Friday, September 14, 2018

خشک سالی، بلاول بھٹو کی وزیراعلیٰ سندھ کو الرٹ رہنے کی ہدایت

پیپلز پارٹی کے چیئرمین بلاول بھٹو زرداری نے حکومت سندھ کو تھرپارکر سمیت صوبے کے دیگر علاقوں میں بارش نہ ہونے کے باعث پیدا ہونے والی صورتحال پر الرٹ رہنے کی ہدایت کردی ہے ۔
بلاول ہائوس میں پی پی چیئرمین نے وزیراعلیٰ سندھ سید مراد علی شاہ سے ملاقات کی اور کہا کہ سندھ حکومت نے عوام کی توقعات پر پورا اترنا ہے۔
انہوں نے کہا کہ بہتر حکمت عملی اور حکمرانی سے خشک سالی سے متاثر علاقوں کے حالات کو قابو اور بہتر بنایا جاسکتا ہے۔
بلاول بھٹو کا کہنا تھا کہ ان کی خواہش ہے کہ وہ عوام کی توقعات کے مطابق صوبہ سندھ کو ترقی یافتہ اور خوشحال دیکھنا چاہتے ہیں۔
ملاقات کے دوران وزیراعلیٰ مراد علی شاہ نے پارٹی چیئرمین کو ترقیاتی کاموں اور حکومت سندھ کی جانب سے آئندہ سالوں کے لئے زیرغور منصوبوں کے متعلق بریفنگ دی۔
https://jang.com.pk/news/550265

#Pakistan - FOUR SENIOR SHIA ISLAMIC SCHOLARS GAGGED AS NO CHANGE SEEN UNDER PTI GOVT

Pakistani Shia Muslims see no change even under the government of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf because ban on entry and speeches of many qualified, senior, law-abiding, pro-peace and moderate Shia Islamic scholars continues. Allama Sheikh Mohsin Ali Najafi, Allama Shifa Najafi, Allama Amin Shaheedi and Allama Raja Nasir Abbas Jafari are not allowed to address Majalis (mourning congregations).

These four qualified and senior Islamic scholars have no history of sectarianism. They always preach love, peace, unity and tolerance. They promote Islamic values and highlight the sacrifices of great Martyrs of Karbala and their leader Imam Hussain (AS) against the forces of tyranny.
It is also very much unfortunate that Allama Raja Nasir, Majlis-e-Wahdat-e-Muslimeen’s secretary general, is also named in the list of those gagged by PTI government. Allama Raja Nasir-led MWM remained an ally of PTI in elections 2018.
Shia Muslims demand that they would not tolerate gagging of law-abiding and qualified senior Islamic scholars. They said change has not come to Pakistan even under the PTI government of Imran Khan and incumbent government too continues to equate the victims of terrorism with the perpetrators of terrorism. They turned down this discriminatory policy targeting Shia Muslims and their qualified religious scholars who never preached anything that could be said violation of law.

a

#Pakistan - #Baluchistan - Dera Bugti women suffer due to absence of gynecologist



Mehnaz Bibi was being rushed to the hospital in a critical condition after her condition deteriorated. She was being shifted all the way from Dera Bugti to Rahim Yar Khan for treatment when she breathed her last.
The absence of a gynecologist at the district headquarter hospital in the downtrodden Dera Bugti had cost the pregnant lady her life, and there’s nothing her family was able to do about it.
Sadly, this is not the first woman in the district who died due to maternal complications.
According to Mehnaz’s family, many women and their children had died in the district as no lady gynecologist offered her services at the medical facility.
The maternal mortality rate has risen sharply in Dera Bugti since the past year. At least six such cases have been reported since last month, while the number has reached 21 in 2018.
Refuting the allegations the officials of District Health Department said, the prime cause of maternal mortalities in Dera Bugti were lack of awareness among women and families.
“In many cases pregnant women dies due to inappropriate care and lack of healthy foods which causing maternal mortalities in the District.” Health officials said adding lady gynecologist has been performing her duties from past many days and routinely checking maternal cases.

Tacit impunity for Pakistan as NSA Bolton raises nuclear alarm

By VIVEK KATJU

Occasionally, very occasionally, a relatively brief and unexpected comment throws unexpected light on what drives a policy. It can also highlight its severe limitations, and lay bare what is generally left unsaid or is deliberately obfuscated.
US National Security Adviser John Bolton’s response to a question about America’s Pakistan policy did exactly this just two days ago.
Bolton addressed the Federalist Society in Washington DC on September 10 on the topic of the International Criminal Court’s request for permission to investigate some US defense and intelligence personnel for “alleged war crimes”.
During the question and answer session that followed his speech a Pakistani journalist asked a question unrelated to the ICC. Instead, he asked about Imran Khan’s electionand the suspension of military assistance to Pakistan.
Bolton referred to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s August 6 visit to Islamabad and said, “He wanted to convey the message that we hoped and expected that Pakistan would cooperate fully in the war against terrorism which they had committed to do. It was before my time but the Trump administration did not take the decision to cancel a substantial part of the military aid package to Pakistan lightly. It was done knowing full well that Pakistan is a nuclear weapons state and the risk that the government could fall into the hands of terrorists who would get control of those nuclear weapons was particularly serious. But it is a serious problem on the sub-continent and I hope it’s one that the new government of Pakistan addresses because this terrorist threat is a threat, I think, to the majority of the people in Pakistan not to the terrorists and not to the some of their supporters in the military and elsewhere. It’s a matter of extra-ordinary importance to the United States and one that we hope that the new government addresses”.
The fear of Pakistani nuclear weapons falling into terrorists’ hands has existed since the 1990s. In an article in the New York Times in April 2017 Rahmatullah Nabil, the former head of Afghan intelligence, claimed that internal Pakistani classified documents had expressed concerns regarding terrorists’ threats to the country’s nuclear assets. However the underlying assumption has always been that the terrorists may be able to get hold of nuclear weapons and materials through subverting the system.
Never has an assertion been voiced as Bolton has done: that the government itself may be taken over by terrorists. This is dramatic because Bolton said that the “risk” of such an eventuality was “particularly serious”. Prima-facie, Bolton’s comment indicates a fear that the entire state apparatus, both civil and military, is at “risk” of falling into terrorist hands.
This implication is warranted for the Strategic Plans Division (SPD). Headed by a three-star general, the SPD acts as a secretariat of the National Command Authority which is chaired by the Prime Minister.
The Authority is, as the policy document setting up Pakistan’s Nuclear Command and Control system states, “responsible for policy formulation, and will exercise employment and development control over all strategic nuclear forces and strategic organizations”.
The SPD is entirely controlled by the Pakistan military even if, as Pakistan’s foremost expert on the country’s nuclear policies and structures, Naeem Salik says, “not the conventional military”. The security division of the SPD is headed by a two-star general and is “responsible for physical security, personnel security and counter-intelligence”. Naturally, Pakistan has always asserted that its weapons are entirely safe.
The underlying but obvious thought behind Bolton’s assertion is that since Pakistan’s nuclear assets are in danger of falling into terrorists’ hands, nothing should be done to impair its military as it is the institution which guards, if not, as it is widely believed, controls these assets. Only then would a decision to suspend a part of the military aid package be such a big deal and not be “taken lightly”. This also explains why the US has been willing to live with Pakistan’s duplicity on Afghanistan.
President Trump has himself vented his frustration on Pakistan’s behavior. He tweeted on New Year’s Day, “The United States has foolishly given Pakistan over 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies and deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools. They give safe havens to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan, with little help. No more!”. Despite these strong words, action has been limited to putting economic pressure on Pakistan through suspending military assistance and the Financial Action Task Force. Pakistan has absorbed all this pressure.
Significantly, the army has not been touched at all. No sanctions have been imposed on any of its personnel. This is notwithstanding its direct role in aiding the Taliban, which through its actions has killed about 2500 US service personnel in Afghanistan and has been responsible for America’s longest war, one still with no end in sight. US restraint against the Pakistan army has naturally resulted in it feeling immune from any real action against it. It has, therefore, no incentive to change what it is doing in Afghanistan.
Bolton reiterated what the US has been asking Pakistan to do for years: contribute to controlling terrorism. But if terrorism is responsible for US restraint, why would the Pakistan army seek to control it? Logic dictates that it is then in Pakistan’s interest to let terrorism proceed, for it represents a shield that prevents the US from taking decisive action, confining itself to steps that Pakistan can absorb.
Bolton’s fear that terrorists have supporters in “the military and elsewhere” is also noteworthy but needs a nuanced understanding. There is no doubt that religiosity has risen very substantially in the army since the Islamization policy undertaken by President General Zia-ul-Haq in the late 1970s and 1980s. There may be supporters of the terrorists’ objectives among high-ranking military figures, and the army leadership uses terrorists to promote Pakistan’s external interests.
Certainly, it is not in the generals’ interest to allow an increase of terrorists’ influence or support in the army. Equally certainly, it is in the US and the international community’s interest not to permit Pakistan, especially its army, impunity over its use of terrorists. Comments such as those of John Bolton and the thinking on which they are based, currently assure them of that impunity.

KP police issue arrest warrants against PTM's Pashteen, Wazir, six others



Arrest warrants for the chief of the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM) Manzoor Pashteen, MNA Ali Wazir, and six others have been issued by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) government, it emerged on Friday.

According to a notification issued by the Swabi Superintendent of Police and sent to political agents in Waziristan on Friday, Pashteen, Wazir, Dr Said Alam Masood, Fazal Advocate, Khan Zaman, Mohsin Dawood, Samad Khan and Noorul Salam have been named as "proclaimed offenders" and are "required to be arrested" in connection with a case registered against them on August 28.
The "case" pertains to a jalsa (gathering) which was held by the movement that day — in defiance of orders barring them from doing so — against human rights violations and for the recovery of missing persons.
PTM — a movement for the rights of those affected by the war against militancy in the tribal areas, especially South Waziristan — has been protesting in different parts of the country against enforced disappearances, extrajudicial arrests and killings, as well as the mistreatment of the Pakhtun community.
PTM first made headlines in Islamabad following the extrajudicial killing of Waziristan native Naqeebullah Mehsud — a shopkeeper and aspiring model — by police in Karachi in January.
The movement's leaders claim that in the past decade, 32,000 Pashtuns have gone missing from Fata. They insist that their struggle is to ensure implementation of the Constitution, under which law-enforcement agencies are supposed to provide details of the people they pick up and present them before courts within a stipulated time period.