms and the absence of institutions capable of conflict mediation were evident in the Independent Electoral Commission’s inability to play an impartial role. During my time as an international election observer in Kabul, I observed both heightened expectations and gradual disenchantment with the electoral process. This would have implications for the future elections. Ahead of the April 2015 parliamentary polls, serious measures of electoral reforms are critical. While the alternative model is a shift towards greater decentralisation, its viability would remain linked to an ability to move away from the personality-centric and patronage network based approach prevalent in the country so far to long-term institution building and reforms. New Delhi can make a useful intervention by moving away from investing in the political elites to institution building. Familiar with the challenges of being a federal polity, India can contribute to develop decentralised structures, which will lead to an inclusive polity representing people from the peripheries. In the long run, this would shrink the space for the extremists. In maintaining a delicate balance of working with the traditionalists and reformists, New Delhi will have to chart a creative strategy of engagement to succeed. Prime Minister Narendra Modi raised concerns of precipitous US troop withdrawal with President Barack Obama. External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj’s visit to Afghanistan in September, unfurling a mega flag, was much appreciated by the Afghans as a symbol of unity at a time of political uncertainty. However, in the absence of clear policy pronouncements from New Delhi, these gestures are little beyond symbolism. Over time, the ‘expectation gap’ between aid commitments and delivery is bound to play out. Revising its strategy to make the required interventions to meet the needs on the ground will be the litmus test of India’s leadership in the neighbourhood and commitment to the long term stabilisation of Afghanistan.By Dr Shanthie Mariet D Souza
Video-Text - Speech of Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto at Diwali celebrations
“Asalam a laikum and Namastay.
Diwali Mubarik,
I am extremely happy to be celebrating Diwali today with my brothers and sisters in Larkana, just like I spent Eid with my brother and sisters in Karachi.
We want a Pakistan that my mother, Quaid-e-Awam and Quaid-e –Azam dreamed of. A Pakistan where Muslim and non Muslims are treated equally. A Pakistan, where Diwali is celebrated with the same passion and fervour as we celebrate Eid. A Pakistan, where every citizen is equal in the eyes of law and has equal place in our hearts.
I would like to congratulate the Government of Sindh for being the only administration in Pakistan which is celebrating Diwali this year.
There are many other political parties in Pakistan. However, in their eyes Muslim and non Muslims are not equal.
I am sure, if Quaid e Azam was alive, he would have despaired over the treatment of non- Muslims in his Pakistan.
Religious Fascists only care about their personal and political gains and use the laws made by Zia. It is these religious fascists, who after conquering Punjab, have evil designs on Sindh. They are taking away the rights of the poor and non-Muslims in the name of religion.
Marvaysun Marvaysun Sindh na Diasu. Marsu Marsu Jinnah ka Pakistan na Daisu.
However, we must not forget that this is not only happening in Pakistan. There is a very famous quote by JFK “the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing”. And we will never let evil succeed.
Even today, in America, religious fascists are killing children and doctors in the name of religion. In Palestine, religious fascists are to this day spilling the blood of innocent Palestinians in the name of religion.
However, wherever there is injustice in the world, the leaders of that country stand up, and speak against the persecution of the poor and minorities. However in Pakistan, the status quo politicians do not stand up and speak. This can only mean that, either, they don’t care about their people, or they are too scared to speak up.
In Punjab, an attack takes place on a church in Joseph Colony, and no one speaks up! A blast occurs in a church in Peshawar and still silence! However, there is a big difference between the PPP and these status quo politicians. If there is an attack on a mosque or temple, the PPP considers this an attack on Ghari Khuda Bux itself!
We will not tolerate this discriminatory treatment of the minorities. And inshallah, we will together build a safe, prosperous and forward thinking Pakistan.”
Isis ascent in Syria and Iraq weakening Pakistani Taliban

Islamic State’s military prowess and string of defections leave once-formidable Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan on the ropes.The dramatic rise of Islamic State (Isis) in Syria and Iraq is helping to tear apart the Pakistani Taliban, the beleaguered militant group beset by infighting and splits. Once the country’s largest and most feared militant coalition, the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has been on the ropes since a US drone strike killed its charismatic leader Hakimullah Mehsud in 2013, a blow followed this summer by the launch of a military onslaught against the group’s sanctuaries. But the latest challenge to the TTP has come from the startling military successes of Isis and its demand that all Muslims pledge allegiance to the new caliphate it announced in June. The claim to global Islamic leadership by the self-styled caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi threatens to undermine the TTP, which draws considerable authority from the fact that its symbolic figurehead is Mullah Omar, the one-eyed village preacher who ruled the original Taliban “emirate” in Afghanistan prior to the US-led invasion of 2001. This week the TTP’s beleaguered leadership announced it had sacked its spokesman, Shahidullah Shahid, after the high profile militant announced he had pledged his personal allegiance to Baghdadi. The statement published on the movement’s Facebook page said the spokesman had left the group some time before and reiterated that the TTP’s leader, Mullah Fazlullah, continued to back Mullah Omar, “the emir of believers”. Last week an audio recording was circulated in which Shahid and five other senior Taliban commanders from across Pakistan’s troubled north-western borderlands with Afghanistan announced they were now followers of Baghdadi. Mohammad Amir Rana, head of the security thinktank the Pak Institute of Peace Studies, said the turning of Pakistani militants towards Isis was highly significant. “This shows [Isis] has captured the imagination and it will encourage many other smaller groups who have been waiting and watching to see what the major groups do.” The challenge from Isis is just the latest facing the TTP, which has repeatedly splintered since Fazlullah took control of the movement last year after a bitter succession dispute. Not being a member of the Mehsud tribe which had dominated the TTP, Fazlullah was unable to hold together a coalition of militant groups that originally joined together in 2007. The movement has fragmented into at least four groups, in part due to disagreements over strategy: whether militants committed to imposing sharia law on the country by force should engage in peace talks offered by the government. Fazlullah’s authority was further undermined by the fact that he is based in the relative safety of eastern Afghanistan at a time when Pakistan’s army is engaged in a major operation to destroy the TTP’s sanctuary in North Waziristan, which the army claims has killed 1,100 militants since it was launched on 15 June. Although the TTP disarray and loss of its North Waziristan hideout have contributed to a sharp fall in terrorist attacks in Pakistan, analysts warn that the movement and its various splinter groups are anxious to prove they can still inflict serious damage. Ehsan Ehsanullah, spokesman of the largest and most formidable new group, the TTP Jamat-ul-Ahrar, told the Guardian they were now “the real TTP” because they had been joined by so many of the Pakistani Taliban’s original founders. And he claimed the loss of North Waziristan had not affected their fighting strength. “Before the operation in North Waziristan was launched we moved our resources and basics to safe places,” he wrote in an email exchange. “Changing headquarters does not change ideologies, strategies and the desire to ruin the enemies.”
Pakistan's Shia Genocide : Another Shia Muslim Shot Martyred In Peshawar
Pro-Taliban takfiri terrorists of Ahl-e-Sunnat-Wal-Jamaat (ASWJ) have killed another Shia Muslim in Peshawar,The Shia Post reports.
Tahir Ali son of Abdul Qayyum was attacked by banned terrorists of ASWJ in Khalid Town area of Peshawar.
Martyr Tahir Ali was a Tailor Master.
http://en.shiapost.com/2014/10/23/another-shia-muslim-shot-martyred-in-peshawar/
Scion of Bhutto dynasty throws down gauntlet to PM
The scion of the country’s leading political dynasty, emerging from the shadow of his mother and former prime minister Benazir Bhutto seven years after she was assassinated, has vowed to resurrect her party’s flagging fortunes.
In the first interview since his political “coming out” at a weekend gathering of hundreds of thousands of supporters, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari told Reuters that he planned a series of rallies in a challenge to embattled prime minister Nawaz Sharif.
“Like any politician, like the head of any political party, we are looking to expand our vote bank, make gains, gain more seats,” the 26-year-old said in his hometown of Naudero late on Wednesday.
“And therefore I will be looking to do that in every way possible,” said Bhutto.
His Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) ruled the country from 2008 to 2013, but it became tarnished by a series of confrontations with the powerful Supreme Court over corruption scandals.
After people became disillusioned with its image and policies, it was voted out in a landmark election last year.
The emergence of Bilawal as an opposition leader comes at an opportune time for the PPP and is likely to be a worry for Prime Minister Nawaz..
The incumbent’s authority has been shaken by weeks of anti-government protests led by former cricket star Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri, a firebrand cleric.
Convincing people he is a force to be reckoned with, however, will be an uphill task for Bhutto, whose youth may prevent him from being taken seriously beyond the PPP’s stronghold in Sindh.
“These political orphans and puppets would want us to be a dictatorship again,” he said, referring to Imran and Qadri and their protests.
“But Pakistan is over that. We are a democracy. We have had a civilian transfer of power.”
Young vote bank
Bilawal, whose age did not allow him to contest the 2008 elections, said he would rely on Pakistan’s young population for support and make fighting poverty his central agenda.
“Sixty per cent of the population of Pakistan is young… and of course I, being 26, I think can relate to them more than any other Pakistani political leader can,” he said.
“For me, serving the people… is about poverty alleviation.”
As well as his youth, Bilawal can draw on a name more evocative than any other in Pakistan.
His family’s story is as torrid as the country’s; his mother Benazir was assassinated at an election campaign rally in 2007, and his grandfather was hanged by a military dictator in 1979.
Benazir’s killer has never been caught, and a UN inquiry found that Pakistani authorities had failed to protect her or properly investigate her death.
Benazir remains a powerful symbol and people often refer to her as a martyr.
Tough on India
While the young Bhutto’s remarks about the poor are consistent with the PPP’s traditional position, he is far more hawkish than his party has been on the issue of Pakistan’s longstanding rivalry with India.
The PPP’s five years in power were marked by a warming in ties between the nuclear-armed neighbours.
In recent weeks, armed forces from Pakistan and India have engaged in their worst clashes in decades in the disputed region of Kashmir.
“The United Nations Security Council, the people of Pakistan, Pakistan as a country and the people of Kashmir all agree on what the way forward is; it’s only India that keeps making excuses and sabotaging peace,” Bilawal said.
“My generation, our generation on both sides of the border won’t put up with this,” he added, in surprisingly strong comments.
Bilawal has been an outspoken critic of the hardline Taliban movement, which threatened his party with attack during the run-up to the 2008 election.
After his mother was killed, her widower, Asif Ali Zardari, returned from self-imposed exile to successfully contest the election. He remains co-chair of the PPP along with his son.
Bilawal said the PPP was ultimately responsible for a major military operation against the Taliban launched in North Waziristan in July, and said Nawaz Sharif, who was in favour of peace talks with the militants, had been reluctant to give the go-ahead.
“It only happened because of the political pressure mounted by the PPP and our fierce, vocal and brave opposition,” Bilawal said.
“The Nawaz Sharif government was reluctant and the peace process was a consensus built among the right-wing parties that dominate discourse in Pakistan. We took it upon ourselves to go against this policy of appeasement.”
Pakistan - Revolution packs up
He came, he saw but in the end Tahirul Qadri did not conquer anything. For 70 days he held Islamabad hostage affecting life adversely. For 70 days he vowed not to leave his container until he was killed by the imaginary PML-N brownshirts he thought surrounded him or till he brought his revolution. It was apparent at the time that Qadri was concerned only with feeding his considerable ego. He was never able to articulate what kind of revolution he wanted and why a revolution was even needed. Now that the media oxygen which sustained Qadri is being denied to him, he has wisely decided to pack his bag. He now promises to hold rallies around the country but many here think he is just trying to make his exit more palatable to his supporters. Going by what he himself says he now wants to be a part of the system he decried as rotten. He says the PAT will participate in the elections even if electoral reforms are not introduced. It took over two months for Qadri to realise that this is exactly what the ‘revolutionary’ in him was ever capable of doing. Some will wonder if he can pass on the same advice to his friend and ally Imran Khan. We need to move beyond dharna politics to become a functioning democracy.
The government should resist the temptation to breathe a sigh of relief now that one thorn has been removed from its side. The large matter of the Model Town killings still looms. The deaths of the PAT activists should not be forgotten. The PML-N may regret the incident only because it allowed Qadri to credibly don the mantle of moralism, but the rest of us should avoid crass political thinking. We still need to find out who ordered the policemen to shoot and there may be need for senior officials in the Punjab government to resign. The end of Qadri’s dharna should not mean the end of the investigation into the case. On a similar note, Qadri now needs to answer for the violence he unleashed on Islamabad. The storming of Constitution Avenue is a shameful chapter in our history as is the sacking of the PTV headquarters. Qadri has no credible defence against the accusation that he purposely incited violence. He may have achieved at least part of what he – and any ‘scriptwriters’ directing him – set out to do. The Nawaz government has been weakened and the future of the political setup is apparently a little more uncertain than before. Imran Khan has once again reiterated he has no intention of leaving his container until the prime minister resigns, although lately there seems to be some stepping back from this demand. Right now, the PTI and its relatively small band of supporters stay on alone in Islamabad and the winter is coming. The full force of the early days of the sit-ins has faded away. What impression is left behind we wait to see.
Bilawal Bhutto - MQM alliance not required to form government

Keeping Pakistan Ebola free
Pakistan is finally responding to the threat posed by Ebola virus, as the Ministry of National Health Services revealed the steps it had taken to ensure that the country remained secure and Ebola-free. Other than setting up isolation units in hospitals located in all major cities, EVD counters have been set up at airports to scan passengers arriving in the country from locations deemed dangerous - mainly African countries. In the absence of systems which can be deemed suitable to effectively deal with an EVD outbreak, Pakistan’s best chances lie in preventing the deadly virus from entering its territory. For this purpose, no errors, human or otherwise, can be allowed to occur. It is critical to check the travel history of arriving passengers in detail rather than looking solely for the location they are immediately arriving from. Such cannot be accomplished without satisfactory co-operation between the health ministry and the immigration department. It is also important to ask valid questions, as advised by health professionals, to verify what cannot be ascertained from travel documents alone.
It must also be kept in mind that people don’t travel to Pakistan solely by air. They travel through land and water too. What measures have been taken by the concerned ministry to scan people arriving in the country through its ports? People do travel to African countries and elsewhere via ships, and present just as imminent a danger as those arriving on airports. It would be in error to ignore such an important aspect of international travel. Other than ports, there is also a need to establish EVD counters on borders for people coming in through Afghanistan, Iran, China and India. Knowing the porous nature of our borders and our inability to prevent illegal entry, it should be accepted that we will remain exposed. While we take measures to prevent EVD from entering the country, similar efforts should be aimed at setting up suitable systems to prepare ourselves for the worst case scenario. We can learn from Nigeria and other countries currently fighting against EVD, and doing so rather successfully. It is hoped that those entrusted with the enormous responsibility of keeping the country Ebola-free are fully aware of their critical role and will act accordingly.
Pakistan: One dharna down

Pakistan: Education in a shambles

THE information may not be new, but the issue is so crucial that it bears repetition: Pakistan will have no future unless it invests heavily in the young — and this investment begins with the long-neglected, even forgotten, sector of education.Despite having a clause on the law books that makes education a universal right for all children, the country is still struggling to put every child in school. On top of that, we now have stark facts and figures about the difficulty in keeping children in school, even if they make it there in the first place. On Tuesday, education campaigner Alif Ailaan released its latest report, Broken promises: The crisis of Pakistan’s out-of-school children. The figures are worrying: of those that do enrol in school, only one in four make it to Grade 10; as indicated by data from various sources used by Alif Ailaan. That means some 25 million children drop out of school. A perusal of the reasons the report lays out for this shamefully high figure is as revealing as it is instructive. A couple of myths are busted, for example, only 1pc of girls were forced to opt out of school because of marriage. Some reasons are obvious — poverty, the need to start pulling in an income and the expense of schooling are deterrents for both boys and girls. But other factors are an indictment of the education infrastructure and its handling. Consider, for example, that 5pc of male dropouts find that school is too far off to make attendance viable; and 51pc of such boys don’t go because they themselves are not willing to continue. The figure for girls not attending for the latter reason is 28pc. But why would children be unwilling to go to school? An answer is found in what the Rawalpindi deputy district education officer had to say to this newspaper. The major reasons, according to him, are “[in]consistency of policies, poverty and a shambolic education infrastructure”. A schoolteacher from the city commented in addition: “a poorly managed system of examinations and teachers’ maltreatment of students”. The path to remedying the situation on paper is quite clear. But so far the country has lacked the sort of political will needed to make it happen. For instance, in the wake of devolution after the passage of the 18th Amendment, the centre seems to have abandoned the subject as a provincial matter; the provinces have, meanwhile, done little (other than Sindh, which has started to try and weed out political appointees in schoolteachers’ positions). The low school enrolment rates coupled with high dropout rates are a disaster in the making for the country’s social and economic future. But going by the response to this abysmal state of affairs, the dire implications have not yet filtered into the consciousness of those at the helm.
Former President Mr. Asif Ali Zardari pays tributes to Begum Bhutto on her 3rd death anniversary
http://mediacellppp.wordpress.com/Co-Chairman Pakistan People’s Party former President Asif Ail Zardari has on the 3rd death anniversary of Maadr I Jamhooriat late Begum Nusrat Bhutto falling on Thursday October 23 paid glowing tributes to her. “Begum Sahiba was a towering personality of great courage. She endured indescribable personal tragedies in the pursuit of democratic struggle and illumined the path for future generations to traverse”, the former President said. He said that Begum Bhutto was an embodiment was elegance and grace even while in extremely stressful and most trying circumstances. Her personal courage and endurance in the struggle for democracy will continue to inspire democracy loving people in the country. By standing tall and proud in the face of adversities she has the nation the virtues of tolerance and endurance at a time when these virtues seem to be vanishing, he said. The strength of the democratic institutions that the nation witnessed recently is a tribute to the struggle and sacrifices of the Madri Jamhooriat in the cause of democracy, he said. It is an irony of fate that while she endured great personal tragedies in the course of this momentous struggle she is no more around to witness the moment of glory. The best way to pay tributes to her memory is to strengthen the democratic institutions in the country and watch against any attempt to scuttle democratic process, the former President said.
Pakistan's Shia Genocide : 8 Shia Muslims Shot Martyred In Quetta Bus Attack
shiapost.comPro-Taliban armed takfiri terrorists of Lashkar-e-Jhagvi (LeJ) and Ahl-e-Sunnat-Wal-Jamaat (ASWJ) killed eight Shia Muslims in the Hazar Ganji area of Quetta, the capital of the volatile Balochistan province, on Thursday morning, The Shia Post reports. The armed terrorists of LeJ-ASWJ opened fire at a Mazda bus and killed eight Shias of the Hazara community. Five persons was severely injured in the attack. The terrorists sprayed bullets over the bus and managed to escape unhurt from the spot. The bodies were brought to the Bolan Medical Complex hospital where a large number of people had gathered. According to a source, six people were killed, however, two more succumbed to injuries on way to the hospital. Pro-Taliban terrorists have killed thousands of innocent Shia Muslims across the country.
Ottawa gunman ‘identified’ as recent Muslim convert, high-risk traveler

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