Thursday, February 23, 2017

دہشتگرد انسانیت کے دشمن‘ قوم کو شہید اہلکاروں پر فخر ہے: بلاول



کراچی (این این آئی) پیپلز پارٹی کے چیئرمین بلاول بھٹو زرداری نے کہا ہے کہ دہشت گرد انسانیت کے دشمن ہیں اور سکیورٹی فورسز کے جن باہمت اہلکاروں نے دہشت گردوں سے لڑکر اپنی جانوں کا نذرانہ پیش کیا ہے پوری قوم کو ان پر فخر ہے، پیپلز پارٹی دہشت گردی کے خلاف مہم میں سکیورٹی اداروں اور پوری قوم کے شانہ بشانہ ہے۔ انہوں نے یہ بات بدھ کو بلاول ہاﺅس میں پارٹی عہدیداروں سے گفتگو کے دوران کہی۔ بلاول بھٹو نے کہا کہ دہشت گردی اندرونی ہو یا بیرونی اسے ختم کرکے دم لیں گے۔ ان کا کہنا تھا کہ تمام امن پسند عالمی قوتیں دہشت گردی کے خلاف پیپلزپارٹی کے ساتھ ہیں، انسانیت کے دشمن دہشت گردوں کو اللہ اور عوام معاف نہیں کریں گے۔ نیشنل ایکشن پلان پر عمل ہوتا ہوا دکھائی نہیں دے رہا ہے، صرف سندھ حکومت اس پر عمل درآمد کررہی ہے، باقی صوبے بھی نیشنل ایکشن پلان پر عمل کریں۔ علاوہ ازیں بلاول بھٹو زرداری نے صوبہ سندھ میں پارٹی کی تنظیم نو کے حوالے سے ڈویژن اور ضلعی عہدیداروں کی تقرری کے لیے امیدواروں سے انٹرویوز لینے کا سلسلہ شروع کر دیاہے ۔بدھ کوبلاول بھٹوزرداری نے بلاول ہاﺅس میں لاڑکانہ ، سکھر ڈویژن اور ان سے منسلک اضلاع کے عہدیداروں کے امیدواروں سے انٹرویوزلیئے۔ اس موقع پرپیپلزپارٹی کی رکن قومی اسمبلی فریال تالپور،قومی اسمبلی میں قائد حزب اختلاف سید خورشید احمد شاہ،پیپلزپارٹی سندھ کے صدرنثار احمد کھوڑو ودیگر سینئر رہنما بھی موجود تھے۔اس موقع پر خطاب کرتے ہوئے بلاول بھٹوزرداری نے کہاکہ نئی تنظیم پر بھاری ذمہ داری عائد ہوگی کیونکہ پارٹی آئندہ سال ہونے والے عام انتخابات کی طرف جارہی ہے۔

https://ppppunjab.wordpress.com/

The Blood-Drenched Return of Pakistan’s Taliban




Donald Trump’s new national security advisor, Gen. H. R. McMaster, will be seeing some familiar names and some familiar problems coming across his desk in the next few days, and months, and very likely years. And they’re not good news.
Afghanistan and Pakistan are coming back into view as centers of terror and unrest potentially every bit as dangerous to the United States as the so-called Islamic State that operates in Iraq and Syria. And Afghanistan’s a part of the world where McMaster discovered his hard charging left him with limp results.
In 2010 his mission was to curb corruption in the U.S.-backed Afghan government—graft, bribery, and theft that undermined everything Washington thought it was trying to do. But some of the people that the United States sent out to build the Afghan nation turned out to be just as corrupt as the locals. And McMaster, even though he worked to understand the Afghan culture, sometimes lost patience.

Asked at a teleconference what he thought Afghans saw as an acceptable level of corruption, McMaster shut down the questioner, acting as if the inquiry made no sense at all and was, indeed, completely unacceptable.
Of course, the problem continued. And what we see now confirms what Af/Pak hands have known all along: the corruption is not just about money, it’s about the whole record of the Afghanistan and Pakistan conflict. You can’t trust the governments you support, not when they are talking about money, and much less when they talk about peace or about “victory.”
What we have seen in the last few days is a bloody reassertion of killing power by various factions of the Pakistani Taliban, known as the TTP—the same group that came very close to blowing up an SUV full of explosives in Times Square in May 2010.
Within the space of a few days, and after almost two years of relative calm, Pakistan has been hit by five suicide bombings and other attacks: On Feb. 13, the target was a protest rally in Lahore, in the rich province of Punjab that used to be considered the peaceful heart of Pakistan. Thirteen people were killed, including two senior police officers. One of those, Mueben Ahamd, was an intelligence officer known for his extensive operations against militants. The Taliban splinter group Al Ahrar claimed the attack.
On Feb. 14, as police tried to defuse a bomb in Quetta it went off, killing two people and wounding 11 . On the 15th, a suicide bomber on a motorcycle rammed a government van carrying senior judges in Peshawar, and other bombers hit a government compound in Mohmand.
On Feb. 16 the attack was on a Sufi shrine in Sehwan in the south of the country, and 88 people died. An offshoot of ISIS claimed responsibility for that atrocity, but in the complicated web of jihadist factions, there are links between ISIS and the Taliban on both sides of the Af/Pak border.
Pakistani authorities promised a merciless crackdown. Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa, the chief of the Pakistani army, promised that “each drop of [the] nation’s blood shall be avenged, and avenged immediately.” He vowed there would be “no more restraint for anyone.” And roundups of suspected terrorists began immediately.
But on Tuesday, at least five people died when suicide bombers tried to storm a courthouse in northwest Pakistan.
All this comes after the Pakistani military has conducted several massive military operations against the TTP and other jihadist groups, repeatedly proclaiming that the back of the organization is broken. What the latest attacks prove is that the organization may be wounded, but it is far from dead. Which is, of course, the point the Taliban on both sides of the border want to make.
Muhamamd Khorasni, a spokesman for the TTP militants, sent an email last week announcing that all the fractured Taliban groups are coming together and have appointed a new deputy head of the organization, uniting what had been separate factions.
Another TTP source told The Daily Beast that the organization was dispersed after government offensives that began in 2014, but their ideology and commitment remained and they were able to rebuild. “Your Western media forecasted that the Taliban regime in Afghanistan collapse, but the Taliban regrouped and reorganized. That is exactly what the TTP has been doing since the Pakistan army operations. It bounced back , reorganized, and will take revenge.”
“TTP leaders had a meeting on Jan. 20 near the Af/Pak border,” this source claimed. “All the groups agreed in principle to combine attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan.”
At the same meeting, according to this source, some leaders suggested a general amnesty for those ex-TTP Taliban who had switched their allegiance to ISIS. “We hope they will come back,” he said.
The feeling is that ISIS has no future in the Af/Pak wars, according to several TTP sources. An Afghan Taliban source told The Daily Beast there have been “no clashes between Afghan Taliban and the Afghan chapter of ISIS for a long time, and the Afghan Taliban want ISIS to merge with them.”
The chances of that apparently have improved after U.S. drone strike took out Afghan-ISIS leader Hafiz Saeed Khan last summer. According to this source, he has been replaced by Abu Haseb, who is Afghan, but who used to be a commander in the Pakistani Kashmiri organization Lashkar-e-Taiba.
None of this bodes well for the United States. As a former TTP commander told The Daily Beast, “We are very clear about our Jihad to install an Islamic regime in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but of course the United States are our lifetime and definite Enemy Number One.”
The ongoing blame game between the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan, each blaming the other for allowing if not indeed encouraging the rebels fighting their neighbor, has given the Taliban on both sides of the frontier a chance to resume their activities and regain strength.
A well-placed European diplomat notes that the terrorists in Afghanistan and Pakistan are now deeply interconnected, and unless the governments of those two countries find a way to pursue the same anti-Taliban agenda, ”terrorists will remain at large in the world’s most  dangerous region, Pakistan and Afghanistan.”
For all these reasons, Gen. McMaster probably would agree with one of his former subordinates who said Af/Pak has been “a sucking chest wound for the United States for the last 15 years.”
Now as U.S. national security advisor, McMaster has the chance as he never has before to try to stop the bleeding. But if he is as smart as many of his colleagues say he is, he probably knows that is just about impossible.

Sami Yousafzai reported from Islamabad, Christopher Dickey from New York

Bomb kills at least 10 in shopping district in Pakistan's Lahore





By Mubashir Bukhari A bomb blast in an upscale shopping center in Pakistan's eastern city of Lahore killed at least 10 people on Thursday, a provincial government spokesman said, the latest attack in a surge of violence that has shaken the country.

 "It was a bomb blast with a huge sound impact that smashed the windows of almost all the buildings around," said Punjab government spokesman Malik Mohammad Khan. He said the blast caused a huge crater and authorities were investigating the exact "nature and motives" of the blast. Punjab police spokesman Nayab Haider said the explosion was caused by a bomb that was detonated either remotely or by timer. Pakistan has been struck by a wave of militant attacks in recent weeks which have killed at least 130 people.

One attack at a Sufi shrine in southern Sindh province killed 90 people. Rescue officials said security forces cordoned off the site of Thursday's blast, in a residential neighborhood which also houses banks and coffee shops, after what one bank worker described as a frightening explosion.

 "We left the building and saw that the motor-bikes parked outside were on fire and all the windows in the surrounding buildings were shattered," eyewitness Mohammad Khurram told Reuters. Reports of a second explosion in the city turned out to be a tire blow-out, a government official said. Thursday's bombing was the second attack in Lahore in two weeks. A suicide bombing on Feb. 13 killed at least 13 people at a protest near the provincial assembly. Government and military officials have vowed to hunt down militants across the country and Pakistan's border with Afghanistan has been shut down due to security concerns. After the shrine bombing, Pakistani security forces said they had killed more than 100 suspected militants in targeted campaigns across the country.