Japan PM’s party at risk of setback in Sunday vote

July 11 (Reuters) – Japan’s ruling coalition could lose control of parliament’s upper house in an election on Sunday that could stall efforts to curb a huge public debt and ultimately put Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s job at risk.

Sagging support for the leading Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), which surged to power for the first time last year, rebounded after Kan — Japan’s fifth leader in three years — replaced his indecisive predecessor last month.

But ratings slipped again after Kan floated the long taboo topic of raising sales tax to curb a public debt, already close to twice the size of the nearly $5 trillion economy. He also struggled to persuade voters he had a clear plan to fix Japan’s economy.

Kan has since stressed he would not hike the sales tax “one yen” without seeking a mandate in the next lower house poll, which must be held by late 2013, but stressed that Japan must make tough decisions to avoid a Greek-style debt crisis.

“Ten to 30 years from now, will people look back and think, the prime minister said something catchy but things went wrong, or … the prime minister said what was bitter and harsh, but that was the start of rebuilding our economy and social security system?” Kan said on Saturday as he wound up his campaign.

“I am determined to do something that will not go down in history with shame.”

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

See graphics:

PM support falls over sales tax: r.reuters.com/myv63g

DPJ lead narrows over rival: link.reuters.com/jev83j

Japan's massive public debt: r.reuters.com/sez92m

Upper house seats before poll: link.reuters.com/tuv85m

More stories on the Japanese politics: [ID:nPOLJP] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

MISSING THE TARGET?

The DPJ, which ousted its long-dominant rival last year with pledges to cut waste, pry control of policymaking from bureaucrats and focus spending on households to boost growth, will almost certainly run the government whatever the outcome of Sunday’s vote because it controls the powerful lower house.

But the party needs a majority in the upper chamber to avoid policy deadlock and begin taking steps to reduce a public debt that is the worst among advanced countries.

Media surveys last week showed the DPJ would likely win around 50 or even fewer of the 121 seats up for grabs in the 242-member chamber — well short of Kan’s target of keeping all 54 seats the Democrats have up for re-election.

That would deprive the DPJ and its tiny coalition partner, the pro-spending People’s New Party, of a majority in the upper house. The Democrats would be forced to seek new allies, complicating the government’s ability to forge ahead with the fiscal reform that Kan has put at the heart of his campaign.

It would also leave Kan vulnerable to a challenge from party powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa — a critic of his sales tax proposal — ahead of a September party leadership vote. Few, though, would expect Kan to go without a fight.

Many voters have been having trouble finding a party to their taste — although a flurry of new, small parties has broadened their options — with surveys showing a hefty chunk were undecided, making precise predictions difficult.

The DPJ’s current coalition partner opposes raising the 5 percent sales tax any time soon, as do some potential allies.

Other opposition parties agree a hike is inevitable but would probably be reluctant to help out the rival DPJ. [ID:nTOE661014]

The leaders of two potential partners, the small, pro-reform Your Party and New Komeito, which partnered with the Liberal Democratic Party until its defeat last year, have rejected the idea of an alliance with the DPJ.

Analysts say they might change their tune later, but would drive hard bargains if the Democrats fare badly. (Editing by Ralph Boulton)

India”s iconic ”Amby” car no longer a motorist’s favourite

London, May 11 (ANI): India’s famed snub-nosed Ambassador appears to finally be on its way out after manufacturers Hindustan Motors reported further losses.

Fiscal losses for 2009-10 were pegged at 429 million rupees from 378 million rupees the previous year.

India”s oldest automaker said its net worth had tumbled by over 50 per cent and it must now report to the state-run Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction for possible revival.

The company, however, remains upbeat. The Ambassador has been chosen as the official car to ferry athletes around at the Commonwealth Games in October.

But analysts are doubtful about longer-term prospects for the company, whose shares have nose-dived.

It “could hang on tenaciously to some small corner of the market, but it”s no longer the purchase of choice,” The Telegraph quoted Murad Ali Baig, one of India”s leading independent automobile analysts.

Hindustan Motors has never returned to its glory days in the 1970s when “the Amby,” as it was affectionately known, held a market stranglehold of around 70 per cent.

Sleek new cars that made its plump contours look dowdy when India began opening its markets to the world have muscled it out.

The Ambassador”s bulky design, based on the 1950s British-built Morris Oxford, has changed little since it first rolled off the assembly line in 1957, although the engine is now more powerful.

For years the Ambassador was the only car driven by senior government officials and people always knew when a “power do” was on in the national capital because of the fleet of Ambassadors outside.

But now many bureaucrats have abandoned the 9,460 dollar Ambassador in favour of sportier sedans or SUVs.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is ferried around in an armoured black BMW.

Even taxi drivers — who were among the Ambassador”s most loyal buyers — are opting for more fuel-efficient compacts. (ANI)

PM refuses to front insulation inquiry

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says he will not appear before a Senate inquiry into the scrapped home insulation program.

A Senate committee is trying to establish what went wrong with the $2.45 billion scheme which was axed after it was linked to the deaths of installers, house fires and allegations of rorting.

The committee has asked Mr Rudd, the minister formerly responsible for the scheme Peter Garrett, the new minister responsible Greg Combet, and Employment Participation Minister Mark Arbib to appear. They have all refused.

Mr Rudd’s office says Question Time is the appropriate place for ministers to answer questions on the issue.

“That is the place to question ministers, not stunts like the Opposition’s party-political inquiry,” a spokesman for Mr Rudd said.

Liberal Senator Mary Jo Fisher, who chairs the environment references committee, says the response “gets a laugh out loud from the committee chairwoman”.

“The Australian people would find that response … offensive,” Senator Fisher said.

“It is dismissive of the fraud, the fires, the accidents, the fatalities that have happened.”

Senator Fisher says the Coalition-dominated committee has not been able to get satisfactory answers from bureaucrats so they wanted to go straight to the top.

The committee would consider its options after Mr Rudd and the ministers refused to appear, she said.

Opposition environment spokesman Greg Hunt says the Prime Minister should appear before the Senate inquiry.

“This is not like any other government failure of the last 30 years, there has been a huge human impact,” Mr Hunt said.

“The Prime Minister should appear to explain what the Government knew and why they made the decisions and why they ignored the warnings.”

Pak suspends officials blamed in UN’s Bhutto assassination report

Islamabad, Apr 19(ANI): The Pakistan Government has suspended eight officials, including former City Police Officer (CPO) Saud Aziz, who were responsible for on former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s security at her last rally in Rawalpindi.

Presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar confirmed the suspension, saying the orders had come from Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

“The action on the UN report has been started on the directives of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani,” The Dawn quoted Babar, as saying.

The government has already initiated action against several serving and retired bureaucrats in connection with the Bhutto assassination case by placing their names on the Exit Control List (ECL).

The move follows after a UN report held officials directly or indirectly responsible for the assassination.

Pakistan People”s Party (PPP) insiders said the party has decided to take legal action against all government officials who failed to protect Bhutto.

The Interior Ministry has compiled a list of 13 senior government officers, which include former Director General of Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) Lt. Gen. (Retd) Hamid Gul, former Chief of Intelligence Bureau (IB) Brig. (Retd) Ijaz Shah, former federal Interior Secretary Kamal Shah and a senior bureaucrat of Punjab Government Ashfaq Anwar. (ANI)

Pak suspends officials blamed in UN’s Bhutto assassination report

Islamabad, Apr 19(ANI): The Pakistan Government has suspended eight officials, including former City Police Officer (CPO) Saud Aziz, who were responsible for on former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s security at her last rally in Rawalpindi.

Presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar confirmed the suspension, saying the orders had come from Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

“The action on the UN report has been started on the directives of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani,” The Dawn quoted Babar, as saying.

The government has already initiated action against several serving and retired bureaucrats in connection with the Bhutto assassination case by placing their names on the Exit Control List (ECL).

The move follows after a UN report held officials directly or indirectly responsible for the assassination.

Pakistan People”s Party (PPP) insiders said the party has decided to take legal action against all government officials who failed to protect Bhutto.

The Interior Ministry has compiled a list of 13 senior government officers, which include former Director General of Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) Lt. Gen. (Retd) Hamid Gul, former Chief of Intelligence Bureau (IB) Brig. (Retd) Ijaz Shah, former federal Interior Secretary Kamal Shah and a senior bureaucrat of Punjab Government Ashfaq Anwar. (ANI)

Could take decade to train Indigenous doctors

The universities behind the Northern Territory’s first medical school are hoping many of its first graduates will be Indigenous and at least half will work in remote Australia.

The Indigenous Health Minister Warren Snowdon turned the first sod on the Charles Darwin University medical school, that will see $27.8 million will be spent on a building and training facilities at Royal Darwin Hospital.

The university’s vice-chancellor Barney Glover has high hopes for the first graduation ceremony in 2015.

“I hope that a majority of them are Indigenous in 2015, but it’s a bit early to tell,” Prof Glover said.

Flinders University will run the program and its vice-chancellor, Michael Barber says $3.5 million in Commonwealth money will be used to attract Indigenous graduates from other fields.

“We don’t want to take away every Indigenous teacher, healthcare worker, even Indigenous bureaucrats,” Prof Barber said.

Prof Barber says it could take a decade to train substantial numbers of home grown Indigenous doctors.

He says Indigenous students now entering year nine have to make the important decisions that will lead to a career as a doctor.

“Don’t drop mathematics,” Prof Barber said.

“And you may wonder about why you need mathematics to get into medicine other than racking up your bill at the end, but it’s an enabling subject.

“So those decisions, convincing students out there that there is more out there to aspire to than maybe they should have that will take us probably a decade to bring up.”

Construction is due to start next week.

Pay rise for public servants

The Salaries and Allowances Tribunal is tomorrow expected to lift the wage freeze imposed on WA’s senior public servants.

In August last year the tribunal froze the wages of the executives because of the tough economic climate.

At the time it said it would remove the cap as soon as economic conditions permitted.

The tribunal is expected to award the executives a four per cent increase tomorrow, a rise of almost $14,000 for bureaucrats at the top of the scale, taking their salaries to $355,000.

Pranab Mukherjee calls for all-party meeting over Women”s Reservation Bill

New Delhi, Mar 31 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has called for an all-party meeting over the Women”s Reservation Bill on April 5 before it is tabled in the upcoming session of the Parliament.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati has called for countrywide protests against the Bill next month, saying that the legislation was against Dalit icon Bhim Rao Ambedkar”s ideology of empowering women from all sections of society.

Mayawati-led Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) has planned to hold the protests at the tehsil level and has asked its leaders to educate people about the ”flaws” in the Bill.

Mayawati has said the BSP is not against the reservation, but wants a sub-quota for the women from the weaker sections of society.

Union Law Minister Veerappa Moily on Tuesday said that the government would seek to get the Women”s Reservation Bill passed in the Lok Sabha during the second half of the current session of Parliament, which re-convenes on April 15.

Moily, however, denied that there would be changes in the Bill.

The Bill has been strongly opposed by the Yadav trio- Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad Yadav, Samajwadi Party (SP) chief Mulayam Singh Yadav and Janata Dal-United (JD-U) supreme Sharad Yadav, who have been demanding a quota within quota for women from backward communities and minorities.

Both Lalu Yadav and Sharad Yadav have threatened to withdraw support from the government if the Bill is passed in its present form.

Mulayam Singh Yadav had earlier made sexist remarks over the Bill saying “men would whistle at women parliamentarians coming through quota”, asserting that he purposefully made these remarks so as to stir up a debate over the Women”s Reservation Bill, which he claimed would only benefit women related to industrialists and bureaucrats.

The controversial yet historic Women”s Reservation Bill seeks to provide 33 percent reservation for women in Parliament and in state legislative bodies. (ANI)

Mulayam”s remarks over Women”s Reservation Bill draw controversy

Lucknow, Mar 24 (ANI): Samajwadi Party (SP) chief Mulayam Singh Yadav”s remarks over the Women”s Reservation Bill has angered different political outfits, as they now want an apology from him.

Yadav at a rally on Tuesday said that if the Women”s Reservation Bill would be passed in its present form, it would help women belonging to the families of industrialists and bureaucrats, who were of the kind youths would want to whistle at.

Women workers of the Samajwadi Party are not ready for this Bill, asserted Yadav, saying that they would get ready for a prolonged agitation soon.

Reacting to Yadav”s remarks, Congress spokesperson Abhishek Manu Singhvi said at least fun or insult should not be made of the female sections of our society.

“If this is indeed the comment, all I can say that your use of respectful words for all sections of society should increase with your political seniority and political experience,” said Singhvi.

“If you cannot do much for the female sections of our society, at least do not insult them, at least do not deride them, at least do not make fun of them,” he added.

Uttar Pradesh Congress Committee chief spokesperson Subodh Srivastava said that making such derogatory and insulting comments against women and that too at a function organised on the birth centenary celebrations of Ram Manohar Lohia was an insult to the late socialist leader, who had been a great supporter of woman empowerment.

Srivastava too demanded an apology from Yadav.

The Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), meanwhile, criticized Yadav”s comments, saying that it reflected his cheap and sick mentality.

“BSP strongly condemns irresponsible statement given by the SP chief that only women and girls of affluent class would get benefit of the women”s reservation and youths would pass comment on them,” said BSP state President Swami Prasad Maurya.

“Such a childish statement is unbecoming of a person, who had been the Chief Minister of the state and had been a Union Minister,” he added.

The Samajwadi Party supremo addressing his party workers said the Bill would benefit only those women belonging to the families of industrialists and bureaucrats, adding that not a single male would be elected to the Lok Sabha 10 years after the Bill comes into force

Yadav also advocated quota for the fairer sex within political parties asserting that it should be made mandatory to reserve 15 percent tickets to women. (ANI)

Rudd flags two-tier hospital system

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the Government will offer incentive payments to outstanding hospitals under its new health plan.

If the states and territories agree to the plan, the Government will draw up a set of national benchmarks for the delivery of hospital services.

At last night’s Australian Medical Association dinner, Mr Rudd said hospitals that exceeded the standards would be given more funding.

“We will put money on the line to drive those standards,” he said.

“[The Government will provide] more funds to deliver essential health services and drive innovation and improvements across our hospitals.

“We must improve waiting times for emergency services. We must improve waiting times for elective surgery. But consistent with the move to activity-based funding, we won’t be handing over blank cheques.

“We believe it is crucial to recognise concrete improvements in a concrete way. This will give local hospitals more funds to deliver essential health services and drive innovation and improvements across our hospitals.”

But the president of the Australian Medical Association, Dr Andrew Pesce, says a major restructure of the health system will be hard for the sector.

“It’s obviously painful for the Government, it’s painful for the Opposition, it’s painful for politicians, it’s painful for the state ministers it’s painful for the department of health bureaucrats,” he said.

“And it’s going to be painful for the medical profession, because if we are going to deliver change which delivers good outcomes, there are no free kicks – we are all going to have to contribute.”

‘Amateur hour experimentation’

The Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says elements of the Government’s health plan have merit, but he wants more detail.

Mr Abbott told the AMA gathering that he does like the idea of paying hospitals directly for the services they deliver.

“Paying a hospital to do something makes more sense than rewarding a hospital for doing nothing,” he said.

But he was very critical of the Prime Minister’s “overly bureaucratic” plan and expressed doubts that Commonwealth public servants will be able to implement it.

“The hospital system is too important to be subject to amateur hour experimentation,” he said.

“I think that every Australian should be very concerned that Mr Rudd and his ministers can’t rule out tax increases to pay for their experimentation with public hospitals.

“It has the potential to close down hundreds of country hospitals, it will add a substantial additional bureaucrats and he can’t in the longer term rule out new taxes to pay for it.

“So all up it’s a disastrous plan.”

Zardari being unnecessarily targeted for his overture to India: Editorial

Islamabad, Sep.17 (ANI): An editorial in one of the leading English dailies of Pakistan has highlighted that President Asif Ali Zardari is being unnecessarily targeted and criticized by certain quarters in the country even if he attempts to address the long pending issues with India in his bid to de-escalate tension between the two neighbour countries.

The Daily Times editorial said while Zardari is condemned for his overture to India, similar actions taken by former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif goes unnoticed in the country.

“President Zardari is pilloried if he makes a friendly overture to India; a similar overture made by Mr Nawaz Sharif is either ignored or actually praised,” the editorial said.

It also brought to light how several retired army officials and bureaucrats have suddenly jumped out of their retirement to denounce Zardari’s every action.

“Retired generals and retired bureaucrats whose ‘stand-still’ strategy with India in the past has brought Pakistan to its present crisis point, have crept out of their retirement to express their shock at how President Zardari is harming Pakistan through his diplomacy with China, the United States and the European Union,” the editorial stated.

The editorial went on to add that Zardari is right in his part to woo the international community, especially China and the US.

“Pakistan needs a lot of placatory diplomacy, not hostile ‘action’, given its past failed strategies,” it concluded. (ANI)

Ministers, bureaucrats should travel in economy class: Mukherjee

New Delhi, Sep 11 (ANI): In a clear and firm message Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said on Friday that ministers and bureaucrats who are entitled to travel on state expenses should undertake domestic travel in economy class.

Mukherjee said that they could fly in business class for international travel.

“The austerity measures are not new and have been in the standing instructions of the Finance Committee since 2005, but have not been adhered to till now,” Mukherjee said.

Mean while, according to a report published by the Indian Express that the matter was raised in the Thursday’s cabinet meeting, and several minister’s raised objection to Mukherjee’s suggestion and also sought clarifications.

Mukherjee, also said the Congress will implement a 20 per cent salary cut for its MPs and will request the Speaker to suggest the same to other parties also.

The austerity measures are needed to tide over these recessionary times, Mukherjee said. (ANI)

Rajasthan Govt directs public servants to pay proper respect to MPs, MLAs

Jaipur, Sep. 2 (ANI): In a bizarre move, the Rajasthan government has directed all the government employees to properly welcome and see off visiting MPs and MLAs.

Among other things, the directive requires government employees to stand up when a lawmaker comes to visit them.

“Respecting them is essential and usually they come to address the grievances of the common man and not with their own personnel issues. In our culture we usually stand up when someone visits us and welcoming someone by just sitting on our chairs is not a part of our culture,” said Ashok Bairwa, spokesman, Rajasthan government.

On their part, the government employees have reacted with mixed notions.

They have contended that there was no need for such an order as they were already respecting public leaders, in and out of office.

“There might be an instance because of which the government had to issue this order. We are not aware of any such instance. I personally feel that employees and officers of the district administration have never shown dissent or disrespect to them nor such a feeling like this has ever come into their minds,” said Gowri Shankar Soni, a government employee.

Many Congress party MPs and MLAs have often complained about indifference of bureaucrats and other staff members towards them. (ANI)

Team Vajpaee’s final assault on Team Advani

New Delhi, Aug 27 (ANI): It has always been Team Advani vs Team Vajpayee. And now as former Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee is too ill to intervene in the bloodletting in his party, watches, his former team has got together once again to wage that final assault on their perpetual enemy, Lal Krishna Advani.

Jaswant Singh, Arun Shourie, Brajesh Mishra and Yashwant Sinha have a common cause. To oust Advani. And their ‘Brahmastra’ is the Kandhar hijacking episode. Did Advani know or not that Jaswant Singh was accompanying the released terrorists to Afghanistan and bringing back the hostages with him? Advani had said on several occasions that he was unaware of the details. Team Vajpayee says he knew everything. Isn’t there any note taking that happens at these meetings?he Team Advani vs Team Vajpayee war has been on for more than 15 years. This city was divided into two camps. Not just the BJP. There were journalists who were loyal to one or the other, bureaucrats too. They just had to make the choice, there was no option.

If you were a beat journalist during the years Mr Vajpayee was Prime Minister, it was an unstated rule that you either got your story from Team Advani or Team Vajpayee. The families and team members saw to it that journalists and bureaucrats who visited the office or home of Advani had no access to Vajpayee’s. There were just two or three editors who were received graciously in both camps; otherwise mutual suspicion was so great that loyalty had to be proved.

Team Vajpayee had that master craftsman and the Chanakya of Indian politics, Brajesh Mishra, as the Brigade Commander. It was an open secret in the capital that in the latter years of Vajpayee’s tenure, Mishra acted as defacto Prime Minister. A more shrewd, credible and efficient deputy is unimaginable. He had no personal agenda. Vajpayee trusted him and had great respect for his skills. And then there was Jaswant Singh, who wasn’t very popular with journalists, but was loyal to the king. A true Rajput. Then the word master Arun Shourie. Another person who wasn’t really in the core team but Vajpayee trusted him implicitly simply because he knew Shourie had no personal agenda.

Yashwant Sinha and Vasundhara went back and forth from camp to camp, but today they are firmly in camp Vajpai. There is no Commander-in-Chief, but they have the Sena on their side.

During the years that Vajpayee was Prime Minister, his team always looked upon Advani with suspicion. Never quite sure when he would try to pull the rug from under the carpet of their poet prime minister. A man who they thought was too soft to ever wage an all out war, but shrewd enough to know that Advani was never comfortable being No 2. He was supposed to the Prime Minister candidate in 1995 but then the Jain Hawala scandal erupted and hey presto it catapulted Vajpai onto the scene. Team Advani, always on the look out for conspiracy theories hinted at a pact between Rao and Vajpayee, which might have been the reason why Advani was out of the reckoning. Another of those unsolved mysteries of Indian politics.

Team Vajpayee held together even when out of power. But team Advani which seemed like a well oiled machine during the election campaign of 2009 came apart. Advani as prime ministerial candidate was unacceptable to the people of India and that was something most BJP leaders knew even during the campaign but so many of them in private conversations would express their helplessness.

Nobody had the courage to tell Advani to step down. The constant refrain was “if only Vajpayee was there”. Without Vajpayee, his team loosely hung around in the periphery of the BJP maharathis like Sushma Swaraj, Arun Jaitley, Rajnath Singh, Ananth Kumar who it seemed had no option but to be in team Advani as there was nobody else.

But when Advani refused to step down despite the electoral defeat in 2009, and stayed on as Leader of the Opposition and then a month ago said he would stay beyond December 30th, it really was too much to bear. If many thought Advani’s announcement was a blow to the BJP, think again. It was that one rallying point for Team Vajpayee to make that final assault on the man, they had wanted to do for so long but hadn’t because their boss wouldn’t let them. They want his scalp and will not rest till they have it. And they can smell victory. There is no team Advani. The bureaucrats fled from the scene the day the government fell in May 2004. The journalists who hung around were only the “bite reporters”. There was no story worth chasing here. Not one BJP leader, nay worker, is speaking out in defense of Advani. Not even “Master Anant Kumar” as Arun Shourie referred to him in that scathing interview he gave to Shekhar Gupta.

Will Advani fade away from the political scene like Richard Nixon did, on an untruth told to a nation? Will he confess, own up that he misled the nation? Or will he gather his forces and fight back. The case gets curiouser and curiouser. By Smita Prakash (ANI)

India befriends Afghanistan, irking Pakistan

Kabul, Aug.21 (ANI): India has become a major donor of Afghanistan, and its growing presence here is riling arch rival Pakistan.

From wells and toilets to power plants and satellite transmitters, India is seeding Afghanistan with a vast array of projects.

The 1.2 billion dollars in pledged assistance includes projects both vital to Afghanistan’s economy, such as a completed road link to Iran’s border, and symbolic of its democratic aspirations, such as the construction of a new parliament building in Kabul.

The Indian government is also paying to bring scores of bureaucrats to India, as it cultivates a new generation of Afghan officialdom.

India’s aid has elevated it to Afghanistan’s top tier of donors.

In terms of pledged donations through 2013, India now ranks fifth behind the U.S., U.K., Japan and Canada, according to the Afghanistan government.

Pakistan doesn’t rank in the top 10. (ANI)

How can jihadis termed as heroes now be arch-enemies, asks Pak paper

Islamabad, July 10 (ANI): A leading Pakistani daily has asked how is it possible to rationally explain to the people of the country that militants who were termed as heroes of yesteryear by the state are the arch-enemies today.

Speaking about the root cause of Pakistan’s problems, President Asif Ali Zardari said that the military’s erstwhile ‘strategic assets’ were the ones against whom military operations were now required, The Dawn says.

And in a meeting with retired senior bureaucrats in Islamabad on Tuesday, Zardari again said that “militants and extremists had been deliberately created and nurtured as a policy to achieve some short-term tactical objectives.”

The paper asks Zardari that if the policy of creating militants was wrong earlier, then it is wrong now. It cannot be any other way.

It would be not possible to explain to Pakistani people that the heroes of yesteryear are the arch-enemies of today. The militants’ religious justifications remain the same; what’s changed is that the militants were fighting the state’s ‘enemies’ yesterday, but now have turned their guns on the state and its allies.

The paper asks should we have ever used jihadi proxies to fight the Russians in Afghanistan? Should we have ever supported the idea of armed jihad in Kashmir? Should we have ever sought to retain our influence in Afghanistan through the Taliban?

If any of those choices ever made sense, then we should have no complaints about the rise of Talibanisation in Pakistan because we created the climate and opportunity for them to run amok, it adds.

It further says that fault is of course not of Pakistan alone and the US obsession with the Soviet enemy, happily colluded in the creation of Muslim warriors.

Pakistan’s Middle Eastern and Gulf allies were happy to create a Sunni army to counter the ‘threat’ from post-revolution Shia Iran, but at the end of the day it was Pakistani soil on which they were primarily nurtured.

The jihadis were raised in our midst we should have always been wary of the extreme blowback we are now confronted with, the Dawn says. (ANI)

Zardari drops bombshell, admits Pak ‘created militancy for short term tactical gains’

Islamabad, July 8 (ANI): Pakistan now seems to be feeling the heat of the fire it had lighted years ago, with President Asif Ali Zardari admitting that the menace of extremism and militancy were created by Islamabad itself to attain some tactical goals.

Addressing a gathering of retired federal secretaries and senior bureaucrats here, Zardari asked the officials to admit the reality.

“Let us be truthful to ourselves and make a candid admission of the realities. Militancy and extremism emerged on the national scene and challenged the state not because the civil bureaucracy was weakened and demoralised, but because they were deliberately created and nurtured as a policy to achieve some short-term tactical objectives,” The Daily Times quoted Zardari, as saying.

Referring to the political turmoil in the country, Zardari said Pakistan cannot afford political brick batting at present, as the state is on the verge of collapse due to the impending threat from the Taliban and other terror organizations.

“We intend to keep all the political forces together in a harmonious relationship as we cannot afford political games and confrontational politics. We are at the brink and we must realize that political games for personal gain can no longer be played,” he said.

Zardari also stressed on the need of dispersing power to different hands for effective governance.

“Too much power, when concentrated in one hand lasts only for a short time. For power to be effectively used for long-lasting public good it must be diffused and dispersed as widely as possible,” he added. (ANI)

Gujarat HC judge declines to hear case against Modi

Ahmedabad, July 7 (ANI): A Gujarat High Court judge has declined to hear a case challenging a probe by the Special Investigation Team (SIT) against state Chief Minister Narendra Modi and 62 others in the 2002 post-Godhra riots.

Citing personal reasons, Justice H N Devani in the High Court said: “Not before me”.

The court was scheduled to hear the case as SIT officials, complainant Zakia Jafri and social activist Teesta Setalvad have already filed their replies.

The writ petition was filed on June 5 by former BJP MLA from Lunavada, Kalu Maliwad against the probe being conducted by SIT with regard to a complaint made by widow of ex-MP from Congress Ahsan Jafri.

In her complaint Jafri ‘s wife alleged that Modi, his cabinet colleagues, police officials and senior bureaucrats aided and abetted post-Godhra riots.

Jafri was killed with 38 persons in Gulberg society in 2002.

The Supreme Court had ordered the SIT to probe the complaint within three months and submit its report. Maliwad, who was acquitted, has said that the Supreme Court directed the SIT to look into Jafri’s complaint. (ANI)

Nepal Maoists likely to join govt within two months

Kathmandu, June 22 (ANI): CPN (UML) leader KP Sharma Oli has said that the Maoists would join the government within two months.peaking to journalists at Tribhuvan International Airport here on Sunday on his arrival after completing his ten-day visit to India, Oli said the peace process would not succeed without the participation of Maoists.

“Peace process will not reach a logical conclusion just by a consensus among Nepali Congress President Girija Prasad Koirala, Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal and UML chairman Jhala Nath Khanal,” he added.

Oli has adopted a conspicuously soft approach towards the Maoists after his India visit.

Oli had met with senior Indian leaders from Congress, Bharatiya Janata Party, Communist leaders and top bureaucrats.

In a different context Oli said the Indian leaders had expressed concern over the growing anti-Indian movements in Nepal.

“I told them that there was no anti-Indian movement in Nepal, Oli added.

Oli had gone to New Delhi for a ‘health check up’ on June 13, nepalnews reported. (ANI)

Michelle Obama thrilled to visit Sesame Street

Washington, May 6 (ANI): US First Lady Michelle Obama’s was thrilled to visit “Sesame Street” on her first visit to New York since Barack Obama took over as US President.

After a visit to the US Mission to the United Nations, she set aside time for a special stop today at the “Sesame Street”.

“And I was thrilled,” Michelle told employees of the US mission to the United Nations. “I never thought I’d be on Sesame Street with Elmo and Big Bird. … I’m still thrilled. I’m on a high.”

She told the employees that she was on the public-broadcasting show to discuss nutrition and healthy eating. (She did not say when her episode of the show would be broadcast.)

Michelle said with a smile that her meeting with the two Muppet legends was “probably the best thing I’ve done so far in the White House,” The Washington Post reported.

Her agenda at the UN mission, meanwhile, was simply to say thank you to federal employees.

Since becoming first lady, Michelle has visited many federal agencies in Washington-including the Departments of Education, Housing and Urban Development, Interior and Homeland Security-to express gratitude to bureaucrats who often work tirelessly out of the spotlight.

“Many people don’t hear that. Many people don’t feel that the years that they’ve put in sometimes are not appreciated. And my visits are a simple way of saying yes, in fact, we see you, we know who you are, we value what you do,” she said. (ANI)