Pakistani actress Meera denies being married

Islamabad, August 31 (ANI): Pakistani actress Meera has denied being married to Attiqur Rehman.

Defence-A Police Station House Officer (SHO) Inspector Abid Rasheed had alleged that he had seen the marriage certificate that showed that the wedding was solemnised on September 2, 2007.

The SHO said that the marriage was registered with the local union council, and the nikah khawan in Makkah Colony also confirmed the nuptials, reports the Daily Times.

The allegation emerged after Meera’s mother shifted antique furniture belonging to Attiqur, who accused her of secretly shifting the items without his knowledge.

Attiqur also claimed being beaten by his father-in-law, mother-in-law, and their other son-in-law Raheel.

Cops were subsequently called in and five men of each party were taken into custody.

Meera, however, has slammed these claims, saying that her association with Attique was restricted to business dealings.

She further accused Attiqur of blackmailing her.

She even alleged that Attique recently attacked her house with the intention of killing her, but she was not there at the time. (ANI)

Taliban infighting could benefit both US, Pak: NYT

Washington, Aug.9 (ANI): An American counter-terrorism official has said that the infighting within the Taliban could provide an opportunity for both the United States and Pakistan to exploit the rivalries to their respective advantages.

According to the counter-terrorism official, one of those opportunities, from the American point of view, would be the ability to focus its fleet of drone aircraft on attacking militant leaders who were involved in the Afghan war, or on Qaeda leaders planning attacks against the West.

That has been a source of tension between the Americans and Pakistani officials, who had viewed the Mehsuds as the most urgent threat.

One Pakistani official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the fighting could create an opening for the Haqqanis, another group that has close ties to Al Qaeda, to intervene in resolving the leadership issue.

Sirajuddin Haqqani is the point man in Pakistan for the leader of the Afghan Taliban, Mullah Muhammad Omar.

Details of the fighting were spotty on Saturday.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister, Rehman Malik, confirmed reports of a shootout at a meeting in South Waziristan and said one of the commanders had been killed but did not say who it was.

“The infighting was between Waliur Rehman and Hakimullah Mehsud,” Malik said, adding “We have information that one of them has been killed. Who was killed we will be able to say later after confirming.”

Reports received by government officials on Saturday indicated that Rehman and Hakimullah Mehsud – a member of Baitullah’s tribe but not a close relative – argued over succession at a tribal meeting at Sara Rogha in South Waziristan.

A shootout ensued, killing Mehsud and wounding Rehman, officials said.

A senior government official in Peshawar was quoted by the New York Times, as saying that Baitullah Mehsud’s father-in-law, who had been at the meeting, was now in the custody of an opposing faction.

Beyond being a succession struggle, the infighting may also represent a deeper conflict over the goals and direction of the Pakistani Taliban.

A resident of the area who spoke by telephone on Saturday said foreign militants favored Mr. Rehman while local Mehsuds wanted Hakimullah to be their new leader.

The alliance between Al Qaeda and Pakistani Taliban leaders goes back years in Pakistan’s lawless tribal areas, where local Pakistani militants helped ferry Arab operatives back and forth across the border from Afghanistan. More recently it has surfaced in the attacks on Pakistan’s major cities, far from the war-torn western tribal areas.

“They are interconnected,” a Karachi counterterrorism official said, referring to Al Qaeda and the Taliban. “They depend on each other.”

Clear evidence of that alliance, counterterrorism officials say, was the 2008 bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.

The bomber was an Afghan, trained by Taliban fighters in Mohmand Agency, part of the tribal area where the Mehsuds operate. But it was a Qaeda operative of Kenyan origin, Usama al-Kinni, who planned and financed the attack.

In an added complication with serious implications for security in Pakistan, the handlers and facilitators in that attack were from Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous and strategic province, which itself has been the target of a series of suicide bombings and commando-style attacks since March. (ANI)

Betullah Mehsud still alive, claims close aide

London, Aug. 8 (ANI): A lieutenant of Pakistan’s enemy no. 1 Baitullah Mehsud on Saturday rejected reports of the Pak-Taliban chief’s death in a US drone strike.

BBC quoted Commander Hakimullah Mehsud – who some analysts suggest may be positioning himself to succeed Baitullah Mehsud – as saying that the reports of Mehsud’s death were the work of US and Pakistani intelligence agencies.

“The news regarding our respected chief is propaganda by our enemies. We know what our enemies want to achieve – it’s the joint policy of the ISI and FBI – they want our chief to come out in the open so they can achieve their target,” Mehsud said.

He said the Pakistani leader had decided to adopt the tactics of Osama bin Laden and stay silent. He said he would issue a message in the next few days.

The US has said that it is increasingly confident that its forces had managed to kill Mehsud, while Pakistan’s foreign minister said on Friday he was “pretty certain” Baitullah Mehsud had been killed.

Neither side has provided evidence to back up their claims so far.

The missile fired by the US drone hit the home of the Taliban chief’s father-in-law, Malik Ikramuddin, in the Zangarha area on Wednesday.

On Friday, another of Baitullah Mehsud’s aides had told the press by telephone that his leader had been killed along with his second wife in the attack.

The White House spokesman, Robert Gibbs, on Friday said that the Pakistani people would be safer if he was dead.

“There seems to be a growing consensus among credible observers that he is indeed dead,” he told reporters.

Believed to command as many as 20,000 pro-Taliban militants, Mehsud came to worldwide attention in the aftermath of the 2007 Red Mosque siege in Islamabad.

He has been blamed by both Pakistan and the US for a series of suicide bomb attacks in the country, as well as suicide attacks on Western forces across the border in Afghanistan. (ANI)

Nina Wang’s alleged lover claims her multi-billion-dollar fortune

London, June 30 (ANI): A man claiming to be the lover of Asia’s richest woman, Nina Wang, has insisted that a will that left her multi-billion-dollar fortune to him was not a forgery.

The document is at the centre of a high-profile court battle over the estate of one of Hong Kong’s most colorful personalities, Sky News reports.

Businesswoman Nina Wang, who died at age 69 of cancer in 2007, was ranked in Forbes magazine as the world’s 204th richest person with a fortune of 4.2 billion dollars.

Feng shui adviser Tony Chan, 49, said he and Wang were lovers and she left her money to him out of genuine affection in a 2006 will.

However, a foundation set up by Wang and her late husband has staked a claim to her estate under a separate will made in 2002.

During a testy court hearing, the foundation’s lawyer Lawrence Lok asked Chan if he concocted the will himself or had someone else do so on his behalf.

“Absolutely not. You’re wrongly accusing me. I never thought she would do that. She really loved me very deeply,” he added.

In the years before her death, Wang gave Chan a total of 266 million dollars in 2005 and 2006.

“It was really a gift. Because I feel that she really loved me, that’s why she gave me the money. She had always been giving me money,” Chan said.

He said his relationship with Wang started in 1992, but he kept it secret from everyone except his wife.

Wang inherited her husband’s fortune after an eight-year court battle against her father-in-law. Her husband was abducted in 1990 and, despite the family paying 20 million pounds in ransom, he was never released and his body never found.

Wang went on to build her husband’s company, Chinachem, into a massive property developer. (ANI)

Priyanka takes on Modi, says Congress is not old

Amethi, Apr. 11 (ANI): Congress party’s star campaigner Priyanka Gandhi has lashed out at Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi for comparing the Congress party to a ‘budhia’ (old woman), and asked people if she looked old.

“Do I look old to you? Does Sonia Gandhi (Congress president and her mother), Rahul Gandhi or I look old to you,” she asked people of Khalidpur village, while addressing a rally there.

During his election campaigns, Modi has repeatedly been asking the voters to choose the 30-year-old “young” BJP the Congress party over a “125-year-old budhia”.

Priyanka, who is the poll manager for her mother Sonia and brother Rahul, kick started her electioneering work from Amethi and Raebareli, respectively.

Addressing a rally in Furshatganz, Priyanka outlined the development work done by her brother Rahul Gandhi by citing his works done in the field of education and health, including a hospital in Munshiganj.

“Rahul has done a lot for the people. As you know, the state government has not been of much help in carrying out development projects and whatever work has been done is with the Centre’s help,” the younger Gandhi sibling said, while aiming the Mayawati Government.

Priyanka seemed to have struck an emotional cord with people of his father Rajiv Gandhi’s Karbhoomi.

“You have given a lot of love and support and I don’t want to insult your love by asking for votes. We will always be grateful to you,” she said.

“In this election drama a lot of people will come and ask for your votes on the basis of religion and caste. It is for you to decide whom to vote,” she added.

Priyanka, who was busy in the rituals after her father-in-law’s demise, will visit a number of villages, local representative of the UPA chairperson KL Sharma said.

According to the party sources, Priyanka Gandhi will visit villages Pure pal, Pure Chirai, Sambhawa, Belkhaur, Sambhawa, arai Hriday Shah, Anapur and is also expected to hold road-shows. (ANI)

Pak CJ takes notice of Swat girl flogging

Islamabad, Apr. 4 (ANI): Pakistan’s Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry has taken suo motu notice of the flogging of a girl in the Swat Valley.

Chaudhry has asked the federal interior secretary, the NWFP chief secretary and the NWFP inspector general of police to appear before the court on Monday.

The two-minute video shows a veiled girl, face down on the ground with two men holding her arms and feet. A third man whips her backside repeatedly for allegedly having ‘illicit relations with her father-in-law’ – causing her to scream: “Either stop it or kill me.”

Chaudhry ordered the fixation of the matter under Article 184(3) of the constitution before an eight-member larger bench of the Supreme Court, to be headed by him.

The CJP also directed the federal interior secretary to find the victim and produce her before the court.

Notices have also been issued to the attorney general of Pakistan, the NWFP advocate general and the president of the NWFP High Court Bar Association.

Earlier, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani had ordered a probe into the case.

Pakistan based human rights groups and civil society activists had lodged protest against the flogging case in Swat. (ANI)

Pak religious clerics condemn teenaged girl’s whipping by Taliban

Lahore, Apr. 4 (ANI): Religious scholars and clerics across Pakistan have condemned the public whipping of a 17-year-old girl by the Taliban in Swat.

The Taliban had alleged that the girl had illicit relations with her father in law, as she had gone out in his presence, instead of her husband.

Girl’s father-in-law was a na-mehram (stranger) for her and she should not have left home with him, the Daily Times quoted them, as saying.

However, renowned religious scholar Muneebur Rehman has quashed Taliban claims by saying that a father-in-law is not a na-mehram for a girl, and she could move around with him.

He added that no woman could be lashed for moving around with a na-mehram.

Sharia cannot be implemented by any group of individuals and only an authorised court could find a woman guilty over allegations of illicit relations, Rehman said.

Meanwhile, religious scholar Dr. Aamir Liaqat Hussain said the incident was completely against Islamic teachings.

Denouncing the incident, he said those involved the incident must be punished.

Jamaat-e-Islami leader Liaqat Baloch said those who had signed the peace deal in Swat should now answer the nation regarding the incident.

Sunni Tehreek chief Muhammad Ijaz Qadri said Islam barred disrespect towards women, while adding that the Taliban’s court system was being promoted to spread terror across the country. (ANI)

Unrepentant Taliban say 17-yr-old “flogged” girl should have actually been “stoned to death”

Peshawar, Apr.4 (ANI): While the whole world has expressed shock over the Taliban’s barbaric act of publicly flogging a teenage girl, the Taliban seems to have no regret over the issue as it has said that in actuality the 17 year old girl should have been probably stoned to death for her ‘crime’.

The Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan, defending its act, said the incident happened nine months ago, and that telecasting the video was a conspiracy to sabotage the peace accord.

Khan said the girl was punished for living for three years with her father-in-law instead of her husband at that time.

“The actual punishment for adultery was stoning to death. However, as there were no Qazis at that time, the girl was awarded punishment of 40 lashes,” Khan said callously.

He refused to condemn the attack saying both the girl and his father-in-law had confessed.

The News quoted Khan, as saying that it was not only the girl who was punished, but her father-in-law was also awarded the same punishment. (ANI)

Zardari orders probe into 17-year-old Swat girl’s flogging

Islamabad, Apr. 4 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has ordered a probe into the case of Taliban flogging a 17-year-old girl publicly in Swat, where the government recently signed a sharia deal with the Taliban.

Zardari has sought a report from the NWFP provincial government, and has called for the arrest of those responsible, a presidential spokesman said.

“President is shocked by the act of barbarism that has brought down heads in shame. Such barbarism is unpardonable,” the Daily Times quoted spokesman Farhatullah Babar, as saying.

Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani also took serious note of the incident, and has sought a report.

The incident has put the controversial Swat peace deal in jeopardy, with TV footage showing the Taliban mercilessly beating the girl.

The two-minute video shows a veiled girl, face down on the ground with two men holding her arms and feet. A third man whips her backside repeatedly for allegedly having ‘illicit relations with her father-in-law’ – causing her to scream: “Either stop it or kill me.”

Meanwhile, Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan has admitted that his group was responsible for the flogging in public, which took place nine months ago.

However, NWFP Government spokesman Mian Iftikhar claimed that the flogging took place on January 3, much before the peace deal with the Taliban.

“We believe there is a conspiracy to sabotage the peace process by airing a video recorded before the deal,” he said.

The girl reportedly said the whipping took place within the last ten days.

Muslim Khan added that the Taliban had been ‘lenient’ with the girl, who would have been stoned to death had a ‘serious view’ of the ‘crime’ been taken.

“The entire village knows she is innocent,” a human right activist told the media. (ANI)

Pak Information Minister says Musa Khankhel’s killing an ‘attack on free media’

Lahore, Feb.18 (ANI): Pakistan’s Information and Broadcasting Minister Sherry Rehman on Wednesday denounced the tragic killing of Geo News correspondent Musa Khankhel in the Matta area of the Swat Valley.

Terming the killing as an attack on the independence of the media in Pakistan, Rehman said the murderers of Khankhel would be arrested soon and tried in a court of law.

Rehman assured the family of Khankhel complete financial support by the government.

Khankhel was shot dead while he was on duty in the Matta area.

The bereaved family has demanded that the Pakistan Government bring the perpetrators to justice.

The murder of Khankhel took place in Matta even as thousands of men marched for peace in another part of Pakistan”"”s troubled Swat Valley.

The march was led by Sufi Mohammad, the man who signed a deal to enforce Sharia’s law to end a bloody insurgency.

“I have come here to establish peace and I will not leave until this mission is achieved,” Sufi Mohammad told people in Mingora.

About 15,000 people participated in the march in the crowd, waving black and white flags. The cleric advised them to recite only Quranic verses.

The elderly cleric walked behind several rows of followers, who were mostly bearded and sporting black turbans. Mohammad, who was wearing a black waistcoat and white shalwar kamiz avoided the gaze of television cameras as he walked.

Local gathered to greet Mohammad, who was jailed in Pakistan for six years after returning from Afghanistan where he led thousands of supporters to fight against US-led troops who toppled the Taliban in 2001.

The controversial deal between Mohammad and the Pakistani Government to enforce sharia law has sparked concern in the International community.

The cleric left Mingora later Wednesday for the nearby town of Matta, where he was hoping to meet Taliban firebrand, Maulana Fazlullah and other Taliban leaders to persuade them to disarm, according to his spokesman Amir Izzat.

No date for any meeting has been announced.

Fazlullah led his two-year bloody campaign to enforce sharia in Swat, while his father-in-law Mohammad was languished in a Pakistani jail.

Thousands of Fazlullah”"”s men have spent two years beheading opponents, bombing schools, outlawing entertainment and fighting government forces in Swat, a former ski resort, causing tens of thousands of people to flee.

It remains unclear how much influence Mohammad can bring to bear over his firebrand son-in-law, who is believed to have around 3,000 armed followers. (ANI)

Geo news correspondent killed in Swat Valley

Swat Valley (Pakistan), Feb.18 (ANI): Geo News and The News correspondent, Mosa Khankhel was killed here on Wednesday.

The murder of Khankhel took place in Matta even as thousands of men marched for peace in another part of Pakistan”s troubled Swat Valley.

The march was led by Sufi Mohammad, the man who signed a deal to enforce Sharia’s law to end a bloody insurgency.

“I have come here to establish peace and I will not leave until this mission is achieved,” Sufi Mohammad told people in Mingora.

About 15,000 people participated in the march in the crowd, waving black and white flags. The cleric advised them to recite only Quranic verses.

The elderly cleric walked behind several rows of followers, who were mostly bearded and sporting black turbans. Mohammad, who was wearing a black waistcoat and white shalwar kamiz avoided the gaze of television cameras as he walked.

Local gathered to greet Mohammad, who was jailed in Pakistan for six years after returning from Afghanistan where he led thousands of supporters to fight against US-led troops who toppled the Taliban in 2001.

The controversial deal between Mohammad and the Pakistani Government to enforce sharia law has sparked concern in the International community.

The cleric left Mingora later Wednesday for the nearby town of Matta, where he was hoping to meet Taliban firebrand, Maulana Fazlullah and other Taliban leaders to persuade them to disarm, according to his spokesman Amir Izzat.

No date for any meeting has been announced.

Fazlullah led his two-year bloody campaign to enforce sharia in Swat, while his father-in-law Mohammad was languished in a Pakistani jail.

Thousands of Fazlullah”s men have spent two years beheading opponents, bombing schools, outlawing entertainment and fighting government forces in Swat, a former ski resort, causing tens of thousands of people to flee.

It remains unclear how much influence Mohammad can bring to bear over his firebrand son-in-law, who is believed to have around 3,000 armed followers. (ANI)

Pak Taliban being ceded too much authority, say critics of truce

Islamabad, Feb.17 (ANI): Despite the Pakistan Government’s insistence that the new legal system in the Swat Valley is consistent with existing civil law, there are some people in the country who see the accord as representing the ominous power of the militants, and fear that it could spread into the heartland of Pakistan, including the country’s most populous and wealthiest province, Punjab.

“The hardest task for the government will be to protect the Punjab against inroads by militants,” the Dawn quotes I. A. Rehman, a member of the Human Rights Commission, as saying in an article for the newspaper.

“Already, religious extremists have strong bases across the province and sympathizers in all arenas: political parties, services, the judiciary, the middle class and even the media,” the New York Times quotes him, as saying.

“For its part, the government is handicapped because of its failure to offer good governance, guarantee livelihoods and restore people’s faith in the frayed judicial system,” he adds.

“This means you have surrendered to a handful of extremists. The state is under attack; instead of dealing with them as aggressors, the government has abdicated,” said Athar Minallah, a leader of a lawyers’ movement that has campaigned for an independent judiciary.

Shuja Nawaz, the author of “Crossed Swords,” a book on the Pakistani military, said that with the accord, “the government is ceding a great deal of space” to the militants.

Provincial officials said the accord in Swat was struck with Maulana Sufi Muhammad. He is the father-in-law of Maulana Fazlullah, a deputy to Baitullah Mehsud, who is the head of the umbrella group for the Taliban in Pakistan.

The government has said that it would accept a system of Islamic law in the Swat valley and agreed to a truce, effectively conceding the area as a Taliban sanctuary and suspending a faltering effort by the army to crush the insurgents.

The concessions to the militants, who now control about 70 percent of the region just 100 miles from the capital, has been severely criticized by Pakistani analysts as a capitulation by a government that is desperate to stop Taliban abuses.

The accord comes less than a week before Pakistan army chief, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani’s visit to Washington to meet Obama administration officials and discuss how Pakistan could improve its tactics against what the American military is now calling an industrial-strength insurgency there of Al Qaeda and the Taliban militants. (ANI)

‘Pak Government setting wrong precedent by imposing Sharia in Swat’

Islamabad, Feb 17 (ANI): Pakistan Government’s decision to impose Sharia in areas of Swat Valley in order to strike a peace deal with militants is a wrong precedent and will not be able to calm the conflict, according to observers.

Islamabad’s faltering military campaign in Swat has been put on hold, and the militants have agreed to a tentative ceasefire. The government decision has set a worrying precedent – one that will surely displease some US officials who want Pakistan to take a harder line against militants, Time magazine reported.

NWFP Chef Minister Amir Haider Khan Hoti said on Monday that Shari’a law would be introduced throughout the Malakand division, which includes the Swat Valley. The Taliban have tentatively welcomed the decision, announcing a 10-day ceasefire.

According to the terms of the agreement, “all non-Sharia laws” have been abrogated in Malakand. The agreement, which enjoys the support of President Asif Ali Zardari and the army, came about after talks with Islamist leader Sufi Mohammed – Fazlullah’s father-in-law and rival.

Government officials argue that by imposing Sharia law they are merely bowing to what is a popular local demand. By stealing a march on Fazlullah, the government believes that it can now wean supporters away, isolate the militants, and with Sufi Mohammed’s help, restore peace.

It is, however, a highly controversial and risky course. A previous peace deal failed within months, after giving the militants the space to regroup and sweep away earlier military gains.

“It is an attempt on the part of the government to win over a section of religious extremists,” says Hasan Askari-Rizvi, a military analyst.

“The idea is that if they are pulled out of the struggle, they will cooperate with the government and help isolate the ilitants. It may have been a good idea if the Taliban were on the run, but they’re well entrenched,” Time quoted Rizvi, as aying. (ANI)

Bush family may have left many cherished items inside White House

Washington, January 21 (ANI): George W. Bush and his wife Laura may have left behind many cherished items in the White House as they gave way for the new first Obama family.

Recent reports suggested that Bush’s 492,798-dollar official state china service, a Lenox gilt-edged style with a green basket weave border, was to remain at the official residence.

Other items to stay behind also included two custom rugs, including one in the Diplomatic Reception Room with emblems from all 50 state flags.

However, the former first couple might have taken some mementos to their new residence in Texas, such as their eight-year-old collection of books, and a personal chest of drawers belonging to the 43rd ex-president’s grandmother.
Sally McDonough, Press Secretary to Laura Bush, had revealed that the family would be taking back only personal things.

“Mrs. Bush — having the experience of being at the White House when her father-in-law was president — knew how many beautiful things she had to choose from to furnish the residence. And she will go back to Texas with only those items that belong to her,” Fox News quoted her as saying.

McDonough had further revealed that the ex-First Lady would certainly like to take back home her gigantic pile of clothes.

She said: “The one thing she does joke about is that she certainly will take many clothes with her because obviously she has a much more formal wardrobe than when she came.” (ANI)