Saturday, September 26, 2020

کابل کې د پخواني ولسمشر ډاکتر نجیب الله لسګونو پلویانو لاریون وکړ

د افغانستان د پخواني ولسمشر ډاکتر نجیب الله لسګونو پلویانو د نوموړي د ۲۴م تلین د لغوه کېدو په غبرګون لاریون وکړ.

ټاکل شوې وه چې نن شنبه دغه ورځ د لویې جرګې په تالار کې ونمانځل شي خو د یو شمېر جهادي ګوندونو په غوښتنه دغه مراسم لغوه شول.

لاریون کوونکو ملي بیرغ او د ډاکتر نجیب الله تصوریرونو په لېږدولو سره د نوموړي د ۲۴م تلین د یاد غونډې لغوه کېدل وغندل.

د لاریون ګډنوال محمود ازادي راډیو ته وویل: "نجیب الله یو وطنپاله شخصیت وو، مونږ ځوانان دلته راټول شوي یو، مونږ د هغه کتابونه، مفکورې او نظریات لوستي او په دې پوهېږو چې ډاکتر صیب نجیب دغه هېواد ته څه ډول مفکوره لرله."

د لاریون یو بل ګډونوال منیر وايي: "لومړی یې د تلین کېدو امر ورکړ، وروسته یې ولې مخالفت وکړ، د زورواکو له امله؟ چې سر مې هم ولاړ شي دا ورځ نمانځم."

د کابل ښار په یوه بله څنډه کې د دغو مراسمو جوړونکي کمېسیون غړي وايي، د ډاکتر نجیب الله د نماځغونډې لغوه کېدل د اساسي قانون خلاف عمل دی.

د کمېسیون یو غړي احمد شاهین ازادي راډيو ته وویل، چې دوی د مراسمو لپاره بشپړ چمتووالی نیولی و.

هغه زیاته کړه: "کوم غبرګونونه چې د دغو مراسمو لپاره دي، دا خپله د قانون خلاف دي، د بیان ازادي، د غونډو جوړول د ډیمکراتیکو ارزښتونو برخه دي، چې په اساسي قانون کې ښکاره دي، د قانون د تطبیق لپاره اصولاً دغه کار د څېړنې وړ دی."

دغه غونډه وروسته تر هغې لغوه شوه چې د حکومت له خوا د لویې جرګې په خیمه کې د ډاکټر نجیب الله د ۲۴م تلین په مناسبت د غونډې د جوړولو په تړاو یو شمېر سیاسي ګوندونو بېلابېل غبرګون وښود.

دوی د اعلامیې په خپرولو سره د دغو مراسمو د لغوه کېدو غوښتنه کړې ده.

د افغانستان د خلق ډیمکراتیک ګوند حکومت وروستي ولسمشر ډاکتر نجیب الله د ۱۳۷۵ لمریز کال د میزان په ۵ نېټه په کابل کې له خپل ورور شاهپور احمدزي سره یو ځای و وژل شو.

نجیب الله د ۱۳۷۱ لمریز کال د حمل له ۲۷ نيټې د وژل کېدو تر ورځې پورې له خپل ورور سره یو ځای کابل کې د ملګرو ملتونو په دفتر کې و چیرې یې چې د واکمنۍ تر سقوط ورسته پناه اخیستې وه.

https://pa.azadiradio.com/a/30859332.html

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Saudi Arabia rebuked at UN over Jamal Khashoggi killing, abuses

Statement by dozens of countries highlighted a wide range of serious human rights violations in the kingdom. Dozens of nations condemned Saudi Arabia before the UN Human Rights Council on Tuesday over serious violations and demanded accountability for the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
In a relatively rare rebuke of the oil-rich kingdom before the UN’s top rights body, Denmark’s Ambassador Carsten Staur read a statement on behalf of 29 states demanding justice for Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist who was killed in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018 by an assassination team.
In the third joint statement to the council targeting Riyadh since the killing, the mainly European countries renewed a call for “transparency and holding all those responsible accountable”.
“We stress the need for full accountability and transparent prosecution of those involved in the killing of Jamal Khashoggi,” said Germany’s Ambassador Michael Freiherr von Ungern-Sternberg. The Saudi journalist was lured into the Saudi consulate to handle marriage paperwork. Within minutes, the one-time royal insider turned critic was strangled and his body dismembered, according to Turkish and US officials. A Saudi court this month handed lengthy jail terms to eight unnamed defendants and overturned five death sentences, in a ruling harshly condemned by Khashoggi’s fiancee and UN rights expert Agnes Callamard, the special rapporteur on extrajudicial killings. Callamard, who like the CIA had previously linked Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) to the killing, decried that top officials who allegedly ordered the murder walked free.
Torture, disappearances
Tuesday’s statement, which was hailed by several human rights groups, also highlighted a wide range of other serious rights violations in Saudi Arabia.
“We remain deeply concerned by reports of torture, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances, and detainees being denied access to essential medical treatment and contact with their families,” it said. Staur said the countries welcomed recent reforms such as restricting flogging and the death penalty against minors, but stressed journalists, activists, and others still face persecution, detention and intimidation. The statement also echoed the criticism voiced by UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet over the “arbitrary detention” of a number of women human rights activists in the country.
She told the opening of the council session on Monday the detained women simply requested to “be empowered to make their own choices, as equals to men”, insisting “they should be released without delay”. Saudi Arabia’s representative hit back on Tuesday insisting “the detention of any women has nothing to do with their right to exercise the freedom of expression, but for violations of the standing laws”. “Their rights are fully respected as detainees,” he said, adding they were guaranteed a fair trial.
Tortured and sexually harassed
Saudi Arabia has detained and put on trial a dozen female activists who long campaigned for the right to drive, which was finally granted in the kingdom two years ago.
Some of the activists allege they were tortured and sexually harassed by interrogators. Staur highlighted that at least five women’s human rights defenders arrested in 2018 remain in detention.
“We reiterate our call for the release of all political detainees and are particularly concerned about the use of the counterterrorism law and other security provisions against individuals peacefully exercising their rights,” he said.
Tuesday’s statement also urged dramatic improvements as Saudi Arabia strives to obtain a seat on the 47-member Human Rights Council.
“Council membership comes with an expectation of upholding the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights,” Staur said.
Germany, speaking on behalf of the European Union at the United Nations Human Rights Council, decried Saudi Arabia’s “prolonged detentions of women rights defenders”, including Loujain al-Hathloul.
John Fisher of Human Rights Watch denounced Saudi Arabia’s “brutal targeting of defenders and dissidents” and urged the release of the female activists and “others arbitrarily detained”.

A vision for a democratic Saudi Arabia free from the house of Saud

Madawi al-Rasheed 

 A new political party, NAAS, is going to fight for democracy in the kingdom, writes one of its founding members.

Two terms have always been taboo in Saudi Arabia: democracy and political party. 

Both are dubbed as western imported blasphemy, leading to discord against the so-called Saudi Islamic tradition. Uttering these words could lead to detention and even charges of sedition, whose punishment is sometimes execution.  

But on 23 September, when Saudi Arabia celebrated its National Day, six exiled Saudi activists and academics - myself included - launched the Saudi National Assembly (NAAS), not only to undermine that taboo but also to insist that the only future for a stable, secure and internationally respected Saudi Arabia is to wholeheartedly adopt democracy as a political system to replace the current absolute monarchy. 

The real democracy

NAAS issued its foundation statement, a document that has been discussed by a group of exiled activists in several western countries including the US, Canada, and Britain, where they have sought asylum. This political party calls for a real democracy with an elected national assembly, separation of powers, independent judiciary, respect for human rights, and the rule of law. 

This political party calls for a real democracy with an elected national assembly, separation of powers, independent judiciary, respect for human rights, and the rule of law

The party believes freedom of expression and the right to form independent civil society are vital, particularly in the Saudi context, where the regime unlawfully detains professionals, intellectuals, activists and young people simply for expressing critical opinions on social media.

An economic programme that considers the country’s natural resources as a treasure to be handled with transparency and equality is vital. Wealth distribution can only be preserved if it benefits all and is subject to the national interest. Welfare services and benefits should be distributed according to need, rather than as a result of favouritism and nepotism, as currently practised.  

Transparency would allow global investment to reach Saudi Arabia without being channelled through corrupt networks overseen by a close coterie of regime beneficiaries. 

The social charter of NAAS insists that all citizens, in addition to residents and immigrants, are equal under the rule of law. Sects, regions, tribes and other ideological differences are not the basis of entitlement as this is based on the right of citizens.

Equal citizenry

The party seeks to challenge identities nourished by the regime, such as tribalism and sectarianism, in order to create a modern, equal and engaged citizenry. As part of this democratic project, the participation of women goes beyond cosmetic reforms, such as permitting women to drive cars or appointing women to token government jobs as a way of impressing outside audiences. 

King Salman's legacy: The future of Saudi Arabia has never looked bleaker
Madawi al-Rasheed
Read More »

Given Saudi Arabia's recent aggressive foreign policy in the region, the party promotes diplomacy as the means to secure Saudi national interests. Military engagements, aggression, and conspiracies against other countries are to be avoided. But defending the security and integrity of Saudi territory from outside aggression remains paramount. 

The founding members are working on opening the political party to a wide circle of members and supporters who believe in its manifesto and are committed to accept its ideals. Together they will work both domestically and globally to raise consciousness and enlist support. The party adopts peaceful means such as raising consciousness, engagement with the media, lobbying and civil protest when this does not endanger compatriots at home. 

Its objective is not to destabilise Saudi Arabia, a country that is not only important for its resources and potential but also for all its citizens, and the Arab and Muslim world. NAAS mitigates against the disintegration of Saudi Arabia at a critical time when it is facing unprecedented challenges of dwindling oil revenues, increasing debts and excessive abuse of human rights and repression.

Benevolent no more

After the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi on 2 October 2018, Saudi Arabia’s reputation reached an unprecedented low even among its Western allies and partners.

It is time that Saudis regain the rightful meaning of democracy and political parties that the regime has always associated with dissent and chaos

Khashoggi's assassination shattered the myth about the benevolent monarchy and redefined the image of the country in the imagination of the international community as a rogue state, willing to defy international norms and values. If not urgently addressed, all these conditions make a descent into violence and disintegration likely without real political change. 

The new party addresses the urgent needs of the country’s citizens from civil rights to employment, and should be welcomed by the international community, including state actors and non-governmental organisations, as it promises a transition towards good governance and accountability.

The party offers a way forward for Saudi Arabia amid a looming vacuum should the regime experience serious upheaval, power struggles within the royal family, and complete implosion from within after the death of King Salman. His successor, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has not only alienated members of his own family, but also the old elite that had historically supported it, such as the financial elite, tribal groups, religious scholars and intellectuals.

The destiny of a people

The regime has lost its legitimacy and finds itself increasingly resorting to violence as a means to silence critical voices inside and outside royal family circles. Direct aggression, violation of privacy, surveillance and threats have become the norm in the absence of accountability and the rule of law. 

It is time that Saudis regain the rightful meaning of democracy and political parties that the regime has always associated with dissent and chaos. Its official religious scholars instilled in the mind of a whole generation that politics is better left in the hands of royalty.

The complete marginalisation of citizens cannot be sustained when Saudis have excelled in education and initiative.

Above all, they demonstrated that they can have a political imagination to coherently articulate a future in which the citizens insert themselves into the political narrative of their own country and make national policy.

The number of political prisoners in Saudi prisons attests to an advanced consciousness that refuses to accept that the destiny of Saudis can only be shaped by royal prerogatives. 

https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/future-saudi-arabia-should-not-be-left-hands-house-saud

Saudi heir and Jared Kushner inch kingdom towards deal with Israel


   


Saudi Arabia’s interventions could result in seismic shift in region’s geopolitics.

As the UAE and Bahrain prepared to sign a deal to normalise diplomatic relations with Israel this summer, Saudi Arabia – the regional heavyweight – was quietly urging them on.
For several months before the deals were signed at the White House, the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, had been laying out his rationale for a pact that would overturn regional policies towards a long-term foe.
There were state-of-the-art fighter jets on offer, political favours with Washington to be won and bigger, better access to Donald Trump’s America, with all the connections a nakedly transactional president saw fit to muster.There was also another inducement: if Saudi Arabia’s allies came to terms with Israel first, it would give the Kingdom cover to follow. Such a move would mark a seismic shift in the region’s geopolitics, easily eclipsing Israeli accords with Egypt in 1978 and Jordan 16 years later.While a pact between Israel and Saudi Arabia is growing closer, Prince Mohammed is unlikely to give Trump what would be his biggest foreign policy achievement before the US election, according to three sources close to the royal court.
Instead, the Kingdom is likely to continue its role of urging regional allies across the line – effectively in its s name. Sudan and Oman are firm favourites to strike a deal before the year is out. But the old guard of the region, Riyadh and Kuwait, are likely to bide their time and hold out for bigger prizes.
Both countries are ruled by long-term monarchs, now well into their 80s and ailing, and both remain invested in long-term formulas for Arab-Israeli peace, which have been shredded by the region’s younger leaders, such as Prince Mohammed.
Addressing the United Nations general assembly on Wednesday, the Saudi monarch, King Salman, stuck to the script of the 2002 Saudi-sponsored Arab Peace Initiative, which had been seen as a template until the past few years.
“The initiative provides the basis for a comprehensive and just solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict that ensures the fraternal Palestinian people obtain their legitimate rights,” said King Salman. “At the forefront of which is establishing their independent state with East Jerusalem as its capital.”
The heir to the Saudi throne views the region through a different lens to his predecessors, seeing Iranian expansionism as a bigger threat to stability than the seven-decade failure to bring about a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians. According to two sources familiar with Prince Mohammed’s thinking, his views have been greatly influenced by Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, since the two met in 2017.
“Kushner was just as transactional as his father-in-law,” said one Saudi source. “He was all about user pays; if you back a cause, or a person, they need to have your back. It was a language MBS understood and he wasted little time applying it to new Saudi positions on Palestine and Lebanon, both of which had become a never-ending burden.”Later that year, the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, was summoned by Prince Mohammed to Riyadh and given a version of what a new Saudi-approved Palestine would look like.Abbas has never spoken publicly about the meeting, and has not been back to Saudi Arabia since. But Palestinian officials, who insisted on anonymity, like everyone else contacted by the Guardian for this story, said the plan put to the veteran Palestinian leader was a lot like the blueprint of Jared Kushner’s peace deal, which was presented earlier this year with little fanfare.
“The crown prince told him Palestine could be Gaza and part of the Sinai, with a land bridge to what was left of the West Bank,” the official said. “The Egyptian president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, was involved in this obviously. It wasn’t a Saudi royal’s prerogative to be giving away part of Egypt without consent.”
The connection between Kushner and Prince Mohammed has remained strong throughout his turbulent three years as the kingdom’s effective leader. The stain of the state-sanctioned murder of Jamal Khashoggi by aides and guards of Prince Mohammed, barely reached the doors of the White House.
Instead, the Trump administration’s blend of transactional power politics, commercial ventures and a narrow range of global interests – securing the fate of Israel and diminishing Iran being first among them – have gelled with the crown prince and the Saudi system, which knows how to deal with regional political families – and now has a replica in the US.
One former western intelligence official said the model was a factor in getting things done. “We go to see them in a nice new suit, sit in their palaces, feel briefly empowered and real,” the officials said. “Then we fly home and take the tube to a shared flat in Elephant and Castle. People on our end are seduced by the access, no matter how hard they try not to be. On their end, they often find the interactions quaint.” The Kushner-MBS bond remains so strong, that the latter has advocated that Lebanon demarcate its maritime border with Israel – a central US talking point, partly aimed at securing Lebanese rights to a shared undersea gas field, but also at neutering Hezbollah, which maintains a stronghold in southern Lebanon. As Trump’s government hurtles towards 3 November, it is ramping up its policy of “maximum pressure” on Iran. Lebanon is seen as a key arena in which to try to dilute Iranian influence, and Prince Mohammed is very much on board.
“Things are all heading in the right direction,” the Saudi official said. “When they pull the trigger on this deal is a very important question. For now, it’s too soon.”

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#Pakistan - Educating the nation

 By Anjum Altaf

The Single New Curriculum (SNC) is the latest big thing and, like many of the big things before, it will end with a whimper, losing air and falling limp leaving us to tot up the costs. But while it lasts it will yield a load of laughs much needed in these times marked by amazingly smart lockdowns, miraculously flattened curves, invisible deaths, and dire warnings. 

The other day I watched a discussion in which one of the experts responsible for the SNC described in awe how the 400 members assembled for the task spent hours discussing the gargantuan problem of population explosion and how grades 1 to 5 students needed to be made aware of it. This profound conclusion was modified partly when members from Balochistan pointed out their small population, immense resources, and abject poverty. Grades 1 to 5 students might be too young to be introduced to the complexities of real life.

While these highly complex issues were being deliberated by the Committee, news trickled out that schools had ordered parents to purchase for their children only the Pakistani edition of the Biology textbook from which the chapter on Reproduction had been removed.

Students will now have to fathom the intricacies of the population explosion without the benefit of knowing reproduction. One can imagine the post-SNC generation growing up believing babies are brought into homes by storks and, by application of logic, assuming logic is part of the SNC, that the way to reduce the number of babies is to kill as many storks as possible. This is contingent on storks being allowed to be depicted in textbooks — 10,000 of which are under the strictest scrutiny — given that storks are not Muslim birds and hence not shariah compliant. 

This lesson could be combined with one recommending the elimination of all birds since they have very little in their favour in the entire corpus of holy sayings and, worse yet, pose a hazard to PIA whose aircraft have the strange habit of colliding with stray avians and turning turtle. Exceptions would be made for the eagle, the bustard, and the owl. Children will memorize via the SNC that eagles rest on mountain peaks thereby posing no danger to PIA. Bustards inhabit deserts away from flight paths and are vital for luring petrodollars. And owls populate our garden by sitting on every branch; they never leave their perches lest they be poached by someone else.

Embarrassing issues might arise if children raised on the SNC ask their mothers why the wise ones are distributing five hens and one cock to every household when the cock is entirely useless and better replaced by another hen that would yield an additional egg. It would be a good to have a parent-teacher guide to the SNC so that they know what cock-and-bull story to give in response to ignorant questions if and when they arise.

Listening to the SNC discussion I was truly impressed by the passion to raise good children. The unstated but strong premise shining through was that good children would surely be intelligent by default, the primary ingredient of intelligence being goodness. Quite clearly, this high-level deliberation by the Committee did not include any recourse to evidence. I suppose most members, being products of the goodness infused by Zia ul Haq’s curriculum consider it the source of the undoubted brilliance that has elevated them to positions where they can now infuse yet another dose of goodness into the SNC.

One can only conclude that evidence-based thinking would not be part of the SNC and all necessary wisdom would be chosen for transfer into the brains of students by the all-knowing Committee of 400. Evidence-based thinking is needed when matters in doubt have to be resolved via experimentation. When doubts do not exist, scarce class time could be so much better utilized in learning the correct pronunciation of holy words to minimize the dangers of blasphemy whose rules need considerable further tightening. 

I was also touched by the earnest request of the expert to at least commend the Committee of 400 for their good intentions — their hearts being in the right place wishing the best for the children of the country. I wondered if the Committee believed Zia ul Haq was not well-intentioned given the havoc wrought by all the good people produced by his curriculum. But, I forget, the Committee of 400 is evidence-proof. Asking it to conclude that education in goodness cannot make people good, let alone intelligent, is asking too much. The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

People will be intelligent if they are taught to think and most intelligent people will be good if goodness ensures a decent life. But who needs intelligent people? Intelligence is for the birds that are to be eliminated. 

The Rise of Unemployment rate in Quetta: Challenges and Remedies

 

Hummas Lashari

One cannot address crime without addressing poverty, and one cannot address poverty by addressing Unemployment. That said, these things often go hand in hand. And sadly, all these issues are arising in Pakistan, especially in our province Balochistan.

Demographically Balochistan is the largest province of Pakistan, and Quetta being its capital, is facing backwardness due to joblessness. So, it is high time to address the issue of rising Unemployment in Quetta. It is 2020, and we all are under the thick dark clouds of the pandemic, which has increased the rate of Unemployment globally, let alone Quetta. To address these issues of joblessness, our government must pay special heed to the unemployed young youth of Quetta. The unemployment rate has increased significantly during these past months. But that’s not all; as I have discussed earlier, crime, poverty, and Unemployment go hand in hand. If people cannot find decent jobs, then there is a chance to overcome poverty, they would turn into criminals and commit crimes like robbery, murder, and abductions. It is like a never-ending cycle of crime, poverty, and Unemployment.

According to the report, all other provinces are getting equal shares except Balochistan. Yes, you read it right. Balochistan is the only province that is not getting its actual share.

However, Article 38(g) ensure that the shares of the Provinces in all Federal services, including autonomous bodies and corporations established by, or under the control of, the Federal Government, shall be secured and any omission in the allocation of the shares of the Provinces in the past shall be rectified. But it’s heartbreaking to see the government officials, who have the fate of the country, are ignorant about Balochistan’s youth issues.

Let’s discuss challenges in an elaborative way to find the root of the problem, and then some remedies to overcome the issues of Unemployment.

The first challenge that we are facing is a lack of skills. We, as a youth, lack the necessary skills that are essential in landing a great job. Besides, our government is not interested in providing opportunities for our youth to develop their skills. But that’s not all, there are no good academies for the preparation of CSS, and most people have no idea about it. So, there is a lack of awareness, as well.

Anyway, allow me to tell you a little secret, whenever elections are around the corner, our political entities visit our Quetta, and promise us heaven, and end up delivering hell. And to be honest, at this point, we can only pray to Allah.

Now, let’s talk about the remedies to overcome this issue. First of all, we, as a youth of Quetta, unite together to address this issue to our government. I, however, speak for the unemployed youth of Balochistan, especially Quetta, and wish to see an end to the rising Unemployment rate in our city. Since the national power comes from every province, we cannot prosper as a nation if we cannot convert our national power into state power. And unfortunately, we cannot make our state powerful unless or until we do something for the youth of Balochistan.

Lastly, it is our humble request to the government of Balochistan to employ its residents and allow them to contribute to the development of the province.

https://dailytimes.com.pk/671164/the-rise-of-unemployment-rate-in-quetta-challenges-and-remedies/

Chairman PPP Bilawal Bhutto Zardari nominates former Prime Ministers Yousuf Raza Gilani and Raja Pervaiz Ashraf to represent PPP in the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) Committee.


 Chairman Pakistan Peoples Party Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has nominated former Prime Ministers Yousuf Raza Gilani and Raja Pervaiz Ashraf to represent PPP in the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) Committee.

The Committee will steer and recommend the line of action and strategy back to the PDM leadership including holding protests, rallies and an organized national structure of the PDM, which was announced at the All Parties Conference hosted by PPP in Islamabad on Sunday.


https://www.ppp.org.pk/pr/23843/

#Pakistan - Digital Rights in Jeopardy in #Balochistan

 

Adnan Aamir

On the morning of August 27, the people of Quetta woke up to find that there was no cellular service. They were taken by surprise and many missed work and appointments due to the suspension of cellular services. For the entire day, everything was at standstill in the city which underscores the importance of telecommunication services, which remained suspended, as it was the seventh day of Muharram. Cellular services had been suspended in the entire city on the pretext of security for Ashura processions. People were not informed of this suspension beforehand which further caused confusion.
This is just one example of the infringement of digital rights of the people of Balochistan. It is a practice that has been going on for the last many years without much scrutiny. This issue has largely remained ignored because of the overall infringement of fundamental human rights in Balochistan. Since there are graver problems faced by citizens of Balochistan, infringement of digital rights of the province is hardly discussed by the masses.
Between August 29 and 30, the same exercise was repeated to provide security to Ashura processions. This time, people knew in advance but it still caused inconvenience for the people. There are many problems with this approach of suspending cellular services to protect religious processions under threat of terrorism attacks.
First, there is no credible evidence to support the claim that suspension of cellular services results in prevention of terrorism attacks. It is true that in recent years there have not been any major sectarian attacks on Ashura processions but there are other reasons for this. Cadres and leaders of sectarian terror outfits were eliminated by security forces. So is hard to comprehend why the government continues to block cellular services without any proven benefit.

MOBILE INTERNET IS BLOCKED IN SEVEN DISTRICTS AND THIS MEANT THAT THOUSANDS OF STUDENTS COULD NOT ATTEND ONLINE CLASSES ANNOUNCED BY HEC

Second, blocking of communication services contradicts the claim of the government that the security situation has improved in the province. Blocking mobile telecommunication services is tantamount to a digital curfew and the imposition of curfew to provide security proves that the situation is still not under control. Lastly, even if the blockage of cellular services is inevitable for security reasons, then the services should only be blocked near areas where the Ashura procession passes. It makes no sense to block mobile networks tens of kilometers away from the Ashura procession. In this context, the blockage of cellular services is a grave infringement of digital rights.
Moreover, on August 29, the Balochistan government came up with a ludicrous set of instructions for its employees. All employees of the provincial government were instructed to un-follow Facebook pages and quit WhatsApp groups. This is ironic given the fact that Chief Minister Jam Kamal claims that he is the admin of 70 WhatsApp groups himself. He proudly claims that he uses WhatsApp for running the affairs of the government in an effective manner. No government can dictate the personal behaviour of its employees on social media. This is also an infringement of the basic digital rights of the people. Thankfully, citizens of the province have challenged this unlawful order in the court of law.
Another example is the permanent suspension of mobile internet services in seven districts of the province on security grounds. In these districts, cellular service is available but mobile internet services remain disconnected. As a result, millions of citizens of these districts are not only disconnected from the world but also from the opportunity of acquiring knowledge and development.
Earlier this year, when the Higher Education Commission (HEC) instructed universities to conduct online classes, this became the subject of student protests across Balochistan. As mentioned earlier, mobile internet is blocked in seven districts and this meant that thousands of students could not attend the classes. Student groups protested for many days in multiple cities and organised demonstrations in Karachi and Quetta. However, none of this moved the HEC and they did not take any decision to help out the protesting students of the province. This is yet another example of how even the federal government also does not care about digital rights of the people of Balochistan.
Furthermore, the impact of digital suppression on Balochistan is huge. According to the Telecom Indicator figures shared by Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), 38.25 percent of the population uses mobile internet in Pakistan. Since Balochistan is under-developed, we can assume that mobile internet penetration can be 19.13 percent in Balochistan. This means that around 2.5 million people of Balochistan are victims of infringement of digital rights by both provincial and federal governments. They have lesser chances of competing with others for economic opportunities in this global world.
In this context, the need of the hour is that governments in Quetta and Islamabad take the issue of digital rights seriously. In this age of information, no community can afford to remain disconnected from the digital world. Governments must deal with this issue on an urgent basis and facilitate affordable, easy, interruption-free and unchecked digital access for the populace.
https://balochistanvoices.com/2020/09/digital-rights-in-jeopardy-in-balochistan/

Balochistan: Government of Punjab fails to address students’ issues despite continuous protest

 The Baloch Students Council Multan has been protesting against the abolition of scholarships for reserved seats for Balochistan from the past twenty-four days but the government of Punjab has failed to address issues.

BSC (Multan) in a statement said that the students are also saddened by the fact that intellectuals, media, nationalist, and the representatives of other pro-democracy organisations across the country are silent on their movement for the rights of students. “This fact is reflected during the protests of students when the political parties stay way and students are left alone in their struggle,” the statement read.

The statement alleged that opposition political parties are only fighting for power-sharing and not cooperating with students. The BSC said that opposition should have supported the students but ‘they cannot see their youth protesting in the streets.’

“Our only demand is to restore our scholarships so that our students can study and we also need scholarships for the tribal areas of Dera Ghazi Khan and Rajanpur,” the BSC statement added.

Meanwhile, the Chairman of  Seraikistan Democratic Party Rana Farazanon visited the protest camp of Baloch students and expressed solidarity with them. He appreciated the commitment and perseverance of the students and assured them of all kinds of moral support from his party.

He demanded the government to solve the problems of these students so that their newcomers could take their classes on time.

Speaking on the occasion, BSC Chairman Waqar Baloch said that he was grateful to the Seraikistan Democratic Party for expressing solidarity with them and assuring its support.

He thanked the SDP chairman on behalf of the Baloch Student Council and hoped that they will continue to fight for the rights of students together.

Separately, Baloch Yahjehti Committee held protests in Islamabad and Lahore to solidarity with the protesting students for the restoration of reserved seats for Balochistan and against the abolition of scholarship for students of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

https://balochwarna.com/2020/09/25/balochistan-government-of-punjab-fails-to-address-students-issues-despite-continuous-protest/

Pakistan’s Gilgit-Baltistan game plan: Playing out the Chinese script

 BRIG N K BHATIA

Pakistani minister for Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit-Baltistan, Ali Amin Gandapur, reignited the contentious issue of grant of provincial status to Gilgit-Baltistan by stating in mid-September that the region would be elevated as the fifth province of Pakistan with all constitutional rights, including representation in the upper and lower houses of the Pakistani parliament.


Alongside the above statement he also made a significant statement on commencement of work on Moqpondass Special Economic Zone under the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
Pakistan had earlier decided to hold elections in Gilgit-Baltistan consequent to directions of Pakistan Supreme Court order, which had been protested to by India through issue of a 'demarche' in early May 2020 as India has always considered complete Jammu and Kashmir including Gilgit-Baltistan and Pakistan Occupied Kashmir as an integral part of India.
Also Read| India ratcheting up claims over PoK and Gilgit-Baltistan not without basis
The Gilgit-Baltistan region, earlier known as Northern Areas has been governed by "Gilgit-Baltistan Empowerment and Self-Governance Order of 2009", that established an electoral framework. Elections have been held in the region under the Order that provides for only limited autonomy.The sudden announcement of the inclusion of Gilgit-Baltistan as the fifth province of Pakistan and underlying reasons for the same are much wider and its implications are bound to set the tone for exacerbating tensions, that are already being played out in the east along the LAC on Indo China border.Gilgit-Baltistan has a large landmass and covers an area of 72,496 km2 (27,99 miles). It has a population of 1.9 million. Its geographical location provides it with a strategic advantage, being at the confluence of Afghanistan, China, Pakistan and India. The Area has been under illegal occupation of Pakistan along with a part of Kashmir that lies to its South. But the most important geographical aspect of the region is the Shaksgam tract, a small region along the northeastern border of Gilgit–Baltistan that has been provisionally ceded by Pakistan to the People’s Republic of China in 1963 and now forms part of China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.The people of the region have been protesting against the denial of fundamental rights and policies of successive Pakistani governments. They see an onslaught of Pakistani cultural practices, erosion of their cultural values and loss of their land due to Pakistan's plans to build five mega-dams with Chinese assistance, in the hydrographically rich area, which the locals assert is in violation of the resolutions adopted by the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan (UNCIP).
The holding of elections in Gilgit-Baltistan is also being protested by the locals as it would pave the way for mainstream political parties of Pakistan to foray into the region at cost of indigenous political groups now operating under the umbrella of Gilgit-Baltistan Democratic Alliance (GBDA) which represents fringe groups such as the Balawaristan National Front, Karakoram National Movement, Gilgit-Baltistan United Movement, the Bolor Research Forum and the GilgitBaltistanLaddakh Democratic Movement.
Most importantly, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is the main underlying reason for Pakistan's attempts to bring about political changes to the territory of Gilgit-Baltistan.
As is well known the China's flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) comprising the Pakistan Economic Corridor cuts through Gilgit-Baltistan. China has been wary of political instability in the region where locals have opposed its implementation due to their land being acquired and the onslaught of Chinese nationals and their culture in their pristine paradise. Another major issue has been the introduction of Mandarin in the local schools at cost of indigenous languages leading to unrest. Indian protests to the implementation of CEPC through the disputed territory which it claims as its own is another underlying reason for Pakistan to undertake political recalibration of Gilgit-Baltistan; to amalgamate it within itself by extending to it the status of a fifth Pakistani province.
Besides facilitating the connectivity through the implementation of road projects in CPEC, the change of political status as territory of Pakistan will help in setting up of Moqpondass Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in Gilgit-Baltistan.
The SEZ is proposed to spread over 250 acres and planned for trade-in marble/granite, fruit, mineral and leather processing. It is located on SakarduGilgit highway, 35 km from Gilgit and 160 km from Skardu airports. The Sust dry port is 200 km.
The statement of Pakistan's Minister on commencement of work on SEZ in GilgitBaltistanalongwith changing the constitutional status of the region thus meshes with the overall change of narrative being undertaken in the region.
However, there are bigger challenges that would emerge once the planned changes in the political amalgamation of Gilgit-Baltistan is undertaken. The people of Pakistan occupied Kashmir, an area almost one-sixth in comparison to Gilgit-Baltistan but with a population of 4 million, twice that of Gilgit-Baltistan, and a with a greater say both politically and vocally are likely to protest for grant of a similar political status, leading to more problems for Pakistan.
According to the Pakistani constitution, Gilgit-Baltistan and Pakistan Occupied Kashmir lack legal sanctity for being part of Pakistan although Pakistan has exercised control over the region since 1947. Under what constitutional provision it subsumes GilgitBaltistan into itself would be another interesting aspect of the creation of its fifth province. This has also led to protests from local leaders of the two regions who consider it as an attack on their identity.
The growing chemistry between Pakistan and China and their end game to change the geostrategic landscape by effecting changes in the geographical and political landscape for furthering Chinese expansionist designs is a direct threat to India and the region.
Having usurped Tibet and culturally annihilated Xinjiang, it may next be the turn of Gilgit-Baltistan to face Chinese decimation with help of its 'Iron Brother' Pakistan.
For India the development poses a formidable challenge to its long-standing claim to the whole of Kashmir. How it tackles the developments besides diplomatic responses will be keenly watched.

https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/other/pakistan-s-gilgit-baltistan-game-plan-playing-out-the-chinese-script/ar-BB19rSao?fullscreen=true#image=1

Diplomacy - Terrorism, ethnic cleansing Pakistan’s ‘crowning glory’ for last 70 years, India says at UN


 By YOSHITA SINGH

The strong rebuttal came after Pakistan PM Imran Khan spoke about India’s internal affairs, including Jammu and Kashmir, during his pre-recorded video statement at the UN General Assembly.

The “only crowning glory” that Pakistan has to show to the world for the last seven decades is terrorism, ethnic cleansing, majoritarian fundamentalism and clandestine nuclear trade, India said in a scathing response on Friday, slamming Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan’s “incessant rant” and “venom” in the UN General Assembly.

“This august forum witnessed a new low on its 75th anniversary. The leader of Pakistan today called for those who incite hate and violence to be outlawed. But as he went on, we were left wondering, was he referring to himself?” First Secretary in the Permanent Mission of India to the UN Mijito Vinito said, making India’s Right of Reply.

The strong rebuttal came after Khan spoke about India’s internal affairs, including the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, during his pre-recorded video statement at the high-level General Debate. Vinito, who was sitting at India’s seat in the UN General Assembly hall for the General Debate, walked out when Khan started his usual “diatribe” about India.

“This hall heard the incessant rant of someone who had nothing to show for himself, who had no achievements to speak of and no reasonable suggestion to offer to the world. Instead, we saw lies, misinformation, war mongering and malice spread through this Assembly,” the young Indian diplomat said.

Slamming Pakistan for its record as a nation, Vinito said, “The only crowning glory that this country has to show to the world for the last 70 years is terrorism, ethnic cleansing, majoritarian fundamentalism and clandestine nuclear trade.”

Alluding to the “stellar record” of Pakistan, he said this is the country that has the “dubious distinction” of hosting the largest number of terrorists proscribed by the United Nations, a reference to terror masterminds such as Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Saeed and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) head Masood Azhar.

“This is the same country that provides pensions for dreaded and listed terrorists out of State funds. The leader whom we heard today is the same person who referred to terrorist Osama Bin Laden as a ‘martyr'” in the Pakistani Parliament in July, Vinito said.

He added that it is Pakistan that brought genocide to South Asia 39 years ago when it killed its own people and it is also the country that is “shameless enough” not to offer a sincere apology for the horrors it perpetrated even after so many years.

India asserted in its Right of Reply that Khan, “who spewed venom today”, admitted in 2019 in public in the US that his country still has about 30,000-40,000 terrorists, who have been trained by Pakistan and have fought in Afghanistan and in the Indian Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

“This is the country that has systematically cleansed its minorities, including Hindus, Christians, Sikhs and others, through the abuse of its blasphemy laws and through forced religious conversions,” Vinito said, adding that “for someone who professes to be a champion of Islam, this is also a country that has encouraged killing of fellow Muslims merely because they belonged to a different sect or to a different region in Pakistan and through sponsoring terrorist attacks against its neighbours”.

Pakistan has consistently used UN platforms, including the high-level General Assembly sessions, to rake up the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, but has repeatedly found no resonance with the international community for its “diatribe”.

India strongly asserted that Jammu and Kashmir is its “integral and inalienable part” and the rules and legislations brought in the Union Territory are strictly its internal affairs.

“The only dispute left in Kashmir relates to that part of Kashmir that is still under the illegal occupation of Pakistan. We call upon Pakistan to vacate all those areas that it is in illegal occupation of,” Vinito said, adding that what should instead be on the agenda of the UN is Pakistan’s “deep state and its unrelenting political and financial support to terrorist organisations and mercenaries, which are a threat to global peace and security”.

“The only way for Pakistan to become a normal country is to abjure its moral, financial and material support to terrorism, turn its attention to the problems faced by its own population, including its minorities, and stop misusing UN platforms to further its nefarious agenda,” India said.

The words used in the General Assembly by Khan “demean” the very essence of the United Nations, Vinito said, adding that “for a nation that is deeply buried in medievalism, it is understandable that the tenets of a modern civilised society such as peace, dialogue and diplomacy are farfetched”.

Pakistan’s delegate then made a response to India’s Right of Reply.

https://theprint.in/diplomacy/terrorism-ethnic-cleansing-pakistans-crowning-glory-for-last-70-years-india-says-at-un/510834/

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