‘Pak has 14,000 Kashmiris in reserve for war against India’

WASHINGTON: Pakistan is staying the course of using terrorist groups to protect its interests, a former militant commander has divulged, contradicting Islamabad’s avowals to the contrary and hopeful testimonials from Washington and New Delhi about Pakistan changing its policy and behavior.

The unnamed militant said Pakistani generals have not given up the policy of nurturing terrorists. “That system was still functioning,” he told the New York Times referring to the Pakistan military’s training and protection of terrorists in an interview published on Monday.

“The government is not interested in eliminating them permanently,” he said. “The Pakistani military establishment has become habituated to using proxies… There are two bodies running these affairs: mullahs and retired generals. These people have a very big role still.”

He also revealed that Pakistan has 12,000 to 14,000 fully trained Kashmiri fighters, scattered throughout various camps in Pakistan, and is “holding them in reserve to use if needed in a war against India”.

He said ISI continues to support even terrorist groups that have turned against the government because the military still wants to keep them as tools for use against India. For instance, Pakistan could easily kill a militant leader like Hakimullah Mehsud but it chose not, he said, adding illustratively that he could do the job for Rs 20,000.

“The account belies years of assurances by Pakistan to American officials… that it has ceased supporting militant groups in its territory,” the paper said, pointing that US has given Pakistan more than $20 billion in aid over the past decade for its help with counter-terrorism operations. The militant’s account comes as an embarrassment to some officials in Islamabad, Washington, and New Delhi who are ginning up a narrative of Pakistan giving up its policy of using terrorist groups for its so-called strategic depth despite there being no evidence to back this. Over the weekend, India’s foreign secretary Nirupama Rao, who is now the ambassador-designate to the US, told a TV channel that there is a change in Pakistan’s attitude to tackling terrorism, and described it as a “concrete development”.

But the militant’s insights show no such change in the Pakistani establishment, unless one chooses to see the Pakistani military and government as different entities (they both claim to speak in one voice).

Factbox: What are the major issues between India and Pakistan?

The talks between S.M. Krishna of India and Shah Mehmood Qureshi of Pakistan are widely seen as the first step in trying to revive a peace process broken off in the wake of the attacks on India’s financial capital.

Here are some of the main issues between the neighbors:

SECURITY

For India, security is the top issue. It has refused to resume a series of talks known as the composite dialogue until Pakistan takes more action against Pakistan-based militant groups.

In particular, India wants Pakistan to show it is serious in reining in the militants behind the Mumbai attacks, in which 166 people were killed.

This is complicated by Indian suspicions that the Pakistan security establishment backed the militants in some way. On the eve of the talks, Indian Home Secretary G.K. Pillai escalated the charges and directly blamed Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency for the attacks.

“It was not just a peripheral role,” he was quoted as saying by the Indian Express newspaper. “They were literally controlling and coordinating it from the beginning till the end.”

For its part, Pakistan accuses India of backing separatists in its Baluchistan province and providing weapons and funding to Pakistan Taliban groups, charges India denies.

KASHMIR

The divided, mostly Muslim Himalayan region of Kashmir is at the heart of hostility between the neighbors and was the cause of two of their three wars since independence from Britain in 1947. The third was over the founding of Bangladesh.

Separatists began an insurgency against Indian rule in 1989 — a movement almost immediately backed by Pakistan — and since then tens of thousands of people have been killed. Most fighters want all of Kashmir to become part of Pakistan but many ordinary Kashmiris want independence from both India and Pakistan.

Krishna and Qureshi will have to sidestep another danger — getting bogged down in a blame game over ongoing anti-government protests in a part of Kashmir held by India.

Violent anti-government protests have swept India-controlled Kashmir for almost a month. The region is under an army lockdown.

WATER

The two countries disagree over use of the water flowing down rivers that rise in Indian Kashmir and run into the Indus river basin in Pakistan.

The use of the water is governed by the 1960 Indus Water Treaty under which India was granted the use of water from three eastern rivers, and Pakistan the use of three western rivers.

Pakistan says India is unfairly diverting water with the upstream construction of barrages and dams. India denies the charge.

SIACHEN

Indian and Pakistani forces have faced off against each other in mountains above the Siachen glacier in the Karakoram range, the world’s highest battlefield, since 1984.

The two sides have been trying to find a solution that would allow them to withdraw troops, but India says it is unwilling to bring its forces down until Pakistan officially authenticates the positions they hold.

Pakistan has said it is willing to do so but on the condition that it is not a final endorsement of India’s claim over the glacier, a source of meltwater for Pakistan’s rivers.

AFGHANISTAN

Afghanistan has become a major source of friction, although Indian and Pakistani differences over Pakistan’s western neighbor have not been a part of their official talks.

The two countries have long competed for influence there and Pakistan is deeply suspicious of a rise in India’s presence after the fall of the Islamabad-backed Taliban government in 2001.

It accuses India of using Afghanistan as a base to create problems inside Pakistan, including backing separatists in its Baluchistan province. India denies the accusations, saying its focus is on development.

This rivalry is complicating U.S.-led efforts to end an intensifying Taliban insurgency and bring stability to Afghanistan more than eight years after the Taliban were ousted.

(Compiled by Chris Allbritton and Zeeshan Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

FACTBOX-What are the issues between India and Pakistan?

(Reuters) – The top diplomats of nuclear-armed rivals Pakistan and India hold their second meeting in three months on Thursday in Islamabad amid continuing efforts to normalise relations strained by the Mumbai attacks of 2008.

Here are some of the main problems between the neighbours.

SECURITY

For India, security is the top issue. It has refused to resume a series of talks known as the composite dialogue until Pakistan takes more action against Pakistan-based militant groups.

In particular, India wants Pakistan to show it is serious in reining in the militants behind the Mumbai attacks, in which 166 people were killed.

Pakistan accuses India of backing separatists in its Baluchistan province and providing weapons and funding to Pakistan Taliban groups, charges India denies.

KASHMIR

The mostly Muslim Himalayan region of Kashmir is at the heart of hostility between the neighbours and was the cause of two of their three wars since independence from Britain in 1947 (the third was over the founding of Bangladesh).

Separatists backed by Pakistan began an insurgency against Indian rule in 1989 and since then tens of thousands of people have been killed. Most fighters want Kashmir to become part of Pakistan but many ordinary Kashmiris want independence from both India and Pakistan.

WATER

The two countries disagree over use of the water flowing down rivers which rise in Indian Kashmir and run into the Indus river basin in Pakistan.

The use of the water is governed by the 1960 Indus Water Treaty under which India was granted the use of water from three eastern rivers, and Pakistan the use of three western rivers.

Pakistan says India is unfairly diverting water with the upstream construction of barrages and dams. India denies the charge.

SIACHEN

Indian and Pakistani forces have faced off against each other in mountains above the Siachen glacier in the Karakoram range, in the world’s highest battlefield, since 1984.

The two sides have been trying to find a solution that would allow them to withdraw troops, but India says it is unwilling to bring its forces down until Pakistan officially authenticates the positions they hold.

Pakistan has said it is willing to do so but on the condition that it is not a final endorsement of India’s claim over the glacier, an important source of meltwater for Pakistan’s rivers.

AFGHANISTAN

Afghanistan has become a major source of friction although Indian and Pakistani differences over Pakistan’s western neighbour have not been a part of their official talks.

The two countries have long competed for influence there and Pakistan is deeply suspicious of a rise in India’s presence after the fall of the Islamabad-backed Taliban government in 2001.

It accuses India of using Afghanistan as a base to create problems inside Pakistan, including backing separatists in its Baluchistan province. India denies the accusations, saying its focus is on development.

This rivalry is complicating U.S.-led efforts to end an intensifying Taliban insurgency and bring stability to Afghanistan more than eight years after the Taliban were ousted.

(Compiled by Chris Allbritton and Zeeshan Haider in Islamabad)

Kashmir’s showpiece shopping plaza Sangarmaal thrown open

Srinagar, June 5 — With front porches lifted from Chrar-e-Sharief shrine, facade worked on stones and bricks’ influenced by Jama Masjid and water fountains a replica of Mughal garden Chesmashahi — Srinagar’s first government-owned showpiece shopping mall, Sangarmaal, was thrown open to public on Saturday evening by Chief Minister Omar Abdullah. The much-talked multi-storey shopping mall is the biggest of the state and first to epitomize Kashmiri architecture by using Khatam Bandh (woodwork) ceiling, mud-shade walls, mat-style windows and shrine-influenced porches.

“I was conscious of style while conceiving the mall. I traveled through the old city and was fascinated by Jama Masjid.

I also visited other historical places in the run up to conceive the idea. So I lifted architectural pieces from here and there.

I wanted Srinagar architecture to come under one roof,” said Sharad Das, the chief architect of the mall. With association of more than two decades with Kashmir, Das said he did not want to torn a page of architecture from Gurgaon or New Delhi for the mall.

“It has to be pure Srinagar architecture. Everything we used is local.

Nothing was imported from outside,” he added. Constructed on eight-and-a-half acres of land for Rs 21 crore, the Sangarmaal, which means first ray of dawn, is equipped with the state-of-art facilities like escalators, under-ground parking.

“To maintain temperature we have used cavity walls. In summers, it will be 4-5 degree Celsius lower than outside and in winters it will be 4-5 degree Celsius higher than outside,” said Das, adding escalator was included in the plan after the then chief minister Mufti Muhammad Sayeed dropped in from his residence, then next to the mall, and suggested a few things.

Das insists the mall is not just for shopping. “I wanted a place of gathering for Kashmiris where families, friends hang out and meet over a cup of coffee or for meals.

We have deliberately kept open spaces for people to meet at ease and with all comforts,” said Das. The shopping mall has expansion plans too.

Besides a children park, a multiplex-cum-convention centre has been conceived on the premises of the mall. “Once the police headquarters are shifted, one can see the mall while passing by M.A. Road,” said Das, who won the project in a contest thrown open in 1999 by the Srinagar Development Authority.

How proud was my valley

India, June 5 — Srinagar is the land of Shah Faesal. Everyone here knows who he is – topper of the Indian civil services, a new brand ambassador of Kashmir in 2010 “Yes, I know him, he is the top IAS officer,” Ejaz Ahmad, 39, a shopkeeper here, seeks oneness with the son of the soil that Shah Faesal is.

The life outside the airport here is like that outside any other airport in the country – big hoardings promoting cell phones and university courses. Way back in 1990, when this reporter landed at Srinagar airport and asked a taxi driver whether there was a taxi bearing the number plate JKF, the answer was: there is no JKF, here it is only JKLF – the abbreviation of Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front and the outfit which stands for the complete independence of the state both from India and Pakistan.

The azadi (freedom) sentiment was at its peak even though fiercely pro-Pakistan group Hizb-ul-Mujahadeen had started showing its military might – the group used to boast of largest number of militants, approximately 4,000 to 5,000. Hizb supporters would say “here everyone is a Mujahadeen (holy warrior).

” A series of widespread protests over the ‘fake encounter’ and marches to Shopian and invocation of the relevance of the United Nations’ resolutions notwithstanding, Shah Faesal – the bespectacled doctor has given a new ownership to this land, where IAS is no longer a hated service, it is meant for Kashmiris in a big way. Faesal, too represents a sentiment – aspire, work hard and achieve.

“He is our inspiration,” says Bashir Dar, an unemployed youth in his early twenties. He had a habit of cursing the National Hydro-electric Projects Corporation for power failures in the Valley.

He was among those who had bought the theory propounded by the leaders, particularly PDP president Mehbooba Mufti and her father and former Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed that “NHPC had stolen the waters of Kashmir”. NHPC has constructed three major power projects in the state and is also operating a fourth one.

It’s been almost a month since Shah Faesal appeared on the scene – a success story scripted by his hard work and ambition to make it big despite having lost his father to the bullets of militants eight years ago. With him three others from this land have made it to the IAS. They are: Mir Umair, Showkat Ahmad Parrey and Rayees Mohammad Bhat.

Four Kashmiris in IAS in a single year is in itself an achievement that has infused a new life among Kashmiri youth. that fact has opened a window of opportunity beyond the high Pir Panchaal range of Himalayas.

The IAS topper represents something “achievable” within the system that is cursed by many in the Valley. His accomplishment has presented the country as a land of opportunity where there is no discrimination in the name of religion, ethnicity or any other factor.

Civil Service Examination topper gets a warm welcome in J-K

Srinagar, May 8 (ANI): Dr. Faesal Shah, the topper of the 2009 Civil Service Examination, was given a warm welcome at his hometown in Jammu and Kashmir.

People from the neighbourhood as well as far-flung areas of the city gathered at his residence to welcome him amid drumbeats, flowers and garlands.

The 26-year-old MBBS graduate, who topped the list of 875 successful candidates, expressed his delight at the hearty welcome, and said he is happy to have proved the myth of indiscrimination for Kashmiris in the Indian Civil Services to be a wrong conception.

“There are many myths circulating in Kashmir. One of the myths is that we are getting discriminated; one of the myths is that we don”t have exposure, we don”t have talent; I think we will have to deal with inferiority complex that is inside us,” said Dr. Faesal Shah.

“I have proven today that a Kashmiri can do it in the first attempt and do it without coaching and he can do it from Srinagar only,” he added.

The locals lauded his success and termed it as the pride of Kashmir.

“We have talent as shown by Faesal Saheb. He has made Kashmir proud. We lack exposure that is the only problem. Rest is okay,” said Athar Sayed, a resident of Srinagar.

Transforming a hurdle into an opportunity, Dr. Faesal Shah coped with personal tragedy to become the first from Kashmir to top the Union Public Service Commission 2009 examinations.

The untimely death of his father in 2002 at the hands of “unidentified militants” days before his pre-medical test did not deter Dr. Faesal from clearing the examination or becoming the first candidate from Kashmir in several years to be selected to the Indian Administrative Service through open merit.

Dr.Faesal was born in Sogam village of Jammu and Kashmir”s Kupwara District. (ANI)

Pak back to singing K-issue settlement through UN resolution tune

Islamabad, May 4 (ANI): Harping upon the country’s same old jaded tune of resolving the long pending Kashmir issue in accordance with the United Nation’s (UN) resolution, Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said that any resolution to the issue would not be durable until the Kashmiris are not made a part of it.

Briefing the National Assembly about the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government’s Kashmir policy, Qureshi said Islamabad has always pushed for a peaceful resolution of the Kashmir issue in the light of the United Nations resolutions of 1948 and 1949, and according to the aspirations of the Kashmiri people, and would continue to do so.

“We are firm to our stance and shall continue extending moral, diplomatic and political support to Kashmiri people for their right to self-determination. It is our principle stand on Kashmir and we shall continue efforts for a durable and peaceful resolution of this issue,” The News quoted Qureshi, as saying.

He described the Kashmir issue as the cornerstone of Pakistan’s foreign policy, and said: “We cannot be oblivious to it. But, we desire a peaceful resolution through dialogue. That is the only way forward.”

Qureshi also claimed that prior to the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, both Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh and President Asif Ali Zardari, during a meeting, had agreed to continue the peace talks and seek a amicable resolution of the Kashmir issue.

He said the Pakistan Government is in constant touch with the Kashmiri leadership on both sides of the Line of Control (LoC), as it believes that a durable solution to the issue is not possible without involving the region’s leadership.

Qureshi’s statement are in clear contrast to former Foreign Minister Khursheed Mehmood Kasuri, who had claimed that India and Pakistan, through back-channel diplomacy, had evolved an ‘interim’ agreement on the Kashmir issue, and that it was subject to review after 15 years.

Kasuri said that both New Delhi and Islamabad, while working out the agreement, had realised that in view of the long standing dispute over Kashmir, none of the solutions that they evolve would resolve the issue, so the ‘interim’ agreement was the best possible solution available under circumstances at that time.

“We were aware of the fact that there would be an overwhelming support for this agreement; but we also realised that there would be criticism from some sections in Kashmir, Pakistan and India,” Kasuri had said earlier. (ANI)

Musharraf meets ‘good old friend’ Bush in Washington

Washington, Sep.19 (ANI): Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf met his ‘good old friend’ former President George Bush earlier this week, The Nation reports.

Musharaf’s close friend and former federal minister Dr. Naseem Ashraf told media persons that both former counterparts discussed several issues regarding bilateral interests and various national and international topics.

During their long talks, Musharraf told Bush that the injustice with Kashmiris and Palestinians was the prime reason behind rampant extremism in Muslim countries.

“Global peace could only be achieved by resolving the disputes of these two regions,” Ashraf quoted Musharraf, as saying.

According to Ashraf, Bush, during the meeting, expressed deep concerns over the growing extremism in Pakistan and various security issues facing the region.

Musharraf’s special bonding with Bush is not new as the former general had recently described the former US President as a ‘very good man’ and a ‘good friend’ of his.

Musharraf had said he specially liked Bush’s straight forwardness. (ANI)

Hurriyat leader Geelani placed under house arrest

Srinagar, Sep.11 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir police on Friday placed leader of the hardline faction of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) under house arrest as a preventive measure.

The arrest was ordered to prevent protests against Indian rule during Friday prayers.

Geelani’s close aide Aiyaz Akbar told reporters here that the former had been told not to break through his security cordon.

The ailing Geelani, 79, was earlier set free by police on Wednesday after serving a three-month jail sentence for organising protests against the Shopian double rape and murder case.

The latest detention came hours after he led scores of Kashmiris in an anti-India demonstration in Srinagar.

Police and federal paramilitaries were monitoring Friday prayers during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

He had addressed a press conference at his residence Thursday afternoon and later led scores of his supporters who shouted anti-India and pro-freedom slogans. (ANI)

Pakistan will continue to support the K-cause: Gilani

Karachi, Sep.5 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has once again said that Islamabad would continue its support to the Kashmiri people and the government’s decision to give autonomy to Gilgit Baltistan does not mean that it has shelved the Kashmir issue.

“We gave internal autonomy, sovereignty to Gilgit Baltistan which was a long standing demand of its people but this does not mean that we have forgotten the Kashmir issue. We will continue to give moral and diplomatic support to the Kashmiri people,” Gilani said.

The prime minister said the government had not altered its stance on the Kashmir issue by awarding autonomy to the Northern Areas.

He said Kashmir was the cornerstone of the PPP’s foreign policy, and support to the cause would continue.

Interacting with media persons during an Iftar dinner hosted by Sindh Governor Dr. Ishratul Ebad Khan, Gilani stressed that Pakistan was not a ‘failed state’, saying the country has a ‘strong democratic government, independent judiciary, free media’.

Referring to the Swat military operation, Gilani said security forces have ‘successfully’ defeated extremism and militancy with full support of the masses.

“NATO forces are fighting in Afghanistan for last five and a half years but Pakistan’s armed forces successfully carried out the operation against extremists and terrorists in Malakand in eight weeks,” The Dawn quoted Gilani, as saying.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi has said that there is a need to project the Kashmir issue more vigorously and the role of Kashmiri leadership was extremely important in this context.

Briefing political leaders of the Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) on the Gilgit-Baltistan reforms, Qureshi said resolution of the Kashmir issue was the key to a durable peace in the region.

“We feel that Kashmir dispute is central to Pakistan-India relations, which highlights the need for the Kashmiris to be associated with the dialogue process,” Qureshi said.

He assured the leaders that Pakistan has been making consistent efforts to project the Kashmir cause at various international levels.

Commenting on the water dispute with India, Qureshi said : “We have emphasized upon the Indian side that there was a need to ensure respect to Indus Waters Treaty and the commitment to address concerns related thereto.” (ANI)

Resolution of Kashmir only possible on equal terms: Sharif

Islamabad, Aug.28 (ANI): Former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has said that resolution of Kashmir issue is imperative for peace in the region adding that all outstanding issues with India should be resolved on equal terms.

During a meeting with Pakistan held Kashmir President Raja Muhammad Zulqernain, Sharif said Islamabad wants to resolve all issues with India amicably, including Kashmir.

“The issue should be resolved on equal terms rather than one side dominating the other,” The Dawn quoted Sharif, as saying.

“It is need of hour to start process of dialogue with India as it is high time that tensions between the two countries must be solved for the sake of millions of Kashmiris living on both sides of the border,” he added.

Zulqernain told Sharif that people on both sides of the Line of the Control wanted a solution for the long pending issue according to their wishes and aspirations. (ANI)

Kashmir ‘cornerstone’ of Pak foreign policy :Gilani

Islamabad, Aug.21 (ANI): Terming the Kashmir issue as a ‘cornerstone’ of country’s foreign policy, Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has said his government is ‘vigorously’ pursuing the issue.

Speaking in the Lower House of parliament, Gilani said the government fully supported the cause of the Kashmiri people.

Responding to a point of order raised by Kashmir Committee Chairman Fazlur Rehman, Gilani said he would direct government officials and Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi to be available for briefings of the parliamentary special committee on Kashmir.

Rehman urged the government to give a parliamentary status to the Kashmir committee, the Daily Times reports.

Islamabad has been pushing for resolving the Kashmir issue in line with the UN Security Council resolutions and the aspirations of the Kashmiris.

On Wednesday, Pakistan’s Minister for Kashmir Affairs, Qamar Zaman Kaira, said that neither his country nor the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) would compromise with India on the Kashmir issue.

Kaira, who is also Pakistan’s Information and Broadcasting Minister, expressed these views in a meeting with Sardar Ali Shahnawaz Khan, advisor to chairman of Christian Democratic Party in Oslo, Norway.

Kaira said that Pakistan is ready for dialogue with India for a peaceful solution of the Kashmir issue, but added that Islamabad would only accept a solution that was acceptable to all Kashmiris.

Pakistan, he said, has not shied away from taking up the Kashmir issue at the diplomatic level.

The Kashmir dispute has been a part of UN deliberations since 1948. Pakistan has demanded that the dispute be resolved as per the UN resolutions of 1948 and 1949. India, however, maintains that these resolutions are being wrongly interpreted by Islamabad. (ANI)

Kashmir Martyrs’ Day observed in Valley

Srinagar, July 13 (AN): Youme Shuhada-e-Kashmir or, the Kashmir Martyrs’ Day was observed here on Monday in memory of 23 Kashmiris who died in 1931 while fighting against Dogra rule.

Various Kashmiri leaders including State Chief Omar Abdullah, New and Renewable Energy Minister and National Conference President Farooq Abdullah paid tributes to the 13 martyrs by offering flowers and garlands on the graves.

Main Opposition leader in the J-K State Assembly and President of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Mehbooba Mufti also visited the Mazar-e-Shuhada (martyrs’ graveyard) and paid tributes to the martyrs.

Mehbooba, on this occasion, urged people to take steps for the sake of the Kashmir and appealed to make the State a place of dignity, peace and love.

To pay tribute to civilians who sacrificed their lives during last 20 years, the occasion was being observed.

Meanwhile, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, chief of moderate faction of Hurriyat Conference, a separatist group, had called a shutdown and a march in memory of those who had laid down their lives in 1931.

Administrative authorities had to impose a curfew in Srinagar ahead of a ‘Lal Chowk march’ called by the separatists and police opened fire on people protesting outside Srinagar’s Central Jail.

Demonstrators had gathered in front of the jail when the trial of a youth Abdul Qadeer accused of involvement in a case of agitation was going on inside the jail. (ANI)

Indo-Pak talks only possible if Mumbai accused successfully prosecuted: Miliband

Islamabad, July 9 (ANI): The resumption of the stalled peace talks between India and Pakistan rests on the successful prosecution of the perpetrators of the 26/11 Mumbai carnage, British Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs David Miliband has said.

Addressing a joint press conference with his Pakistan counterpart Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Miliband said the thaw in Indo-Pak relation is directly related to the trial of the Mumbai terror attack masterminds.

“In respect of the restarting the frozen dialogue process, the key next step is the successful prosecution of the people who are involved in the Mumbai attacks,” The Nation quoted Miliband, as saying.

Miliband said the Mumbai issue is very critical for confidence building between India and Pakistan.

He asked Islamabad to speed-up its probe on the issue, and said that the perpetrators should be duly punished.

“It is important that the Pakistan government moves faster and punishes the culprits if they are found guilty within the Pakistani legal system,” Milibad said.

Commenting on the Kashmir issue, Miliband said that the long pending dispute needed to be resolved with mutual consent.

“The dialogue needs to be held in light of aspirations of Kashmiris and it is needed to resolve the problem with mutual discussion,” he said.

Miliband, who arrived in Multan on a one-day visit on Wednesday, said Britain would continue its support to Pakistan, and added that it will help Islamabad to improve its relationship with the European Union.

Referring to the EU summit held last month, Miliband said: “The historic summit two weeks ago was very important. The whole of the 27 European Union countries and 500 million people are now increasingly focused on Pakistan.”

He rejected reports about British arms falling into the Taliban’s hands, but admitted the fact that there is a general global problem regarding the spread of illegal arms. (ANI)

Youngsters participate in cleanliness drive on Jhelum’s banks

Srinagar, July 5 (ANI): Several youth from different States have come together to spread awareness about the need to maintain cleanliness and preserve popular tourist spots in Jammu and Kashmir.

The youngsters are participating in a nine-day camp under a National Youth Camp and cleaning the area surrounding world famous Jhelum Lake.

Organised by the National Youth Project, New Delhi in association with Peace Foundation, Jammu and Kashmir, the camp is to last till July 9.

Volunteers collect garbage dumped on the banks of Jhelum Lake during the camp.

“The cleaning drive also sends a strong message that our property, tourist spots must be saved from all kinds of pollution and this property of Kashmiris must be preserved since many people depend on this lake for their livelihood,” said Fayaz Ahmed, chairman of Peace Foundation, Jammu and Kashmir.

Besides the cleanliness drive, the youth are also spreading a message of peace and brotherhood in the valley.

After Jhelum, the youngsters’ next plan is to clean world famous Dal Lake in Srinagar.

“We are cleaning by collecting plastics from the roads and taking clearance of the Jhelum Lake,” said Sunil Kumar, a youth from West Bengal.

Kashmir has been among the top Asian tourism destinations, particularly for the honeymoon couples, holidaying crowd, nature lovers, skiers and trekkers.

According to official figures, 430,000 tourists including 23,000 foreigners visited Kashmir in 2008. (ANI)

Strike is an injustice to common people: Omar Abdullah

Srinagar, July 2 (ANI): As the strike call given by the hardline faction of the separatist Hurriyat Conference continued for the third consecutive day in Kashmir, Chief Minister Omar Abdullah termed it a grave injustice to the common people whose earnings have been seriously affected.

“The strike does not affect my earnings, it affects the poor people who earn in these two to three months and can use it for the rest of the year, be it houseboat owners, taxi drivers. It is pure injustice for these people,” Abdullah said.

“The people who call for strikes should understand this. If they want to punish the government they should look for other ways to do so. They are punishing common Kashmiris, which I believe is grave injustice,” he added.

Because of the strike during the tourist season, daily wage earners like labourers, taxi drivers, houseboat owners and shopkeepers are suffering the most.

“It is the labour class that is suffering. For employees, they take their salary by the end of the month, but it is the labourers who suffer,” said Reyaz Ahmad, a resident.

The strike was called against the killing of two civilians when police opened fire to quell protests in Baramulla district on Monday.

The protests erupted over the alleged misbehavior of policeman with a woman. (ANI)

Peace process with India will resume in six months: Kasuri

Lahore, May 25 (ANI): Former Pakistan Foreign Minister Khursheed Mehmood Kasuri has said he is “50 to 60 percent sure” that the peace process between India and Pakistan will resume in six months.

In an interview with Najam Sethi on Dunya News, Kasuri said he had played a vital role in improving ties between Pakistan and India.

“[Former secretary] Riaz Khan and I were involved through back channel in dialogue between the two countries,” the Daily Times quoted Kasuri, as saying.

Both countries had agreed on how to define Kashmir units on both sides, the demilitarisation of borders, and formation of a mechanism that included Pakistan, India and Kashmiris, Kasuri added.

“All Kashmiri leadership was with us on this issue, except Syed Ali Gilani,” he said.

Kasuri said the dialogue stopped in 2006 because of elections in five states of India, and because of the judiciary issue in Pakistan. (ANI)

Kashmiris want peace with Pakistan

Rajouri, May 16 (ANI): Scores of Muslims here prayed for improved relations with Pakistan.

Muslim devotees who gathered at the Shahdara Sharif shrine at Rajouri said they prayed for a government that would restart the stalled peace talks with Pakistan.

“We have prayed for peace and that the relations between India and Pakistan are strengthened. The misunderstandings between both the countries should be sorted out,” said Mohammed Iqbal Chib, a resident.

He added that the people wanted the relations between the State and Central administrations to be strengthened for the good of the people.

“God gives better government in the Centre and the State’s leadership under Omar Abdullah. We want that the God makes their coalition successful,” he added.

Devotees also said that they hoped that the Congress Party would be successful in forming a new government, as it would benefit them in a big way.

“I have prayed that God makes the Congress Government successful and helps the poor because in Jammu and Kashmir there was devastation all over. With the coming of the Congress, we will have success and all our problems will be solved,” said Sadiq, another resident. (ANI)

Pakistan is weak, ethnically riven and a master of plausible deniability: Expert

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Pakistan in its current state is a country that is weak and lacks the capacity to enforce its law and ensure domestic tranquility.

Secondly, it is a country that can be identified as an ethnic patchwork state that knows well enough not to bend restive or potentially restive minorities to its will, and thirdly it is a canny state that seeks to advance strategic aims by feigning powerlessness.

This view has been expressed by Bret Stephens, the foreign-affairs columnist of the Wall Street Journal.

“It is politically weak, ethnically riven, and a master of plausible deniability-an art it has practiced not only toward India, Afghanistan and the U.S. with its support for various “freedom fighting” groups but also, in the matter of the CIA drone attacks, toward its own people,” claims Stephens.

According to Stephens, the roots of Pakistan’s problems go to its nature as a state.

“Even now, nearly 62 years after its founding, the best answer is “not India”:

As with the Palestinians, Pakistani identity is defined negatively. What else is Pakistan? As with Iran, it is an Islamic Republic: Punjabis, Pashtuns, Kashmiris, Balochis, Sindhis and so on are only really knitted together in their state as Muslims,” he says.

No wonder the Pakistani army has been so reluctant to redeploy the bulk of its forces to the western front: To do so betrays Pakistan’s entire reason for being. Tellingly, the army only went on the offensive this month after the Taliban took aim at an army convoy.

“The odds are roughly even that another “truce” will be agreed by the government just as soon as the Taliban draws appropriate conclusions and reserves its violence for clean-shaven men, independent-minded females and other enemies of God,” Stephens says.

He concludes by saying: “We live in an age dominated by immodest ideas of personal, national or ideological destiny, to which Pakistan has not been immune.” (ANI)

Indian Govt doesn’t bomb Kashmiris in J and K as Pak is doing in Swat: Taliban

London, May 13 (ANI): The Taliban has warned of carrying out ‘revenge attacks’ inside Pakistan against the Swat military operation, in which about 751 extremists have reportedly been killed so far, and said that even in Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian government does not use bombs against its own people, as was being done here.

The Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Sufi Mohammad blamed the Pakistan government of breaching the Swat peace deal, and killing its own people by initiating the military operation in Swat and other regions of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

“The peace deal has been broken by the government. Even in Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian government does not use bombs against its own people,” Mohammad said.

Speaking for the first time since the military operation began in the region, the Taliban’s influential religious leader charged the government of working under foreign pressure.

“The government is trying to keep a foreign power happy by killing its own people. They are taking the dollars and filling their pockets and just trying to please others by killing their own citizens,” Sky News quoted Mohammad, as saying.

Security forces have reportedly killed 751 militants so far and lost 29 of their men in operation Raah-e-Haq, which is underway in Swat and other parts of the Malakand division against the Taliban.

According to an estimate, about one-million people have been displaced or rendered homeless due to the conflict.

Meanwhile, the United Nations is planning to airlift food and emergency supplies to the tens of thousands of people who have fled the fighting. (ANI)