Saturday, January 17, 2009

Obama urges 'perseverance' during train ride




WASHINGTON — Buoyed all day by thousands of cheering onlookers, President-elect Barack Obama brought his whistle-stop journey to the nation's capital Saturday to kick off a weekend of festivities before his inauguration as the 44th U.S. president.
The "Obama Express" carrying the 47-year-old former Illinois senator pulled into Union Station at nightfall, ending a day-long 137-mile trip from Philadelphia along the same route that Abraham Lincoln traveled before his own inauguration 147 years ago.

The train, carrying Obama, his wife, Michelle, their daughters Malia and Sasha left this morning from Philadelphia's historic 30th Street Station, and made a stop in Wilmington, Del., to pick up Vice-President Joe Biden, and his wife Jill.

It also stopped in Baltimore, where Obama spoke to a crowd that Deputy Fire Chief Raymond O'Brocki estimated at 40,000 people.

Obama, who trumpeted a call for "change" throughout his campaign, called on Americans to have patience and perseverance in the face of economic challenges.

"Let's make sure this election is not the end of what we do to change America, but the beginning," he told a crowd bundled up against the bitter cold.

Many African-Americans among the crowd wept as Obama, who will become the nation's first black president, addressed the audience.

As in Philadelphia, the Democrat referred to the founding fathers who overcame great difficulties in giving birth to a new nation.

"The trials we face are very different now, but severe in their own right," he said, noting the challenge of an economic crisis and two wars. "Only a handful of times in our history has a generation been confronted with challenges so vast. "

"And yet while our problems may be new, what is required to overcome them is not," Obama said. "What is required is the same perseverance and idealism that those first patriots displayed."

He called for a "new declaration of independence, not just in our nation, but in our own lives — from ideology and small thinking, prejudice and bigotry — an appeal not to our easy instincts but to our better angels."

The president-elect warned, however, that the enormous challenges will not be solved quickly and that there will be "false starts, and setbacks, frustrations and disappointments."

The train made two "slow rolls" through small train stations in Delaware and Maryland as it wound its way south to Washington.

As it slowed in Claymont, Del., crowds ignored the biting cold to cheer as Obama — smiling broadly — waved from an open-air platform decorated in red, white and blue bunting.

Likewise, crowds jammed into the small station in Edgewood, Md., shouted "yes, we can" as train moved slowly past, with Obama and Biden waving from the last car.

The president-elect and his family rode in style aboard a chartered 1930 Pullman train decked out with brass lamps, a bedroom and dining room. The plush, privately owned car has been used in many presidential campaigns, including by George H.W. Bush in 1992.

On board are special guests, including former Army officer Matt Kuntz of Helena, Mont., who began promoting better mental health services and screening for soldiers returning from Iraq after his stepbrother committed suicide; Case Western Reserve University history professor Lisa Hazirjian, who worked for the campaign recruiting gay and lesbian volunteers in Ohio and Pennsylvania; and Lilly Ledbetter of Jacksonville, Ala., who sued Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., for sex discrimination.

The Obamas made a low-key entry into Washington. No public events were planned, although about a hundred people showed up in hopes of getting a glimpse of the president-elect. They left in a motorcade shortly after the train pulled into Union Station and left for Blair House, the official residence where they will live until they moved into the White House on Tuesday.

While the train replicated part of Lincoln's pre-White House railroad journey to Washington from Illinois in 1861, and security was high, the Obama trip was absent the emotions that raged in the country in the lead up to the Civil War.

The fears of a possible assassination plot against the incoming 14th president were so high that Lincoln eventually agreed to change his plans and travel the last leg through Baltimore incognito and on a different train to the capital.

The only major problems thus far for the Obama inaugural events is a forecast of freezing temperatures for Tuesday's ceremony and the expected crush of visitors to the nation's capital.

Somewhere between 1 million and 2 million people are expected to make their way to Washington for the swearing-in ceremony and inaugural parade. Some 240,000 tickets have been issued for the festivities at the Capitol, with 28,000 seats.

On Sunday, Obama will attend a star-studded concert at the Lincoln Memorial, and on Tuesday, he will be sworn into office with his hand on Lincoln's bible.

In his weekly Saturday radio and Internet address, Obama said his inauguration Tuesday is a rite of passage that the country marks every four years as a testament to its democratic ideals. He cautioned that its tradition should not be taken for granted.

"We must remember that our nation was founded at a time of kings and queens, and even today billions of people around the world cannot imagine their leaders giving up power without strife or bloodshed," Obama said.

He noted that peaceful transfers between U.S. presidents have come regardless of circumstance.

"Inaugurations have taken place during times of war and peace; in Depression and prosperity," Obama said. "Our democracy has undergone many changes, and our people have taken many steps in pursuit of a more perfect union. What has always endured is this peaceful and orderly transition of power."

While the inauguration ceremonies are taking center stage, the Obama team is also moving along on the governing track.

On Friday, the Senate agreed to give him access to the second half of last fall's $700 billion financial industry bailout and House Democrats unveiled an $825 billion stimulus package.

One of the largest bills ever to make its way through Congress, it calls for federal spending of roughly $550 billion and tax cuts of $275 billion over the next two years to revive the sickly economy. It also focuses heavily on energy, education, health care and jobs-producing highway construction.

Seeking to counter critics' claims of excessive spending and too few tax cuts, Obama cast the package as necessary to create long-lasting, well-paying jobs in industries such as alternative energy, and help hard-hit industrial states such as Ohio now and in the future.

Also Friday, two U.S. officials said Obama was preparing to prohibit the use of waterboarding and harsh interrogation techniques by ordering the CIA to follow military rules for questioning prisoners.

The proposal Obama is considering would require all CIA interrogators to follow conduct outlined in the U.S. Army Field Manual, the officials said. The plans would also have the effect of shutting down secret "black site" prisons around the world, they said.

The new rules would abandon a part of outgoing President George W. Bush's counterterrorism policy that has been condemned internationally.

Good reasons for progress in U.S.-Russian relations





This statement promises progress in U.S.-Russian relations regarding strategic offensive weapons and in ensuring global stability. Clinton put forth the foreign policy goals of the administration of Barack Obama, who is to be inaugurated as the 44th U.S. President on January 20, at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing this week.
The "lady in a pantsuit" said the President-Elect and she "believe that foreign policy must be based on a marriage of principles and pragmatism, not rigid ideology, on facts and evidence, not emotion or prejudice."

This sounds great, and, judging by the U.S. media, the American public hopes the U.S. is coming back, meaning that it will be able to overcome the negative consequences of Bush's presidency.

Relations with the U.S. remain one of the main foreign policy priorities for Russia, which has had a new president since last year.

Cooperation entails mutual advantage and a balance of interests. The new U.S. administration is definitely aware of this. If its foreign policy is indeed based on principles and pragmatism, it should logically opt for full-scale relations with Russia.

Russia has been heartened by Washington's intention to develop dialogue with it pragmatically, on the basis of respect for each other's interests. The Russian Foreign Ministry thinks this intention should be supported, and that contacts with the new U.S. administration should be developed as soon as possible.

Clinton said they would "work with Russia to secure their agreement to extend essential monitoring and verification provisions of the START Treaty before it expires in December 2009, and we will work toward agreements for further reductions in nuclear weapons."

Analysts think the new U.S. administration will try to avoid tensions in bilateral relations in view of the domestic problems it has inherited from the Bush presidency (the Iraq and Afghanistan wars) and recent international problems, such as the Palestinian-Israeli fighting over Gaza and the Horn of Africa piracy.

Russian diplomats say relations with the U.S. should be developed on the principles sealed in the U.S.-Russia Strategic Framework Declaration signed in Sochi on April 6, 2008. According to it, "the foundation for the U.S. and Russian relationship should be based on the core principles of friendship, cooperation, openness, and predictability."

Russia is ready to work energetically towards this goal, Russian diplomats say, adding that dialogue with the U.S. should be "based on respect, and be honest and open."

Russia has voiced several fundamental ideas on key international issues, including a new vision of trans-Atlantic security and ways to improve the global financial system.

Moscow had put forth its proposals on military-strategic and economic issues of U.S.-Russian relations and is prepared to move ahead, hoping for reciprocal moves from the new U.S. administration.

Taliban sets Pakistani school on fire'



Taliban militants have destroyed a public school building and damaged two other houses in restive Swat valley in northwest Pakistan. Police officials said unknown militants exploded a state boy's high school in Mingora city in Swat valley on Saturday. The blast also damaged two houses situated close to the school building, police sources added. Taliban militants had earlier warned the state-run and private educational institutions not to enroll girls in schools, setting January 15 as the deadline for the ban in Swat valley. Hundreds of schools in Pakistani northwestern region have shut the doors to girls to comply with the Taliban edict banning girls' education.

Mubarak calls for IDF to leave Gaza





Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on Saturday demanded that Israel immediately end its military operations in the Gaza Strip and withdraw its forces, even as the Jewish State was contemplating a unilateral cease-fire that would keep its soldiers in Gaza.

Mubarak's call came on the same day that Hamas leaders maintained that fighting with Israel would continue if their demands for an Israeli withdrawal were not met.

Egypt has been a key interlocutor in the weeks of negotiation to bring about an end to Israel's attack on the Gaza Strip to stop Hamas rocket fire. More than 1,100 Palestinians have died since the strikes began December 27.

"I demand Israel today stop its military operations immediately. I demand from its leaders an immediate and unconditional cease-fire and I demand from them a full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Strip," he said.

Unlike the widespread condemnation of Israel elsewhere in the Arab world, the Egyptian government has blamed Hamas for provoking the fighting and has worked closely with Israeli officials on the crisis.

Egypt put forward a proposal for a temporary cease-fire followed by a more lasting agreement to end arms smuggling to Hamas and open the crossings into the Gaza Strip.

Egypt has been adamant, however, that any international force monitoring the borders or the Gaza Strip could not be based on Egyptian territory.

"Egypt will never accept any foreign presence of monitors on its land. I say this is a red line I have not and will not allow to be crossed," he said.

Mubarak said once a cease-fire had been agreed on, Egypt would work to lift the blockade of Gaza and reopen the crossings - a key Palestinian demand.

"The Rafah crossing will remain open to the international, Arab and Egyptian humanitarian aid and humanitarian cases until there are arrangements in place to reopen the crossing," he said, adding that they would be based on a 2005 agreement between Israel, the EU and the Palestinian Authority.

Israel's decision to pursue a unilateral cease-fire seemed to be at least partly driven by a deal signed with the United States on Friday aimed at cutting off the supply of smuggled weapons to Hamas in Gaza.

The document signed in Washington outlines a framework under which the US will provide military and intelligence assets, including detection and surveillance equipment, as well as logistical help and training to Israel, Egypt and other nations in the region. The equipment and training would be used for monitoring Gaza's land and sea borders.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit, however, said Saturday his country was not bound by the agreement.

The US and Israel can "do what they wish with regard to the sea or any other country in Africa, but when it comes to Egyptian land, we are not bound by anything except the safety and national security of the Egyptian people and Egypt's ability to protect its borders," Aboul Gheit told reporters.

He also denied any weapons were smuggled into Gaza from Egypt, saying they are all transported to the territory by sea.

Olmert announces Gaza ceasefire






Israel's offensive has killed at least 400 children according to the UN [AFP]
Ehud Olmert, Israel's prime minister, has announced a unilateral truce in the Gaza Strip.Israel will halt its offensive in Gaza at 0000 GMT on Sunday but troops will remain in the enclave for the time being and will respond to Hamas fire, Olmert said on Saturday.The announcement came after a meeting of Israel's security council on Saturday evening and halts the 22-day offensive which has left more than 1200 Palestinians dead, more than 400 of them children.
Mission accomplished
"We have reached all the goals of the war, and beyond," Olmert said.
"If our enemies decide to strike and want to carry on then the Israeli army will regard itself as free to respond with force," he added.Olmert said the war boosted Israel's deterrence and that Hamas's actions would decide when the military would withdraw."This operation strengthened the deterrence of the State of Israel in the face of all those who threaten us."If Hamas completely stops its attacks, we will judge at what moment we will leave the Gaza Strip," he said.
Hamas defiant
Hamas, however, said it would continue fighting in Gaza as long as Israeli troops remained in the Hamas-ruled Strip."If the Israeli military continues its existence in the Gaza Strip, that is a wide door for the resistance against the occupation forces," Osama Hamdan, a Hamas official in Lebanon told Al Jazeera.Fawzi Barhum, a Hamas spokesman, said: "The Zionist enemy must stop all its aggression, completely withdraw from the Gaza Strip, lift the blockade, and open the crossings. We will not accept the presence of a single soldier in Gaza."The enemy's declaration of a unilateral ceasefire confirms that this is a unilateral war launched in one direction, from the enemy upon our people," Barhum, who is in Gaza, said in a statement.Speaking at a forum in Beirut, Hamdan called on Arab leaders to stand by the Palestinian "resistance" and urged European nations to cut ties with Israel for its "crimes" in Gaza.
Uncertainty prevails
Alan Fisher, Al Jazeera's correspondent on the Gaza-Israel border, said: "What the Israelis are doing by this unilateral declaration is taking all the power into their own hands and they will almost dictate now what happens, and when.

"Israel could almost go it alone now because of the role Egypt is playing in talking to Hamas and this deal, as Israel sees it, isn't with Hamas - it is something they are doing on their own," he said.
Ayman Mohyeldin, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Gaza, said: "There are many questions that remain unanswered and what this announcement will mean for the Palestinians on the ground remains unclear because there was no clarity in that announcement."
Dr Azzam Tamimi, from the Institute of Islamic Political Thought in London, told Al Jazeera: "After the Israelis have managed to kill as many of the children and women of Gaza I doubt that people of Gaza will believe them. Ehud Olmert is a compulsive liar.
"The main objective of this operation right from the start was to turn the people of Gaza against Hamas and pave the way for Mahmoud Abbas [the Palestinian president] to return to Gaza. That is why the civilians were deliberately attacked and their lives shattered."This objective has failed, it hasn't been achieved and now Israel is declaring a unilateral truce. It is a defeat for the real objectives of this operation," Tamimi said.Rami Khouri, the Director of the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut in Lebanon, told Al Jazeera: "This unilateral ceasefire has no chance of being a durable ceasefire.
"Israel has tried many unilateral approaches and each one of them has simply made the situation worse for Israel.
"There is no chance of any unilateral move by Israel having any success. It has to be a negotiated agreement that responds to the basic legitimate needs of both sides," he said.

Sharm summit

A summit aimed at giving international backing to the ceasefire will be held in Egypt's Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh on Sunday.

It is to be attended by the leaders of Germany, France, Spain, Britain, Italy, Turkey, Jordan and the Czech Republic - which holds the rotating EU presidency - as well as presidents Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general.

It was not immediately clear whether Israel would send a representative, and Hamas has not been invited.

Reduce rocket fire

About 1,230 Gazans have been killed in Gaza since the offensive began, according to UN and Palestinian medical sources.


UN officials say two children were killed when Israeli tank fire hit a UN school [AFP] At least 13 Israelis have died, three of them civilians.
Israel decided on a unilateral ceasefire in preference to entering into an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire with Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, analysts said.

The unilateral truce allows Israel to avoid agreeing concessions with the Palestinian group, such as easing the 18-month-old blockade of the Gaza Strip, which has prevented medical aid and basic supplies from reaching the Palestinians.

Egypt has been pushing Israel and the rival Palestinian factions to reach an agreement. A Hamas delegation had returned to Cairo on Friday for a second round of talks.

Israel's stated aim of the war, which it dubbed Operation Cast Lead, has been to reduce Palestinian rocket attacks on southern Israel.

On the first day of the offensive up to 100 rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel. In the past few days up to 20 have hit Israel on a daily basis.
Taliban threats close Pakistan schools

PESHAWAR — In a dark echo of Taliban rule in Afghanistan, violent religious extremists in Pakistan are moving to restrict girls' education as they seek to impose a draconian version of Islamic law on a beleaguered population.
In a northern valley where Taliban guerrillas have been waging a bloody war against security forces for more than a year, hard-liners have blown up or burned down some 170 schools, most of them for girls. Then in December, a warning by militants in a pirate radio broadcast: All schools for girls should close by Jan. 15.
This week, an association representing 400 private schools for boys and girls in the Swat valley said they would all remain closed after the winter break because of the threat.
"Since the Taliban's warning, attendance in our schools has reduced by almost half" to some 20,000 students, association president Ziauddin Yousufzai told The Associated Press on Friday.
"From today, we have closed our schools as we cannot run our education system in this insecure environment," he said.
Under Taliban rule, Afghanistan in the 1990s banned education for girls and forced most working women to return to their homes.
Since their 2001 ouster, the hardline Islamist movement's followers have been blamed for scores of arson attacks on schools in Afghanistan, many of them built with Western aid. An acid attack by Taliban insurgents last year maimed several girls.
The rise of Taliban groups in neighboring Pakistan has brought similar violence, especially in Swat, a relatively progressive area that until recently drew tourists from across Pakistan with its fine Alpine scenery.
The valley lies close to, but outside, Pakistan's tribally governed belt along the Afghan border where the West worries that al-Qaida leaders have found refuge.
Residents complain that the local administration, including the police force, has collapsed over recent months as officials and lawmakers flee in fear. Relief workers say thousands of residents also have moved out of militant-held areas.
Those who remain find themselves with little choice but to comply with the demands of the militants, who have exploited long-nurtured local grievances with Pakistan's snail-paced justice system.
Muslim Khan, the militants' spokesman, said they would not allow any girls' schools to operate until the army withdraws from the valley and Islamic law is imposed.
"These schools are being run under a system introduced by the British and promote obscenity and vulgarity in society," Khan told AP by telephone from an undisclosed location.
Khan said a system of girls education would be developed in line with the teaching of Islam.
All schools in the Swat valley, including some 1,600 government-run establishments with a quarter-million students, are closed for the winter vacation until the end of February.
Provincial education minister Sardar Hussain Babek said the government was trying to improve security by then so that they could reopen.
"If some people have grudges or complaints with the government they should not target the students and they should not snatch the right of education from them," he said.
But another senior provincial official, Bashir Ahmed Bilour, suggested the schools issue was secondary.
"People are being killed, they are being hanged there, so why are we talking about schools? Are schools open in Gaza?" Bilour said.
Administrators and teachers are scared.
Yousufzai worried that militants might even be more likely to target schools provided with security guards, putting students and teachers in greater peril.
"We appeal to both (militants and the government) to spare education and health institutions in this crisis," said Yousufzai.
Jahan Ara, a teacher in Swat's main town of Mingora, said she had taught in a private school for the last four years since her father died but had decided to quit.
"This job was enabling me to feed my widowed mother and three sisters but now I cannot take the risk," she said.

Afghan Foreign Minister Unhappy With Clinton



U.S. Secretary of State-designate Hillary Clinton's use of the term "narco state" to describe Afghanistan in a recent Senate testimony has caught the attention of her Afghan counterpart.Foreign Ministry Rangin Dadfar Spanta said Saturday that it is "absolutely wrong" to classify Afghanistan as such, though the minister readily admitted that Afghanistan is a major producer of drugs.Afghanistan produces more than 90 percent of the world's opium, the main ingredient in heroin."Madame Clinton is a good friend of Afghanistan, a close friend of ours," Spanta told The Associated Press in an interview arranged to rebut Clinton's classification of Afghanistan."But if somebody believes that our government, the government of President (Hamid) Karzai is involved as a government entity in the production of drugs, this is absolutely wrong."Spanta was reacting to a report in the Financial Times on Friday that quoted Clinton as calling Afghanistan a "narco state" whose government was "plagued by limited capacity and widespread corruption." The comments appeared in Clinton's written Senate testimony for her nomination as Secretary of State.But Spanta also made a startling admission: that the Afghan government controls perhaps only 90 percent of Helmand, the largest drug-producing province and one of the country's most violent."The main production center of drugs is Helmand, and we are not in charge. Helmand (is) not under control of my government," Spanta said. "If the international community is serious about fighting drug production and drug trafficking, they have to bring Helmand under our control."Spanta said the government controls only the capital of Helmand, Lashkar Gah, along with "some islands" of territory around the rest of the province.The U.S. plans to send up to 30,000 new forces into Afghanistan this year, and several thousands of those troops are likely to go to Helmand, which produces more than 50 percent of Afghanistan's opium poppies.Spanta called Helmand "the main threat" and said al-Qaida and Taliban militants as well as criminal drug organizations operate there.He said corruption was a problem the Afghan government still needed to address but that it was actively working on the drug problem. He said the government has arrested more than 700 people involved in the drug trade in recent years.Despite the irritation over the narco state label, Spanta called the United States a key alley and said he was sure President-elect Barack Obama would continue President George W. Bush's policy of strong support for Afghanistan.Spanta called Obama a "strong president with vision for his country and the world."

Five die in Kabul suicide attack


A suicide car bomber has struck in the Afghan capital, Kabul, killing four civilians and an American soldier.Nearly 20 others were injured in the blast near a US base and the German embassy. A number of German nationals are said to be among the wounded.A witness told the BBC the blast had set fire to several cars and a tanker.In a later attack in eastern Nangarhar province a civilian died and six people were hurt, including three policemen. The Taleban claimed both attacks.A child was among the dead in Saturday's first bombing on a small road between an American base, Camp Eggers, and the German embassy in the central Kabul district of Wazir Akbar Khan.
There was confusion earlier over casualty figures as the US military said two soldiers had been killed.It then said five US soldiers and an American civilian had been injured and that one of the wounded personnel died later.
A spokesman for the German foreign ministry in Berlin said several embassy workers had been hurt.German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said the suicide attack - the first to hit Kabul this year - was a "cowardly act" that would not deter Berlin.Germany has 3,200 troops in Afghanistan, mainly in the country's north.The heavily-guarded US base is the headquarters for soldiers training Afghan police and army forces.Reuters news agency reported that Afghan relatives of the dead had gathered screaming and crying outside a nearby hospital.Despite the heavy security in the district, which houses many embassies and offices of international organisations, the district has been attacked before.In November four Afghans were killed by a suicide bomber outside the US embassy.In Saturday's second attack, a suicide bomber killed a civilian while attempting to ram his vehicle into a convoy of Nato troops and Afghan police in Chaparhar district, Nangarhar province.A Taleban spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, told AP news agency a suicide bomber had carried out the Kabul attack in a Toyota Corolla. The militant group later claimed the second blast too.
The militants' influence has spread from their traditional heartlands in the south and east to areas closer to the capital.But the BBC's Martin Patience says that with increased police checkpoints throughout the city, there were fewer attacks inside Kabul in 2008 than in the previous year.US President-elect Barack Obama has pledged to make Afghanistan a foreign policy priority after he comes to office on Tuesday and is expected to approve the doubling of US troops in the country from the 30,000 at present.

One million kids to miss anti-polio drive in NWFP


One million kids to miss anti-polio drive in NWFP



PESHAWAR: Around one million children would miss the upcoming anti-polio campaign in militancy-ridden and snow-bound areas of the NWFP, officials said here Saturday.

An estimated 5.5 million children would be vaccinated in various districts and tribal regions during the campaign that would commence tomorrow (Monday). The drive, inaugurated at Peshawar Public School here Saturday, would continue for three days.

Speaking on the occasion, Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI) Director Dr Syed Mujahid Hussain Shah said children from public sector schools would assist the teams during the campaign. “About one million schoolchildren and 16,000 polio teams will participate,” he said, adding that the decision to include schoolchildren in the drive would help persuade parents get their children immunised against the disease.

The official said that Kurram, Bajaur, Mohmand agencies and Dir Lower, Hangu, Swat and Shabqadar (in Charsadda) had been excluded from the campaign because of law and order problem. Apart from the troubled regions, the immunisation has also been postponed in the snow-bound districts of Kohistan, Dir Lower and Mansehra. Around one million children in these areas, he said, would miss the polio drops.

On the occasion, Provincial Minister for Education Sardar Hussain Babak said the executive district officers and principals of public sector schools had been directed to participate in the drive. “All civil society organisations and government departments should participate in such programmes of public interest,” Babak said.

The minister said the Education Ministry would participate in the immunisation drive to ensure every child in the province gets vaccinated against the disease. “Hopefully, there will be no poliovirus-affected child in the current year in NWFP,” he remarked.

Minister for Industries Ahmad Hussain Shah criticised the EPI role and said that the Health Department authorities were not justified in their claims. He said the polio cases were repeatedly emerging in the province because of the failure of vaccination drives on account of the security concerns.

The number of polio-hit children is on the rise, as there were only five polio victims in 2005 as compared to 118 in 2008.

700 Afghan families expelled from Khyber: PA



LANDIKOTAL: Political Agent Khyber Agency Saturday said that 700 Afghan families were expelled from Jamrud tehsil besides demolishing encroachments in the main bazaar.

Addressing local media here, the political agent, Capt (R) Tariq Hayat, said the operation was aimed at purging the area of anti-social elements, criminals and militants.

The PA made it clear that the security forces and administration demolished the houses of those people who had refused to surrender and added that they would be brought to justice. He lauded the people for supporting the administration to continue operation and assured

them restoration of the government’s writ.

The security forces had also arrested a Taliban commander Murad Shiwnari and demolished two houses three days back.

The political administration officials imprisoned Murad Shinwari in the Landikotal lockup. The soldiers also dynamited homes of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan commanders in Landikotal named Hazrat Ali and Murad Shinwari, while Mufti Ejaz Shinwari, an alleged supporter of militants, reportedly surrendered to the law-enforcers.

Friday, January 16, 2009

UNHCR to accommodate 5,000 IDPs at Jalozai


UNHCR to accommodate 5,000 IDPs at Jalozai
PESHAWAR: United Nation High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has decided to accommodate 5,000 families of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) at Jalozai site.
The UNHCR is also providing extra plastic sheets and winterised tents to help the families get through winter, says a press release issued on Friday.
Jalozai site has providing a safe environment more than 1,00,000 Afghan refugees fleeing conflict in their homeland over the years, it is now home to over 11,000 IDPs who recently escaped the fighting in the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan.
An average of 100 additional families are being accommodated everyday.
"Jalozai is an organised camp which meets international standards and where adequate infrastructure is provided. IDPs families can be better assisted and protected," says the press release.
The UNHCR will also pay Rs500 to every family to establish home kitchens.
Agencies like the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) and International Rescue Committee (IRC) are trying their best to normalise conditions for the displaced children in Jalozai.
Child-friendly spaces have been created and a tent school set up with large classrooms.
To provide basic healthcare, World Health Organisation (WHO) and its partner are running a clinic in the camp staffed by 10 male and female doctors

Cells set up to monitor schools performance


PESHAWAR: The Education Department has set up monitoring cells at government schools over unsatisfactory annual results and regular absence of teachers from the schools.
On the directive of Education Minister Sardar Hussain Babak, monitoring cells have been set up in state-run schools.
Each cell comprises of section officers who will make a sudden visit to schools after every five months.
They will also inquire about the problems and difficulties faced by the students.
According to the education department, hundreds of teachers remain absent from the schools.
While some teachers who are regularly taking their classes could not cover the syllabus due to which the course of the students remain incomplete.
It merits a mention here that most of teachers in state-run schools have opened private schools and remain absent from their duties in government schools due to which government schools of the province are showing a very poor results continuously.
Keeping in view the poor performance most of the parents are reluctant to enroll their children in government schools affecting the enrollment process in these schools badly across the province.
Parents says that schoolteachers have a totally different approach to school education, which could affect the students’ performance.
It is hoped that setting up monitoring cells would ensure teachers' attendance in the schools.

Pakistan must move faster against extremists, says British FM





ISLAMABAD : British Foreign Secretary David Miliband on Friday stepped up the pressure on Pakistan to act more quickly against extremist networks operating on its soil in the wake of the Mumbai attacks.

His visit here comes on the heels of a high-profile trip to India, during which he called on Islamabad to show "zero tolerance" toward militant groups blamed by India for the attacks, which left 174 dead including nine gunmen.

"The whole international community want Pakistan to go further and go faster," Miliband told a press conference in Islamabad after meetings with key Pakistani leaders including Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

"I want the Pakistan government to take action because British people have been hurt... because terrorism from Pakistan is a threat to the stability of the whole region."

Miliband however said he believed the government in Islamabad was "serious in its commitment to prosecute those associated with the Mumbai attacks. Steps have been taken."

New Delhi has blamed the banned Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which is fighting Indian rule in divided Kashmir, for the November bloodbath in Mumbai.

Islamabad has said it is doing all it can to crack down on militant groups, announcing Thursday that it had so far detained more than 70 members of an Islamic charity linked to LeT and placed 124 others under surveillance.

Pakistan has also confirmed that the lone surviving Mumbai gunman is one of its citizens.

Earlier, an aide to Gilani told AFP the prime minister "reiterated that his government would do whatever it can (on Mumbai) and would move fast in acting against those who are proven to be involved".

"We are conducting our investigation in the light of the information provided by India. We are acting on our side," the aide said.

Miliband's visit comes one month after British Prime Minister Gordon Brown pledged six million pounds (nine million dollars) to help Pakistan tackle militancy during his own visit to Islamabad.

Both Brown and Miliband have said that London has a vested interest in coming to Islamabad's aid, as the majority of terror plots investigated by British authorities in London have links back to Pakistan.

The British foreign secretary earlier met with his counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi for nearly two hours on a range of issues including Islamabad's relations with India.

Qureshi said Pakistan had appreciated Miliband's "balanced and rational statements" during his stay in India, the Pakistani foreign ministry said.

Miliband was expected to meet President Asif Ali Zardari and army chief General Ashfaq Kayani before departing Saturday, Pakistani officials said.

In a speech Thursday at the Taj Mahal hotel in Mumbai, one of the locations targeted in the attacks, Miliband called on Pakistan to show no mercy towards militant groups like LeT.

"We know the attacks were carried out by Lashkar-e-Taiba operating from the territory of Pakistan," Miliband said. "There must be zero tolerance towards such organisations."

On Tuesday in New Delhi, he also restated London's view that the government in Islamabad did not direct the attacks, despite Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's claim that the militants had the support of "some official agencies".

India and Pakistan have engaged in a series of tit-for-tat accusations since the attacks, with each side saying the other is guilty of whipping up "war hysteria".

India's army chief said Wednesday that he regarded war as a "last resort" but reiterated that New Delhi was keeping open all of its options, including military action.

India asked to exploit FATA, Balochistan situations




PESHAWAR: The Indian government has been advised to exploit the situation in the Tribal Areas and the insurgency-hit Balochistan in the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks, according to a 72-page white paper handed over to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi.

“Exploit the divisions within Pakistan and expose its weaknesses in Balochistan, FATA and Azad Kashmir,” says the white paper – titled ‘War on Terror: The Agenda for Action’ and posted on the website of India Today – but does not elaborate. The Balochistan government already believes India is fuelling militancy in the province.

The suggestion is one of several proposals to prevent future attacks against India. The white paper was prepared as part of the Indian civil society’s effort to bring to the public domain an agenda for action, and “not to apportion blame for the failures that led to the Mumbai attacks”, according to the publication house – linked to India Today – that floated the idea to press the government to declare war on terror.

The white paper also asks the government: “Mount a sustained diplomatic campaign to build international pressure, especially from the US, with the message that if such efforts fail, India is ready for war. Set a timeline for Pakistan to dismantle terror infrastructure.”

The report refers to the Kashmir issue as a cause for attacks like the ones in Mumbai, and suggests, “India needs to tackle the (Indian-held Kashmir) valley discontent by deciding how much autonomy Kashmir requires and working out a way to negotiate with Pakistan.”

India blames Pakistan for the Mumbai terror attacks, but Islamabad and certain Western countries such as Britain deny the charge.

The Indian prime minister recently alleged that Pakistan’s intelligence agencies were involved in the attack, and India has handed over Pakistan a so-called “dossier of evidence linking elements in Pakistan to the Mumbai attacks”.

But Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani says the dossier contains information, not evidence.

Pakistan: Taliban forces closure of girls' schools in north






Mingora - Around 400 private girls' schools in Pakistan's restive northwestern Swat district have closed to comply with a Taliban deadline which expired on Thursday. Some parents have even begun moving to other parts of the country where their girls can attend school, Pakistan's Geo News reported on Friday. The closure of the private schools will deprive more than 40,000 students of their basic right to education. In addition, 84,248 girls students in state-run schools are unlikely to attend class because of fear of attacks by militants.Private school owners in Swat say the schools will not reopen until the unrest in the picturesque valley ends or the Taliban revokes the ban.School owners in Mingora, Swat's central administrative district, say that even if they kept the schools open, parents would be unlikely to send their children there.There are over 350 privately-owned schools in Swat, each with separate sections for boys and girls, according to data available from a local association of schools.Over the past year, the Taliban has ordered most of the schools to close and destroyed nearly 150 schools.Pakistani daily The News reported that following appeals to the Taliban, it has softened its stance, allowing girls to attain education up to the fourth grade. However, local militant leader Maulana Fazlullah has renewed the Taliban's threat to bomb educational institutions including 20 colleges, if any school continues to provide secondary education for the girls.The Taliban's central spokesman, Maulvi Omar, has distanced his movement from Taliban militants in Swat over their ban on girls' schooling and urged Fazullah to withdraw the ban, The News reported.Private schools also urged to the militants to withdraw the ultimatum in the interests of hundreds of female teachers, most of them lone breadwinners, as well as those of many thousands of female students affected by the ban.

Israel 'set to halt war on Gaza'


Israel's security cabinet is expected to decide to halt the war on Gaza at a meeting on Saturday, Israeli sources have said.The move would be seen as being preferable to entering an Egyptian-brokered formal ceasefire with Hamas, unnamed sources told the AFP and Reuters news agencies.The 21-day-old conflict has left more than 1,150 Palestinians dead, at least a third of them children, and devastated infrastructure within the densely populated territory."The security cabinet will convene and that is where a decision will be made," Tzipi Livni, Israel's foreign minister, told Israel's Channel 10 television when asked if the government would end the conflict."I have said the end doesn't have to be in agreement with Hamas, but rather in arrangements against Hamas."A unilateral ceasefire would allow Israel to avoid agreeing concessions with Hamas, such as easing the blockade of the Gaza Strip, which has prevented medical aid and basic supplies reaching the Palestinians.ptian efforts

Al Jazeera's Alan Fisher, reporting from the Israel-Gaza border, said that a unilateral truce would play well to the domestic audience as parliamentary elections approach.

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"The Israeli government can say there was no deal with Hamas, they are not doing this as part of any negotiations with what they regard as a 'terrorist' group," he said.

An unnamed Israeli official reportedly told the AFP news agency that Israeli troops would remain in Gaza in the event of any such ceasefire being called.

"If they [Hamas] decide to open fire, we will not hesitate to respond and continue the offensive," the official was quoted as saying.

Israel's stated aim of the war, which it dubbed Operation Cast Lead, was to halt Palestinian rocket attacks on southern Israel.

Egypt has been pushing Israel and the rival Palestinian factions to reach a deal that was expected to see an immediate ceasefire and an agreement over security arrangements for Gaza's crossings.

A Hamas delegation from the Syrian capital Damascus arrived to Cairo on Friday for a second round of talks on a ceasefire proposal.

Their return followed a meeting between Amos Gilad, a senior Israeli envoy, and Omar Suleiman, Egypt's intelligence chief.

Earlier this week, Hamas proposed a one-year renewable ceasefire in return for an end to the Israeli blockade, which has been in place since the group seized full control of the Gaza Strip in June 2007.

"We want guarantees that the crossings will remain open. If Israel accepts the principle of guarantees, then we will start talking about their details," Osama Hamdan, a Hamas official in Beirut, said.

Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera's senior political analyst, said: "We have seen unilateral moves by Israel, whether it be in Lebanon in 2006 or Gaza in 2005

"Those unilateral decisions simply compound the problem, simply delay the problem, but they never resolve the problem.

"I think this is because Israel has run out of options. It realises Israel couldn't deliver what it needs, Hamas wouldn't agree to its conditions and it realises more of the same, the same shelling, the same bombardment ... is making people in Israel think twice about how to continue."

Israeli bombardment

However, as reports of the possible ceasefire emerged, the Israeli military continued to pound targets across the Gaza Strip.

At least 10 people attending a funeral wake died when Israeli forces destroyed a house in Gaza City.


At least 1,155 Palestinians have been killed during the 21 days of Israel's offensive [AFP] Earlier, a woman and her five children, all under the age of 13, were killed when an air raid destroyed their house in Jabaliya, north of Gaza City, according to medics.

Hatem Shurrab, a Gaza resident living near Tar al-Hawa in Gaza City, which has experienced some of the heaviest fighting, told Al Jazeera that regular explosions could still be heard.
"I have my sister's family who came to our home to shelter. It's very difficult to describe how we feel. It's very scary. The next target is not known. Who will be killed next, we don't know.

"I can hear explosions going around and a couple of hundreds of metres away a home was burnt close to the explosions.

"What is really painful for me is that I see every day people who are being displaced. Mass internal displacement. Women running in the street trying to find a place."

Meanwhile, a funeral was held for Said Siam, the interior minister in Hamas's government, who was assassinated on Thursday along with one of his sons and a brother in an air raid in Jabaliya refugee camp.

PM announces to set up varsity in FATA


ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani on Friday announced the setting up of a university in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and also gave directions for immediate settlement of internally displaced persons of FATA.He was talking to a delegation of Parliamentarians from FATA, led by Minister for Environment Hamidullah Jan Afridi and Minister for Zakat and Ushr Noor ul Haq Qadri here at the PM House. The Prime Minister urged the FATA parliamentarians to participate in and associate themselves with the government’s efforts to improve law and order in the area which is vital for the socio-economic well being of its residents.

Federal govt to cooperate with NWFP for protection of female schools in Swat




ISLAMABAD, Jan 16 (APP): Minister for Information and Broadcasting Sherry Rehman said on Friday that the government would cooperate with the provincial government in its steps for protection of female educational institutions in Swat and some other parts of North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

Responding to some points of order raised by some opposition MNAs regarding attacks on female schools in Swat, the minister said that the President and Prime Minister have taken serious notice of these attacks.

She said that the Pakistan Peoples Party has always tried to create consensus against the menace of terrorism.” Our great leader Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto sacrificed her life during struggle against dictatorship and terrorism and the PPP got February 18 mandate for its anti-terrorism stance”, said the minister.

She said that empowerment of women and protection of women’s rights was an important part of the PPP manifesto. She said that the Awami National Party also has empowerment of women part of its manifesto. The NWFP government has already taken several steps for protection of girl students and female educational institutions and more steps would be taken to ensure that no attacks are carried out on the female schools.

Sherry Rehman said that the women caucus in the National Assembly would present a resolution in the House against the attacks on female schools in Swat and some other parts of the NWFP.

The minister however said that the government has to take in to consideration the collateral damage and migration of the innocent people from the area.

Earlier PML-N MNA Ayaz Amir raised the issue on a point of order stating that it was unfortunate that girl students in Swat were deprived of right to education in the name of Islam.

Amir Muqam of PML-Q said that most of the schools in Swat have been destroyed in Swat. He also pointed out that no compensation has been paid to over one thousand persons who lost their lives in Swat unrest.

PML-N leader Ahsan Iqbal said that it was wrong interpretation of Islam to ban girl students education. Some people are imposing their tribal values and traditions in the name of Islam which would defame the religion in the eyes of the world.

Miliband begins key Pakistan trip



UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband has arrived in Islamabad on a two-day visit as part of international efforts to diffuse India-Pakistan tension.

Relations between the South Asian neighbours have been under severe strain since November's Mumbai attacks.

More than 170 people died in the attacks, which India has blamed on Pakistan-based militants.

On Thursday, Mr Miliband visited Mumbai where he urged Islamabad to show "zero tolerance" towards militant groups.

Mr Miliband has held talks with Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

He is also due to meet President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and army chief Gen Ashfaq Kayani before flying out on Saturday, Pakistani officials say.

Taj Palace speech

Delhi has blamed Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba for the attacks on India's financial capital and believes "official agencies" played a part.

Both Lashkar-e-Taiba and the Pakistani government have denied any involvement.

On Thursday, Pakistan said it had so far arrested 71 people in a crackdown on groups allegedly linked to Mumbai.

Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik said officials had also shut several schools run by a charity linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba.

Mr Malik said the authorities had so far closed down 87 institutions - including seven madrassas (religious schools) - belonging to the banned Jamaat-ud-Dawa Islamic charity.

The organisation is widely seen as a political front for Lashkar-e-Taiba. A number of publications and websites had also been blocked.

The camps closed down include the main Lashkar-e-Taiba base in Pakistani-administered Kashmir, which was shut in December.

The group's main commander, Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, who has been named in India as being linked to the Mumbai attacks, was one of those arrested at that time.

India has repeatedly said that Pakistan is failing to take action despite evidence of Lashkar's involvement in the attacks.

On Thursday, Mr Miliband gave a speech at the Taj Palace hotel, one of the sites of the attacks in Mumbai.

He said: "We know the attacks were carried out by Laskhar-e-Taiba operating from the territory of Pakistan.

"There must be zero tolerance towards such organisations."

But he has said he does not believe the Pakistani government was directly involved.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

President Bush gives a farewell address to the nation Thursday from the White House.




Delivering his farewell address from the White House, Bush called the approaching inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama a "moment of hope and pride" for the country. He said he is "filled with gratitude" for the opportunity to serve.

But he also cautioned Obama to be vigilant, warning that the gravest threat to the country continues to be another terrorist attack.

"We have faced danger and trial, and there's more ahead. But with the courage of our people and confidence in our ideals, this great nation will never tire, never falter and never fail," Bush said, reprising a line he delivered shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks.

The outgoing president hailed the progress made in Afghanistan and Iraq during his two terms. He described his administration's military campaigns as a fight against murderous fanatics that the United States and its allies are winning. And he said he's always acted in the country's best interest, though there have been "setbacks" along the way.

"I vowed to do everything in my power to keep us safe. ... And with strong allies at our side, we have taken the fight to the terrorists and those who support them," he said. "There is legitimate debate about many of these decisions. But there can be little debate about the results. America has gone more than seven years without another terrorist attack on our soil."

Bush acknowledged "things I would do differently if given the chance." But he said: "I have followed my conscience and done what I thought was right. You may not agree with some tough decisions I have made. But I hope you can agree that I was willing to make the tough decisions."

Bush said the country never wavered in promoting "human liberty, human rights, and human dignity." He delivered his address in front of an audience in the East Room of the White House.

Bush has made several appearances over the course of the week, defending his overall record as "solid" and declining to engage in what he called "self-pity." He has said the desire to protect the country always trumped a desire to be popular and appease his critics.

Bush, whose presidency has been assailed by criticism over his handling of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, said Thursday that Afghanistan has gone from a nation controlled by the oppressive Taliban to one promoting democracy and fighting terrorism. He said Iraq has gone "from a brutal dictatorship" to an "Arab democracy." He said Iraq has gone from an enemy to a friend of the United States.

He said the "only practical way" to protect Americans is to advance the causes of liberty and freedom so other nations do not fall into the hands of those who support terror.

"I have often spoken to you about good and evil. This has made some uncomfortable. But good and evil are present in this world, and between the two there can be no compromise," Bush said. "This nation must continue to speak out for justice and truth."

The final months of Bush's presidency were marked by what's been called the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. But Bush defended his decision to send billions of government dollars into the financial markets to safeguard the economy against collapse.

And he said the nation must continue to "engage the world."

"Our enemies are patient and determined to strike again. America did nothing to seek or deserve this conflict. But we have been given solemn responsibilities, and we must meet them. We must resist complacency. We must keep our resolve. And we must never let down our guard," he said.

NWFP likely to have woman health minister




NOWSHERA: The NWFP would have first elected woman as minister for health after the PPP high command decided to implement the decisions of central executive committee to separately run the party and public offices.

According to a notification issued by the Pakistan People’s Party, PPP MPA Shazia Tehmas would get the portfolio of health ministry as the NWFP Minister for Health Syed Zahir Ali Shah was made provincial chief of the party.

Federal Minister Najmuddin Khan and NWFP Senior Minister Rahimdad Khan quit the party offices and were replaced by Dir District Nazim Ahmed Hassan Khan and Health Minister Zahir Ali Shah, respectively.

President Asif Ali Zardari’s Special Assistant Sardar Ali Khan and presidency spokesperson Farhatullah Babar confirmed to ‘The News’ that party and public offices had been separated. They said the process was initiated from the NWFP while it would be gradually implemented in other provinces as well.

ANP aims at major chunk of seats



PESHAWAR: The Awami National Party (ANP) is expected to get a major chunk of 11 Senate seats to be filled from the NWFP in March — probably more than what is numerically possible.With 48 members in the Frontier Assembly, the party is in a position to elect four members to the upper house of the parliament but ANP leaders are aiming at the double. “We are working on a strategy with our coalition partner PPP, whereupon the ANP will lend support to the PPP in other provinces in return for support to the ANP in NWFP. Besides, the party is also in contact with the independent MPAs and those from the smaller parties. We aim at around eight to nine Senate seats,” an ANP leader told The News wishing not to be named.While the ANP has sought applications for the party tickets till January 27, insiders claim the party leadership has already finalised at least eight names to be nominated by the party. They include Muhammad Azam Hoti, father of NWFP Chief Minister Ameer Haider Hoti, ANP Provincial President Afrasiyab Khattak, President of the Peshawar High Court Bar Association Latif Afridi, Mohammad Adeel, outgoing senator Hashim Babar and Dr Humayun.Besides, the party leadership is also expected to invite nationalist leader Afzal Khan Lala for Senate election, as the veteran politician has resigned from the parliamentary politics. According to the party’s constitution, a member has to apply for the Senate ticket and the ANP leadership would try to convince the former parliamentarian to apply for the party ticket.Meanwhile, some senior parliamentarians of the ruling coalition in the NWFP, especially from the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), have sought change in the procedure for Senate election and have supported election through show of hands instead of secret ballot.The PPP had failed to get even a single of its candidates elected to the Senate from the NWFP in 2006 despite having 11 members in the Frontier Assembly — enough to elect two members. In 2006, two independents — Gulzar Ahmad Khan and his son Waqar Ahmad Khan — were elected to the Senate from the NWFP instead. The ANP has two members in the Senate and got Ilyas Ahmad Bilour re-elected in 2006 despite being reduced to seven members in the previous assembly.A parliamentarian, who wished not to be named, said change in the procedure for the Senate election would bring an end to horse-trading. “Everywhere in the world, only direct elections are held through secret ballot while indirect elections are held through a show of hands,” he pointed out.

Afghan general dies in air crash


One of Afghanistan's top army officers and 12 other soldiers have been killed in a helicopter crash in the west of the country, the defence ministry says.

It said the helicopter carrying General Fazaludin Sayar crashed in Herat province because of bad weather.

Gen Sayar was one of the Afghan army's four regional commanders and in charge of the west of the country.

The delegation he was leading had been on its way to visit an army base in neighbouring Farah province.

Defence ministry spokesman General Mohammad Zahir Azimi told AFP news agency that it was the army's worst crash since 2001.

According to some reports, Taleban fighters claimed they had shot the helicopter down - but the ministry denied this, saying it was an accident.

The BBC's Martin Patience, in Afghanistan, says the Afghan security forces are still heavily dependent on old Russian aircraft to transport their troops.

And he says questions have been raised about safety standards in the past.

The other people who died in the crash were reported to be the corps' operations chief, its telecommunications official, five bodyguards, four crew and the general's chief-of-staff.

Ban 'optimistic' of Gaza truce deal



UN and Arab diplomats have struggled to halt the war that has killed nearly 1,100 Gazans [AFP]
The United Nations secretary-general has said he is "reasonably optimistic" that the Israelis will accept a ceasefire deal with Hamas.

But Ban Ki-moon, speaking after meeting Israeli leaders in Tel Aviv, admitted "it may take a few more days to agree to a few more technical issues" and urged both sides of the conflict to "stop fighting now".

Hamas, the Palestinian faction that controls the Gaza Strip, has told Egyptian negotiators it would agree to a truce in the Gaza Strip if Israel met certain conditions.

Khaled Meshaal, the exiled political leader of Hamas, his group's demands include a year-long, renewable ceasefire, the withdrawal of all Israel forces within five-to-seven days, and the immediate opening of all Gaza border crossings, backed by international guarantees they would stay open.

Israel insists Hamas must no longer be able to smuggle in weapons through tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border, and must end its rocket attacks on its southern towns.

Arab diplomacy

The office of Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, said Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, told him "the United States would be prepared to assist in solving the issue of smuggling".

Israeli leaders were expected to make decisions on the proposal on Thursday, after Israeli envoy Amos Gilad returned from a day-long trip to Cairo where he discussed the issue with Egyptian officials.

Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) leaders meeting in Riyadh, the Saudi capital, on Thursday to discuss the crisis agreed to continue the deliberations at a summit in Kuwait on Monday.

The Saudi summit came a day after Qatar unveiled its own plan for an Arab League meeting on the war to be held in Doha, the capital of Qatar, on Friday.

"We all know it is shameful to discuss the national and human cost of Gaza that has now been stained with children's blood at the margin of a previously planned summit," Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, the emir of Qatar, said.

"We have renewed our invitation for an emergency Arab summit in Doha but, whenever quorum has been reached, it falls short again."

When asked about the Doha summit, Saudi officials said there was no quorum to convene it.

But some leaders have arrived in Doha for the summit, including president Bashar al-Assad of Syria and Abdelaziz Bouteflika of Algeria.

Army fully prepared for challenges: COAS




Gen Kayani stresses ‘comprehensive national effort’ to tackle threats



ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Army is ready to deal with any threats to the country’s security, Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Kayani said on Thursday.

“Pakistan Army is fully prepared to meet the challenges,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) quoted the COAS as saying while chairing the 62nd Formation Commanders’ Conference at the General Headquarters (GHQ).

Gen Kayani said such a threat could best be defeated through a comprehensive national effort.

All corps commanders, principal staff officers and formation commanders attended the conference.

The ISPR said the participants of the conference were briefed on the prevailing security environment. “The spirit of sacrifice and high morale of troops are a guarantee for the defence of the country,” the COAS said.

The commanders also reviewed the operational preparedness of Pakistan Army. Gen Kayani expressed satisfaction on the military commanders’ efforts in this regard.

Pakistan says 71 arrested in Mumbai crackdown


ISLAMABAD— Pakistan on Thursday reaffirmed its commitment to root out extremists on its soil, saying it had so far arrested 71 people in a crackdown on banned groups in the wake of the Mumbai attacks.
Earlier, interior ministry chief Rehman Malik told reporters that Pakistan had arrested 124 members of an Islamic charity linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which New Delhi has blamed for the Mumbai carnage in late November.
But interior secretary Syed Kamal Shah later told AFP there had been a "mix-up" about the figures at the press conference, saying 71 people had been detained and another 124 placed under virtual house arrest.
"Those who are placed under surveillance cannot leave their homes or area without informing the authorities about it. This is stringent surveillance," Shah said, noting suspects were being watched under Pakistan's anti-terror act.
Malik said Pakistan was "very, very serious" about fighting extremism, saying the anti-terror fight was the "only option" for Islamabad.
The 71 people arrested are members of Jamaat-ud-Dawa, one of the country's biggest charities, but which is widely viewed as the political wing of LeT, banned here after an attack on the Indian parliament in late 2001.
The crackdown came in response to a UN Security Council resolution passed last month, describing Jamaat-ud-Dawa as a terror group.
Immediately after the resolution was passed, Pakistan placed the charity's leader Hafiz Saeed -- who is also the founder of LeT -- under house arrest and froze the group's assets.
Malik said Thursday the state had since shut down five Jamaat-ud-Dawa camps, blocked six websites and closed several madrassas, or religious schools.
The senior official said that Islamabad needed more information from India in order to proceed with its own probe into the attacks in Mumbai and eventual prosecution of suspects, but expressed solidarity with New Delhi.
"We are with you. We have given commitment to the international community. We have to fight our common enemy," Malik said.
"This is the time that Pakistan and India need to stick together," he said, but added: "We'll be needing more information."
Malik said a high-powered team from the Federal Investigation Agency -- Pakistan's FBI -- would review all material provided by India in connection with the Mumbai attacks, which killed 174 people including nine of the gunmen.
Islamabad "will inquire into this matter with full conviction," he told reporters.
Tensions between the two nuclear-armed rivals escalated after India accused "official agencies" in Pakistan of involvement in the attacks -- a claim that authorities here have vehemently denied.
Islamabad has confirmed that the lone surviving gunman, who is in Indian custody, is a Pakistani national.
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said Tuesday that he did not believe the Pakistani state had directed the attacks -- a statement welcomed by Malik.
Miliband is due in Pakistan on Friday for talks with senior officials.

Hayden Says Al-Qaeda Now Less Welcome in Pakistan Tribal Areas


The tribal regions in northwest Pakistan have become a lot less welcoming to the al-Qaeda terrorist network and its allies, CIA Director Michael Hayden said today.

The Islamic militants are “beginning to realize, beginning to think, this is neither safe nor a haven,” Hayden said in a farewell interview with reporters at Central Intelligence Agency headquarters in Langley, Virginia.

He said the agency and Pakistan’s military have put increasing pressure on al-Qaeda. The U.S. has carried out a series of missile strikes in recent months in these areas, and Hayden today said he’s seen progress “since last summer” in curbing the militants.

Al-Qaeda fighters sought shelter in this rugged mountainous region after the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, which ousted the ruling Taliban militia. Hayden and other U.S. intelligence officials have said al-Qaeda and their Taliban supporters use bases there to plan and carry out attacks on coalition forces across the border in Afghanistan.

Hayden said that confronting al-Qaeda must remain a priority for the next CIA director. President-elect Barack Obama has nominated Leon Panetta, former chief of staff to President Bill Clinton, for this post.

Obama said yesterday that al-Qaeda remains the top threat to national security and eliminating its bases of operation will continue to be a U.S. priority in his administration.

“We’re going to do everything in our power to make sure that they cannot create safe havens” from which to attack the U.S., Obama said. He spoke after getting briefed by Vice President-elect Joe Biden and Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who just returned from a trip to Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq.

PIA to start Peshawar-Kabul flights





PESHAWAR: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) plans to start a weekly flight on the Peshawar-Kabul route from January 31.

With the beginning of the Peshawar-Kabul-Peshawar flight, a long standing demand would be met. In particular, traders and businessmen in Peshawar and Kabul had been demanding PIA flights linking the two cities.

The once-a-week flight will be scheduled on Saturdays. PIA already operates two flights a week between Islamabad and Kabul every Monday and Thursday.

Peshawar offers connecting flights to a number of cities in Pakistan and also to destinations in the Gulf and these flights would suit many Afghan passengers flying to Peshawar from Kabul. A number of airlines operate flights between Peshawar and Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, Jeddah, Doha, etc.

Jet Ditches in Hudson; All Are Said Safe









A US Airways jetliner with 150 passengers and 5 crew members plunged into the icy Hudson River on Thursday afternoon less than five minutes after taking off from LaGuardia Airport. A spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration said everyone on board escaped safely.

Moments after the plane, a twin jet Airbus A320 bound for Charlotte, N.C., crashed into the river, at least a half-dozen small craft converged on the crippled aircraft and rescued the freezing passengers, two pilots and three flight attendants.

“It would appear the pilot did a masterful job of landing in the river and making sure everybody got out,” Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said at an early evening news conference. “I had a long conversation with the pilot, he walked the plane twice and made sure that everybody was out.”

Some of the passengers were taken to hospitals in New York and New Jersey, and several were treated for hypothermia after being plucked from the wings of the aircraft. It was one of the coldest days of the year in New York City, with the air temperature in the 20s and water temperature about 40 degrees.

A spokeswoman for the F.A.A., Laura J. Brown, said that a flock of birds had might have been sucked into the jet engines, but several aircraft manufactures said such occurrences are rare.

The two engines on the plane were manufactured by CFM International, a joint venture operated by General Electric and Snecma, a company based in France. A spokeswoman for CFM said she did not know the age of the engines or whether they had been involved in previous incidents.

Stunned and shivering passengers who were rescued from the jetliner described a frightening scene in the three minutes from takeoff to a hard landing into the river, and then a surprisingly controlled exit from the partly submerged aircraft.

Jeff Kolodjay, 31, who was traveling with his father and a brother and was seated over the left wing, said he heard the left engine blow.

"The left engine just blew and there were flames,” Mr. Kolodjay said. “It started smelling a lot like gasoline. The pilot got on and said, ‘You guys got to brace for a hard impact.’ That’s when everyone started to say their prayers. I got to give it to the pilot, he did a hell of a landing.”

Alberto Panero, another passenger, told CNN: “Within a couple of minutes all of a sudden you just heard a loud bang, and the plane shook a bit and immediately you could smell smoke, like fire. Although it didn’t seem like it was out of control we knew something was going on because we were turning back.”

Mr. Panero added: “We just hit, and somehow the plane just stayed afloat and we were able to get on the raft and, it’s just incredible right now that everyone’s still alive.”

Mr. Kolodjay said that the plane started taking on water soon after it hit the river. “It was filled up to our waist by the time we got off,” he said.

Accounts from witnesses, including those on the Weehawken Ferry who aided in the rescue, were equally gripping.

David Watta, a 42-year old vice president of Product Management at Shermans Travel Media, was heading home on the first ferry to reach the plane.

Mr. Watta said in a telephone interview that his ferry was diverted to the plane after about two minutes out of port.

"A lot of people were in shock, and a lot of people were freezing,” he said. “They loaded about fifty onto the boat, and we gave them our coats to warm them up and tried to comfort them. We were holding people, hugging them, reassuring them, holding there hands, warming them with our body heat. We tried to take them to the back of the ferry which was warmer because it was furthest from the entrance.

He added: “We provided cell phones so they could call loved ones, a lot of them were so cold that they couldn’t dial so we dialed for them. I would say that everyone on the ferry were heroes for the day, they were all civilians who stepped up in a time of need to help their fellow citizens.”

Ms. Brown of the F.A.A. said the plane took off from Runway 4 at LaGuardia, made a left turn after takeoff, which is standard procedure, and moments later glided to an unexpected stop on the icy, gray Hudson.

Port Imperial Ferry, which operates between Manhattan and Weehawken, shut down service during the rescue operation.

Coast Guard personnel rushed to the scene, from the stations in New York and Sandy Hook, N.J. In addition there were four helicopters dispatched from Atlantic City.

Most witnesses on the Manhattan side of the Hudson recalled an eerie sight of a plane flying too low over the Hudson River, sending chilling reminders of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Fulmer Duckworth, 41, an employee at the Bank of America who watched the incident unfold from the 29th floor of his building at West 42nd Street and Sixth Avenue. “It didn’t occur to me that it was a plane in the water.”

Mr. Duckworth said he saw the plane spin counterclockwise in the water, and then begin drifting down the river with the current. The plane had taken off at 3:26 p.m., and the tide was on its way out, pulling the downed craft south down the river as the number of blinking red lights on the river and the shoreline multiplied.

“Actually it looked like everybody was really calm, like on the subway platform when it’s really, really crowded, and everyone’s standing shoulder to shoulder,” he said. “Everyone was standing right up against each other on the wings.”

Witnesses said the plane, described by the manufacturer as a medium-range jetliner, floated for two or three minutes before it started to sink as it drifted downstream, its nose poking up.

“It didn’t break up at all,” Mr. Duckworth said. “Everything you could see looked perfectly intact, like you could take it out of the water and fly it.

Another witness, Matt Mireles, who sent an e-mail message to The New York Times, said that from the window of his Upper West Side apartment he saw white smoke trailing from the left engine shortly before it glided onto the icy gray water.

The Airbus has sold nearly 3,600 airplanes in the A320 series since it was introduced in 1988. There have been 19 major accidents and 631 fatalities. There have also been 33 non-fatal accidents involving engine failures, nose gear problems and minor collisions.

At the airport in Charlotte, where the flight was scheduled to arrive at 5:16 p.m. and then depart for Seattle at 6:10, the arrival board said the plane was still expected to arrive on time late into the afternoon.

But it would not.

“I just want to get warm and grab my family,” Mr. Kolodjay said as he stood on the promenade at 12th Avenue and 40th Street, blowing on his hands.