Tees Hazari Court dismisses Madhuri Gupta”s bail plea

New Delhi, May 21 (ANI): A Tees Hazari Court on Friday dismissed the bail plea of Indian Diplomat Madhuri Gupta, who was arrested on charges of spying for Pakistan”s intelligence agencies.

She was earlier sent to 14-day judicial custody on May 1.

Gupta, who was posted in Indian High Commission in Pakistan, faces serious charges of having links with Pakistan”s ISI.

She is believed to have leaked the names of India”s undercover agents in Pakistan to the ISI.

However, sources say she might not have leaked any sensitive information, as she did not have access to it. (ANI)

Asian Tigers threaten to kill ‘Osama’ if action taken against Hamid Mir

Lahore, May 21 (ANI): The Asian Tigers have threatened to kill the son of former Inter-Services Intelligence officer Khalid Khawaja if any action is taken against Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir.

Osama Khalid claimed that the Asian Tigers have indirectly threatened to do the same to him as they did to his father, a private TV channel reported on Thursday.

A foreign reporter contacted Osama who informed him that he had received a mail from the terrorist group, in which they were threatening Osama with a similar fate to that of his father if any action was taken against the talk show host.

Osama said that he has “firm belief” that talk show host Hamid Mir and Osman Punjabi, a militant associated with the Taliban, were the real murderers of his father, the Daily Times reports.

He said he would present all the records of the telephonic conversations that he had held with Osman Punjabi before the court, as he has enough (telephonic) records to support his case, adding that he believed he would get justice from the judiciary regarding the murder of his father.

A little-known Asian Tigers militant group murdered former ISI officer Khalid Khawaja on April 23.

Osama said he had already confirmed that the unidentified militant in the audiotape talking to Hamid Mir was Osman Punjabi, who used his alias Muhammad Omar while talking to various people.

Osama said that he would register a case after collecting further evidences in the murder of his father, adding that he would prove before the court that the audiotape was accurate.

Besides the holding of a judicial inquiry, he also appealed to Chief Justice of Pakistan Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry to take suo motu notice of the matter. (ANI)

Pak Intel agencies confirm authenticity of Hamid Mir’s conversation with Taliban

Lahore, May 20 (ANI): Reports of various intelligence agencies, including the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), over the alleged audiotape featuring a conversation between Geo News Executive Editor Hamid Mir and a Taliban spokesman, have confirmed the authenticity of the tape.

According to a television channel, the intelligence agencies have submitted their report to Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

“The conversation between Hamid Mir and the Taliban militant is original and has been proved by the audiotape,” The Daily Times quoted a part of the report, as saying.

Meanwhile, Osama Khalid, son of killed former ISI officials Khalid Khwaja has said that he would take legal action against Mir and also lodge a First Information Report (FIR) against him for playing a role in his father’s murder.

“Hamid Mir instigated the militants to murder my father,” Osama said.

He also requested Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry to take suo motu notice of the incident and take action against Mir.

Osama also urged the media community to kick out the “black sheep” out of the profession. (ANI)

Hamid Mir to sue media houses for ISI official’s murder slur, son squarely blames him

Lahore, May 19 (ANI): Noted Pakistan television journalist Hamid Mir has sent legal notices to the Daily Times and Business Plus television channel for running a report claiming that he had a telephonic interaction with a Taliban spokesman which actually led to the killing of kidnapped former Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) official Khalid Khwaja.

Mir, Executive Editor of the Geo News, has termed the story being published and aired on the newspaper and the television channel respectively, as ‘defamatory’, which was ‘based on malafide intentions’.

In his notice, Mir has demanded an official apology from both the media houses within 14 days and also payment of 250 million rupees as compensation for damages done to his reputation failing which legal action would be initiated.

“The points of interest mentioned at the end of column were also aimed to cause hatred and dislike for Mr Mir in specific sections of the society. Further, the publication of editorial titled Shocking revelations in Daily Times on 17 May 2010, which wrongly propagated Mr Mir’s indiscretion in Khalid Khawaja’s murder…” Mir’s notice to The Daily Times states.

“The said column and transcript was published in the Daily Times in breach of professional conduct and without verifying the accuracy and authenticity of the source of information,” it added.

Both Mir and the Taliban have denied having any conversation with each other concerning kidnapped ISI officials.

Earlier, Mir had said that the leaked audiotape was an attempt to malign his image by his ‘enemies in the government.’

“I never said these things to these people. This is a concocted tape. They took my voice, sampled it and manufactured this conspiracy against me,” Mir had said.

On the other hand, Khwaja’s son Osama Khalid has claimed that one of the voices in the tape was certainly that of Usman, a Taliban militant with whom his family had several talks for his father’s release.

Speaking during a television programme, Osama said the Asian Tigers, the group which had claimed to kidnapped Khwaja along with his former colleague Colonel Imam and a British filmmaker, was actually a group working for the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).

“Because no Muslim can do it (murder another Muslim),” Osama said.

“This audiotape is enough proof to show Hamid Mir’s role in my father’s murder,” he added.

Osama also claimed that Mir had hatched a conspiracy to murder his father and received a hefty sum for it from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). (ANI)

Noted Pak TV journalist, Hamid Mir, Taliban, rubbish telephonic chat reports

London, May 18 (ANI): Noted Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir has rubbished media reports that he had a telephonic conversation with a Taliban spokesperson during which he described former Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) official Khalid Khwaja as a Central Investigation Agency (CIA) collaborator.

Khwaja was abducted and killed by the Taliban last month.

Mir denied ever speaking to any Taliban spokesperson, and said that the leaked audiotape was an attempt to malign his image by his ‘enemies in the government.’

“I never said these things to these people. This is a concocted tape. They took my voice, sampled it and manufactured this conspiracy against me,” The Guardian quoted Mir, as saying.

The tape, in which Mir is purportedly heard asking the Taliban spokesperson to interrogate Khwaja over his links with the CIA and his role in the Lal Masjid siege, has started a debate amidst media circles in Pakistan.

Several senior and respected journalists believe that the voice in the tape sounded exactly like that of Mir’s.

“There are serious allegations to be answered. If this tape turns out to be genuine, it suggests a journalist instigated the murder of a kidnapee. A line must be drawn somewhere,” The Daily Times Editor Rashed Rahman said.

Meanwhile, the Taliban has also described the audiotape as ‘fake’, saying it was issued by some secret agency of the country.

“We condemn the reliability of this tape since there was no conversation between us and Hamid Mir. Although we often talk to different media persons. This seems to be a conspiracy to destroy the reputation of the Mujahideens and the brave people of this country who want to dig out the truth and reveal the dark faces of this nation,” a statement issued by the Taliban media centre said. (ANI)

Pak sets free most terrorists held in connection with failed Times Square bombing

Karachi, May 8 (ANI): Pakistani intelligence agencies have freed many suspected militants, including two Jaish-e-Muhammed operatives, who were arrested over alleged links with Faisal Shahzad, the American citizen of Pakistani origin who has confessed to have plotted the bungled Times Square bombing.

Sources said intelligence agencies have released most of the 20 members of various banned terror outfits, who were apprehended to probe whether they maintained any links with Shahzad.

They were sent back to their homes on Friday night after they were found innocent. Besides the JeM men, some others had also been released, The Daily Times quoted sources privy to the issue as saying.

It is not clear whether Sheik Mohammed Rehan, a top notch JeM leader, who purportedly drove Shahzad from Karachi to Peshawar in July 2009, was arrested or not.

Pakistan had banned the JeM, the terror group which has close links with Al-Qaeda and primarily targets India, in 2002, but analysts believe that it is receiving continuous help from the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). Some experts are also of the view that the ISI had actually facilitated the terror group’s formation. (ANI)

Pakistan taking ‘aggressive action’ against terrorists, says US

Washington, May 7 (IANS) As Times Square bombing attempt suspect Faisal Shahzad was linked to terror groups in his homeland, the United States came to the aid of its key ally saying of late Islamabad has been taking ‘aggressive action’ against militants.

‘Pakistan has for a number of years been taking aggressive action,’ State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley told reporters Thursday denying suggestions Pakistan was not taking action against terrorist groups.

Pakistan was doing so as it ‘came to realise that groups within its borders, even groups that entities from the Pakistani government has had historical relations with, now in fact threaten Pakistan just as much as they threaten other countries in the region and other regions of the world,’ he said.

Crowley’s remark was an obvious reference to Pakistani spy agency ISI’s well known ties with militant groups responsible for terror attacks in India.

‘I think we are very satisfied with the pace of action that Pakistan has taken over the last couple of years,’ he said.

‘Pakistan itself, you know, will be the first to tell you that it is doing a lot.

‘And over time, it will have to do more in order to defeat these groups that threaten the state of Pakistan, threaten

the regional security and obviously pose a risk to the United States as well,’ Crowley said.

Once the US was able to ‘understand what kind of support might have been given’ to the Times Square suspect Faisal Shahzad ‘we’ll pass that on to Pakistan. And we would hope that Pakistan will take appropriate action in place,’ he said.

But Crowley refused to entertain a suggestion that ‘all these terrorists come’ from Pakistan. ‘I’m not going to entertain a question that-that implicates one country, and to suggest that all terrorism in the world is the responsibility of one country. That’s not true,’ he said.

At the White House, spokesman Robert Gibbs parried questions whether Shahzad ‘s possible contacts in Pakistan and the role of Pakistan Taliban had come up for discussion during President Barack Obama’s meeting with his key aides on the Pakistan Afghnaistan situation.

‘I will just say that in the hour and 15 minutes the President spent in that room it was a comprehensive discussion of all of our issues dealing with Afghanistan and Pakistan,’ he said.

Asked if the US was ‘pleased or satisfied with Pakistan’s cooperation’ on the Times Square case investigation so far, Gibbs responded with just a ‘Yes.’

‘I think if you look back over the course of 15 or 16 months of our administration, we have dramatically increased our partnership with Pakistan-intense security cooperation, supporting Pakistan’s largest offensive against terrorism within its borders in years,’ he said.

‘The offensive that was-is focused not just on Al Qaeda, but on the Pakistani Taliban as well.’

Asked if the emergence of North Waziristan as a hotbed of terrorist activity and terrorist training was discussed, Gibbs said: ‘Suffice to say that many regions in Pakistan have been the focus of our cooperative work with Pakistan, the government of Pakistan for the length of our administration, understanding that we have a threat that continues from that region of the world.’

Meanwhile, US Attorney General Eric Holder told a Congressional Committee that if convicted Shahzad faces a potential life sentence.

‘Although this car bomb failed to properly detonate, this plot was yet another reminder that terrorists are still plotting to kill Americans,’ he said.

Hakeemullah even if alive not in command of Pak Taliban anymore: Pentagon

Washington, Apr.30 (ANI): The Pentagon is unsure over the fate of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Hakeemullah Mehsud, but it is certain that the warlord does not exert any authority over the banned terror outfit anymore.

Speaking during a media briefing here, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said while Hakeemullah’s fate is still shrouded in mystery, it is believed that he is not in command of the Taliban.

“I certainly have seen no evidence that the person you speak of (Hakeemullah) is operational today or is executing or exerting authority over the Pakistani Taliban as he once did. So I don’t know if that reflects him being alive or dead, but he clearly is not running the Pakistani Taliban anymore,” The Daily Times quoted Morrell, as saying.

Earlier, a British daily quoted an Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) official as claiming that the Taliban chieftain, who was believed to have been killed in a US drone strike in South Waziristan in January, is alive.

“He (Hakimullah) is alive.He had some wounds but he is basically OK,” the official had said on conditions of anonymity.

Although neither the US nor the Pakistani agencies had confirmed Hakeemullah’s death, who was sworn in as the TTP chieftain following Baitullah Mehsud’s death in a similar missile attack in August last year, he was widely believed to have succumbed to injuries sustained during a missile hit in January. (ANI)

Pak Army finally realising need to quash its ‘created Frankenstein’ in North Waziristan

New York, Apr.30 (ANI): The Pakistan Army, which has been reluctant to take on the Taliban and other extremist groups operating from the terror hot bed of North Waziristan, is now coming to terms that it must focus on the restive tribal region for the country’s own interests, Pakistani and US officials have said.

North Waziristan has long been considered as the most important safe haven for the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, where Islamabad has nurtured militant groups for years to run proxy wars across it borders.

According to US officials, the Pakistan Army is now beginning to understand that it was important to take on both the Taliban, which is targeting the state, and also those groups that are fighting against the foreign forces in Afghanistan.

“This is a scary phenomenon. All these groups are beginning to morph together,” The New York Times quoted a US official, as saying.

However, both Pakistani and Western officials said that any operation in North Waziristan by the Pakistan Army is likely to be months away.

“And even if it is undertaken, the offensive may not completely sever Pakistan’s relationship with the militants, like Sirajuddin Haqqani, who serve its interests in Afghanistan,” the newspaper observed.

North Waziristan has long been a sanctuary for the Haqqani group, which is believed to be a longtime ‘asset’ of the Pakistan military and the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI).

A top Pakistani official, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, admitted that North Waziristan is at the core of the terror issue in the country, which needs to be addressed immediately.

“The source of the problem is in North Waziristan, and it will have to be addressed,” he said.

Analysts also pointed out that an offensive in North Waziristan is imminent.

“An operation could come sooner, not least because officers on the ground are calling for it. More frequent attacks emanating from North Waziristan are likely to lead to a reaction sooner rather than later as field commanders feel the pressure to protect their troops,” said Shuja Nawaz, director of the South Asia program at the Atlantic Council in Washington.

The Pakistan military not only has to tackle the Taliban and Al-Qaeda extremists in North Waziristan, but it also has to tackle those splintered militant groups comprising of Pashtun tribesmen, Arabs, Uzbeks and ethnic Punjabis which are fighting separately, the newspaper said.

Though consensus is fast building up that the North Waziristan based terror groups must be targeted, it still remains to be seen how the Pakistan Army, which is already fighting on several fronts and often complains of lack of resources to push into the terror hot bed for at least several months, takes up the challenge. (ANI)

Pak sets free six top Taliban commanders: Report

Lahore, Apr.29 (ANI): Pakistan has set free at least six top Taliban militants, including the extremist outfit’s second-in command Mullah Abdul Ghani Barader’s close aide Abdul Qayum Zakir, a report in a magazine has claimed.

According to Newsweek magazine, Zakir, who was nabbed days after Barader was picked up from Karachi, was among the six Taliban commanders who were released by the Pakistani authorities recently.

Zakir was Baradar’s top military commander and one of the Taliban chieftain Mullah Omar’s most effective and most feared commanders during the Taliban’s fight to defeat the resisting Northern Alliance 10 years ago, the magazine said.

It said that several Taliban sources have also confirmed the arrest and his subsequent release.

However, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) spokesman Major General Athar Abbas told said he has no information about the arrest and release of these militant leaders.

The incident has also been confirmed by a US official, who declined to be identified, who said that there was nothing surprising about it.

“It’s not a surprise that in a country where politics is often messy, competing interests are carefully balanced, and relationships are complex, some of those people have been let go,” the official said.

“We know they don’t have a consistent policy that they apply consistently, but that doesn’t mean we can’t work with them. Quite frankly, we have to,” he added.

The report regarding the release of Taliban commanders by Pakistan comes days after The Washington Post reported that US officials believe at least two of the arrested Taliban commanders were released by the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) recently.

U.S. military and intelligence officials said the releases, detected by American spy agencies but not publicly disclosed, are evidence that parts of Pakistan’s security establishment continue to support the Afghan Taliban. (ANI)

TTP chief Hakimullah survived US drone attack: ISI official

London, Apr.29 (ANI): Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Hakimullah Mehsud, who was believed to have been killed in a US drone strike in South Waziristan in January, is alive, an Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) official has claimed.

“He (Hakimullah) is alive.He had some wounds but he is basically OK,” The Guardian quoted the official, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, as saying.

Although neither the US nor the Pakistani agencies had confirmed Hakeemullah’s death, who was sworn in as the TTP chieftain following Baitullah Mehsud’s death in a similar missile attack in August last year, he was widely believed to have succumbed to injuries sustained during a missile hit in January.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister Rehman Malik had also confirmed Hakimullah’s death, however, he had failed to table any evidence to back his claims.

Hakimullah was hit within 72 hours after the release of a confessional video of Jordanian doctor Human Khalil Abu-Mulal al Balawi, who killed seven CIA agents in Khost on December 30, Malik had claimed.

The video, which showed Hakimullah sitting with the Jordanian double agent Balawi, was released on the evening of January 9 and Hakimullah was hit in a drone attack in Shakoti on the night between January 13 and 14, he said.

The report regarding Hakimullah surviving the drone attack is seen as a big blow for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), which has intensified the missile hits on militant hideouts along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border since the attack on its Khost base camp.

The CIA has already carried out 38 attacks this year so far, as compared to a total of 49 in 2009.

According to the ISI official, the Obama Administration is under pressure because of the stiff resistance being offered by the Taliban and Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.

“The US government is under pressure because it is unable to achieve much in Afghanistan. This is one way of hitting their al-Qaida enemies, as they define them,” the newspaper quoted him, as saying. (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)

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)

Obama criticized for not addressing greatest threats

A noted US columnist on Friday criticised President Barack Obama for not addressing the two greatest threats, including Pakistan’s plutonium production, at the recently concluded Nuclear Security Summit.

“The first is Iran, which is frantically enriching uranium to make a bomb, and which our own State Department identifies as the greatest exporter of terrorism in the world. Nor on the agenda was Pakistan’s plutonium production, which is adding to the world’s stockpile of fissile material every day,” wrote Charles Krauthammer, a columnist at The Washington Post.

“Pakistan is a relatively friendly power, but it is the most unstable of all the nuclear states. It is fighting a Taliban insurgency and is home to al-Qaeda,” he said in his comments.

“Suicide bombs go off regularly in its major cities. Moreover, its own secret service, the ISI, is of dubious loyalty, some of its elements being sympathetic to the Taliban and thus, by extension, to al-Qaeda,” he wrote.

Acknowledging that sequestering nuclear material is a good thing, he wrote: “But, it is a minor thing, particularly when Iran is off the table and Pakistan is creating new plutonium for every ounce of Canadian uranium shipped to the United States.”

No links between Pak Army, ISI and Headley : ISPR

Islamabad, Apr.1 (ANI): The Pakistan Army has denounced reports that David Coleman Headley, a Lashkar operative who has been charged with scouting targets for the 2008 Mumbai attacks, had named three Pakistan Army and Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) officials for their direct involvement in the 26/11 attacks.

A statement issued by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) termed the report as false and fabricated, and said that they were aimed at maligning the image of the Pakistan Army and the ISI.

“There is absolutely no link or connection between the army, ISI and David Headley,” The Daily Times quoted the statement, as saying.

The report appears to be part of an overall design with a malicious intent to bring disrepute to Pakistan’s national security organisations, the statement added.

Headley had pleaded guilty to all the 12 charges of conspiracy involving bombing public places in India and providing material support to foreign terrorist plots and Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), besides aiding and abetting the murder of six US citizens in the Mumbai attacks.

Headley, 49, has been cooperating with U.S. investigators since his arrest in October and faces up to life imprisonment.

Headley had promised to cooperate and provide testimony in exchange for a pledge that he would not be extradited to India, Pakistan or Denmark. (ANI)

Pentagon plays down chances of ‘big announcement’ for Pak during strategic talks

Washington, Mar.24 (ANI): While Pakistan has handed over a huge 56-page wish list to the United States ahead of the strategic dialogue between both countries, the Pentagon has hinted that there is a little chance of any big announcement to Islamabad after the deliberations.

Talking to reporters, Pentagon Press Secretary Geof Marshall said Wednesday’s talks would primarily focus on developing the relationship between both countries.

“I would not look to this, at the end of it, for there to be some great announcement about any hard items that are being produced as a result of the conversations. This is a dialogue designed to produce a better long-term strategic relationship … this is not simply about asking and receiving items,” The Daily Times quoted Marshall, as saying.

Pakistan’s wish list included unmanned Predator drones, helicopter gunships, more financial aid, a India like civil nuclear accord and a direct role of the White House in reviving the stalled Indo-Pak composite dialogue.

The document also requests for greater cooperation between Pakistani spy agency (the ISI) and US intelligence outfits.

The wish list also raises concerns about India’s effort to modernise its military, in part through buying US equipment and weapons. (ANI)

Pakistan hands over 56-page wish list to US before strategic dialogue

Washington, Mar.24 (ANI): Unmanned Predator drones, helicopter gunships, more financial aid, a civil nuclear accord, and a direct role of the White House in reviving the stalled Indo-Pak composite dialogue are some of the ‘marked’ requirements in the 56-page wish list that Pakistan has handed over to the United States just ahead of the strategic dialogue.

The document also requests for greater cooperation between Pakistani spy agency (the ISI) and US intelligence outfits.

Islamabad also wants a role in any future talks between the West backed Afghanistan and the Taliban.

According to a Pakistani official, who refused to be named, Islamabad’s fears of being outflanked by New Delhi, which has forged close ties with Kabul, are reflected in the document’s ‘indirect’ language about regional security issues.

The wish list also raises concerns about India’s effort to modernise its military, in part through buying US equipment and weapons, The Nation reports.

When asked about the details of the wish list, the Pakistan military’s spokesperson, Major General Athar Abbas confirmed its presence but refused to divulge any detail regarding it.

Commenting on the reports, spokesman for the National Security Council, Michael Hammer said the White House is looking forward to Wednesday’s (March 24) dialogue but denied to comment on Pakistan’s specific proposals, which were made during a series of meetings between Pakistani and US officials in the recent past.

“During the course of those discussions, a considerable number of ideas, initiatives, and opportunities have been brought up by both sides,” Hammer said, adding: “We are not prepared to comment on any one set of ideas other than to say that we are encouraged by an open and robust dialogue.”

Meanwhile, the Pentagon has played down the chance of any big announcement of fresh aid at the end of the talks, saying the dialogue would focus on strengthening long-term bilateral ties.

“I would not look to this, at the end of it, for there to be some great announcement about any hard items that are being produced as a result of the conversations,” Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters.

“This is a dialogue designed to produce a better long-term strategic relationship … this is not simply about asking and receiving items,” Morrell added. (ANI)

Pak intelligence calls for Afghan border to be closed

London, Mar. 15 (ANI): Pakistan”s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) has called for tighter control of the Afghan border by NATO troops to stop Taliban fighters from escaping its operations in the North West Frontier.

Major General Athar Abbas, the director general of the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), claimed that a cross-border flow into Afghanistan was hampering its campaign to crush the Taliban.

“We are at full stretch. I have to say that the border is a joint responsibility,” The Telegraph quoted Major General Athar Abass, as saying in a presentation to the Royal United Services Institute, a London think tank.

“NATO must stop the cross border flow,” he said.

Pakistan has rapidly expanded its presence along the Afghanistan border, which crosses mountains and deserts, after years of complaints from NATO that it was not doing enough to stop Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters finding safe haven in its territory.

According to Major General Abbas, there are now 821 Pakistan army checkpoints on the border, but just 112 Afghan Army or NATO posts.

Pakistan officials have proclaimed the success of its operations in the autonomous territories dominated by Pashtun tribes that have sheltered the Taliban. (ANI)

Pak to rake up ‘K’ issue, Indian atrocities in UN General Assembly

Islamabad, Sep.12 (ANI): Pakistan is looking to rake up the Kashmir issue at the United Nations General Assembly which is scheduled to be held later this month.

According to sources, in two separate meetings held at the Foreign Office, concerned officials briefed Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi regarding both the Kashmir and Afghanistan issues.

Sources said that it was decided that Islamabad would urge the United Nations to ensure a resolution of the long-lingering Kashmir dispute on a priority basis for durable peace in the region.

“The international community would also be informed about the human rights violations committed by Indian forces in held Kashmir,” The Dawn quoted sources, as saying.

They said the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) chief Lieutenant General Shuja Pasha was also present in the meeting.

According to a private television channel, Pakistan is also likely to take up the issue of presence of US led allied forces in Afghanistan

Islamabad has decided to inform the international community about the problems being faced by it due to the presence of NATO forces in Afghanistan, the channel reported.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has said that resolution of the Kashmir issue is the key to establishing good ties with India and restoring peace in the sub-continent.

During a meeting with Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) Prime Minister Sardar Yaqub Khan, Gilani said resolving the Kashmir dispute was Islamabad’s top priority. (ANI)

Osama sponsored Sharif’s election campaign in 1988, claims ex-ISI official

Lahore, Sep.10 (ANI): A former Pakistani spymaster has revealed that former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif maintained a close relationship with Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and claimed that the chieftain had sponsored the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief’s election campaign in 1988.

Former Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) officer Khalid Khawaja said bin Laden not only funded Sharif’s campaign, but also paid him huge money to ensure protection of Al Qaeda operatives inside Pakistan and to ‘Islamise’ the state and society.

In an interview with television channel, Khawaja said he had personally arranged the meeting between Sharif and bin Laden on the former Prime Minister’s request, and he has evidence to prove his claims.

Khawaja said that he used to be a close associate of bin Laden in the past and might have met him more than a hundred times, but said he never met him after 9/11.

Meanwhile, the ABC News has also confirmed that Al-Qaeda chief had paid huge money to Sharif, The Daily Times reports.

It quoted former FBI agent Jack Cloonan as saying that bin Laden paid nearly one million dollars to Sharif’s representative for not initiating any action against militants based in the Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP). (ANI)