Pak Govt. can bring back Qaeda suspect Aafia Siddiqui in a day if it wants: US counsel

Karachi, Jun.11 (ANI): Hinting that the Pakistan Government was not serious in bringing back Dr. Aafia Siddiui, the Al-Qaeda terror suspect currently detained in a US jail, her American lawyer has said that Siddiqui can be extradited the ‘very next day’ if Islamabad asks for her repatriation.

Tina Foster said that the US authorities were misleading the government of Pakistan that Siddiqui can not be extradited before her sentencing by the court.

“Dr Siddiqui’s best chance for repatriation to Pakistan is before August 16 when a US judge is expected to sentence her to life-imprisonment, provided the Pakistani government put diplomatic pressure to get its citizen back,” Foster said during a press conference here.

Siddiqui, a trained neuroscientist, has been charged for firing at American investigators in Afghanistan in July 2008. She faces up to 20 years in prison on the attempted murder charge and life in prison on the firearms charge.

Foster, who is also the Executive Director of International Justice Network, also criticised US Attorney-General, Eric Holder, and the US Ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, saying they were ‘misleading both the government and the people of Pakistan over Siddiqui’s case.

“They have stated that she (Siddiqui) could not be transferred to Pakistan because her case is still pending in the court. This is incorrect, and the government of Pakistan should not be fooled by this obvious attempt to forestall Dr Siddiqui’s return to Pakistan,” The News quoted Foster, as saying.

She described Siddiqui’s trial in a US court as a “miscarriage of justice”, and added that after the 9/11, Washington was not even ready to admit mistakes committed by state authorities.

Foster also blasted the US media for labelling Siddiqui a ‘terrorist’ and calling her “Al-Qaeda lady”. (ANI)

Ahmadiyyas blame Pakistan’s policies for Lahore massacre

Toronto, May 29 (IANS) Canada Friday joined its Ahmadiyya Muslim community in condemning the massacre by Pakistani Taliban of 70 members of the minority sect in two Lahore mosques. There are about 50,000 Ahmadiyyas in Canada.

At a condolence meeting here, Lal Khan Malik, president of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat in Canada, said, ‘Once again, seeds of hatred sown by fanatical clergy and supported by the Pakistani government have resulted in death of innocents Ahmadiyyas.

‘Each year, Ahmadiyya Muslims are being martyred in Pakistan for no reason other than their faith.”

The condolence meeting, attended by Canadian Immigration Minister Jason Kenney on behalf of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, said the massacre ‘represents a serious escalation in the continuing official persecution of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community in Pakistan, a persecution that has been noted and documented by numerous human rights agencies and governments around the world.”

Dr Aslam Daud, general secretary of the Ahmadiyya Jamaat, said, ‘We request Canada and the international community to put pressure on Pakistan to immediately stop violence against our people.”

Ensuring the community on behalf of the prime minister, Kenney said Canada will ensure that those behind the massacre are brought to justice.

Later, Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon said in a statement that Canada is urging ‘the Pakistani authorities to ensure equal rights for members of minority communities, and we hope that the perpetrators of this horrendous attack are brought to justice. We will continue to work with Pakistan and our allies to help Pakistan address the challenges it faces.”

A high-profile group among the one-million Muslim community in Canada, the Ahmadiyyas inaugurated North America’s largest mosque in Calgary two years ago. Open to people of all faiths and built at a cost of $15 million, the Baitun Nur mosque is spread over 48,000 square feet.

Outlawed as un-Islamic in Pakistan in 1984, the community claims 70 million followers worldwide.

Suspected Taliban blow up “U.S. spies” in Pakistan

Taliban militants strapped explosives to two men accused of being U.S. spies and blew than up at a public execution in northwest Pakistan, intelligence officials and residents said on Friday.

The killings took place on Thursday evening in North Waziristan, a lawless al Qaeda and Taliban sanctuary on the Afghan border where the United States has stepped up attacks with missile-firing drone aircraft, fuelling militant fears of spies.

Five masked militants paraded the hand-cuffed men before dozens of people in the Datta Kheil area and accused them of passing information to the United States on targets for its CIA-operated pilotless drone aircraft.

“They strapped explosives around their bodies and then blew them up,” a Pakistani intelligence official in the region told Reuters by telephone.

Militants have killed hundreds of people they suspect are spies for the United States or the Pakistani government over the past few years.

They usually decapitate or shoot the suspects. Residents said this was the first time the militants had blown up suspected spies.

Pakistan’s northwestern ethnic Pashtun tribal lands along the Afghan border have never been under the full control of any government and have for decades been Islamist militant hubs.

During the 1980s, the tribal belt was a staging area for the U.S.- and Pakistani-backed jihad, or Muslim holy war, against Soviet forces occupying Afghanistan.

Many Taliban and al Qaeda fighters fled there after U.S.-led forces ousted the Taliban from Afghanistan in the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

A separate Pakistani Taliban force then emerged from the Pashtun tribes and they have been waging war against the Pakistani state in recent years.

The army launched a major offensive in the Pakistani Taliban bastion of South Waziristan last October, killing hundreds of insurgents and destroying their main bases. Many militants took refuge in North Waziristan, officials said.

The United States wants Pakistan to extend its offensive to North Waziristan and go after militants there, particularly Afghan Taliban, who launch cross-border attacks on Western forces in Afghanistan.

The Pakistani military, which has long seen the Afghan Taliban as tools for limiting the influence of old rival India in Afghanistan, says it will deal with North Waziristan but in its own time.

(Writing by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Robert Birsel)

(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: http://www.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/afghanistanpakistan)

Next big terrorist attack on US will be postmarked ‘Pakistan’: CIA analyst

Washington, May 15 (IANS) A former CIA analyst, who helped President Barack Obama formulate his Pakistan-Afghanistan policy, sees ‘a very serious possibility that the next mass casualty terrorist attack on the United States will be postmarked ‘Pakistan.”

‘What we’re seeing going on in Pakistan now is a very dangerous phenomenon,’ says Bruce Riedel, Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution, in an interview with the Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington think tank.

‘The ideology of Al Qaeda, the ideology of global Islamic jihad that all jihadists should focus on the United States as the ultimate enemy, is gaining ground with groups beyond Al Qaeda,’ said Riedel, who chaired a special interagency committee last year to develop Obama’s Af-Pak policy.

Obama and previous Bush administrations have been pressuring Pakistan for years to shut down completely the jihadist Frankenstein that was created over three decades in Pakistan, Riedel said. But ‘no Pakistani government has yet been willing to take on the entire network of terrorist groups.’

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has also raised questions about some in the Pakistani government still retaining links to Al Qaeda, the Afghan Taliban, the Pakistani Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba and a host of other groups.

‘We saw this in 2008 in Mumbai, when Lashkar-e-Taiba attacked Mumbai and attacked American and Israeli targets,’ Riedel said noting ‘Those are the targets of Al Qaeda and the global Islamic jihad.’

‘We’ve now seen the Pakistani Taliban try to launch an attack on the United States of America for the first time,’ he said referring to the arrest of Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad in connection to the failed car bombing in New York’s Times Square.

‘This spreading of the idea of global Islamic jihad is very dangerous and as it gets deeper and deeper into the extremist groups in Pakistan it means we can expect more attacks like the one we saw at Times Square, and we can expect them to become increasingly sophisticated and more capable,’ Riedel said.

Clinton has warned of ‘severe consequences’ for Pakistan in the event of a successful Pakistan-based terrorist attack in the United States.

But US options to act against Pakistan are ‘severely limited,’ Riedel said arguing the best option is ‘to get Pakistan to do more now’ in its fight against extremism, he says, by providing more weapons and technological aid.

Pakistan realises there is a cancer in their midst: Obama

Washington, May 13 (IANS) President Barack Obama believes that after years of looking at their main rival India as their only concern, Pakistan has finally come to realise that the cancer of terrorism threatens Pakistan’s sovereignty.

‘I think there has been in the past a view on the part of Pakistan that their primary rival, India, was their only concern,’ he said Wednesday at a joint press appearance with the visiting Afghan President Hamid Karzai in response to a question by an Afghan journalist about Pakistan’s unhelpful attitude towards Afghanistan.

‘I think what you’ve seen over the last several months is a growing recognition that they have a cancer in their midst; that the extremist organizations that have been allowed to congregate and use as a base the frontier areas to then go into Afghanistan, that that now threatens Pakistan ‘s sovereignty.’

Obama said he and Karzai had in the past, met with Pakistan President Asif Ali ‘Zardari, as well as their intelligence officers, their military, their teams, and emphasised to Pakistan the fact that our security is intertwined.’

‘Our goal is to break down some of the old suspicions and the old bad habits and continue to work with the Pakistani government to see their interest in a stable Afghanistan which is free from foreign meddling,’ he said.

‘Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United States, the international community, should all be working to reduce the influence of extremists in those regions, Obama said. ‘And I am actually encouraged by what I’ve seen from the Pakistani government over the last several months.’

‘But just as it’s going to take some time for Afghanistan’s economy, for example, to fully recover from 30 years of war, it’s going to take some time for Pakistan, even where there is a will, to find a way in order to effectively deal with these extremists in areas that are fairly loosely governed from Islamabad,’ Obama said.

Praising recent steps taken by Pakistan to take on militants, he said: ‘Part of what I’ve been encouraged by is Pakistan’s willingness to start asserting more control over some of these areas.

‘But it’s not going to happen overnight,’ he acknowledged. ‘And they have been taking enormous casualties; the Pakistani military has been going in fairly aggressively. But this will be a ongoing project.’

During a 45 minute meeting in the Oval Office, Obama said he and Karzai ‘both discussed the fact that the only way, ultimately, that Pakistan is secure is if Afghanistan is secure.

‘And the only way that Afghanistan is secure is if the sovereignty, the territorial integrity, the Afghan constitution,

the Afghan people are respected by their neighbours.

‘We think that that message is starting to get through, but it’s one that we have to continue to promote,’ Obama said.

(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)

Pak must shun India ‘obsession’, Afghan ‘meddling’ ‘bad habits’: Obama

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Noting Pakistan’s ‘obsession’ with India, US President Barack Obama has said that Islamabad must shun the ‘bad’ custom of viewing its neighbouring nation as a primary threat and realise that it was extremists emanating from its own soil that are threatening the country’s very existence.

Speaking during a joint press conference with Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai, Obama pointed out that his administration was working both with the Pakistani and Afghan leadership to help them do away with some of their ‘bad habits’ and old suspicions.

While describing Pakistan’s obsession with India as one of its ‘bad habits’, he acknowledged that Islamabad is now slowly overcoming the practice.

“I think there has been in the past a view on the part of Pakistan that their primary rival, India, was their only concern,” The Dawn quoted Obama, as saying.

“What you’ve seen over the last several months is a growing recognition that they have a cancer in their midst; that the extremist organisations that have been allowed to congregate and use as a base the frontier areas to then go into Afghanistan, that now threatens Pakistan’s sovereignty,” he added.

Responding to a comment of an Afghan journalist that Pakistan was the “the only reason that Afghanistan was not civilised today”, the US President said Washington was determined to help improve relations between Islamabad and Kabul.

“Our goal is to break down some of the old suspicions and the old bad habits and continue to work with the Pakistani government to see their interest in a stable Afghanistan which is free from foreign meddling,” he said.

During the briefing, Karzai was asked about reconciliation with the Taliban, to which he replied that there are “thousands of Taliban who are not against Afghanistan or against the Afghan people or their country; who are not against America either or the rest of the world”.

Karzai said there are many Afghan Taliban who wanted to come back if provided an opportunity and political means to do so.

“It’s this group of the Taliban that you’re addressing in the peace Jirga. It is this group that is our intention,” he said.

Without mentioning Pakistan, the Afghan President said that the Taliban being controlled from ‘outside’ were increasing troubles for his country. (ANI)

Hillary’s statement on bin Laden an insult to Pak: JeI chief

Lahore, May 12 (ANI): Jamaat-e-Islami chief Syed Munawar Hasan has said that the allegations made by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton against Pakistan regarding Osama bin Laden and Taliban supremo Mullah Umar amount to a blatant insult to the government, people and the armed forces.

Clinton had accused that there were people in the Pakistani Government who knew the whereabouts of bin Laden and Mullah Omar, and asked Islamabad to increase cooperation to capture or kill all the attackers of 9/11.

In a statement on Tuesday, the JI chief stressed upon Islamabad to protest against Hilary’s statements and also announce pulling out of this “crusade” against al-Qaeda and the Taliban, telling Washington that “enough is enough.”

Syed Munawar Hasan said former US President George W Bush had blamed bin Laden for the 9/11 tragedy without any investigation and had announced that Osama would be captured soon, dead or alive.

He said the US, despite its latest technology and resources, had failed to get hold of bin Laden during the last nine years and was now putting the blame on Pakistan only to hide its embarrassment, The News reports.

He also said that Faisal Shahzad’s drama was also staged to intensify pressure on Islamabad.

He said even if Faisal Shahzad was involved in the Time Square plot, there was no reason to blame Pakistan for an individual’s act and issue threats on this count. (ANI)

Hillary did not warn Pak of ‘severe consequences’: US

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton did not warn Islamabad of “severe consequences” if a terrorist attack inside the US were to be have its foot print in Pakistan, two top officials of the State Department have said.

“I don’t think she said that,” Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs P.J. Crowley told reporters when asked about such a statement given by Clinton in an interview to the CBS news on Sunday.

“I think she (Clinton) was responding to a hypothetical question that the United States, would take seriously any link to a foreign country where there are successful terrorist attacks. She’s not singling out any one country in particular,” Crowley asserted.

U.S. Special Representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke, while addressing the media at Washington Foreign Press Centre, said that CBS edited the interview and did not show the entire portion of its interview with Clinton.

“As a result, the quotes appeared to be different than what the Secretary of State actually meant.”

Holbrooke also said US aid to Pakistan would be impacted as a result of recent developments; consequent of the investigations according to which Pakistani Taliban was responsible for the failed Times Square bombing attempt.

“She herself praised the Pakistan government for what it has done. And so, I urge you not to react to a misrepresentation of what she said, although I think that happens from time to time,” Holbrooke said asking journalists to get in touch with the State Department spokesman for full unedited transcripts of the interview.

According to an as-aired transcript of the interview released by the State Department, Clinton was asked: “Even in light of the Times Square bomber, you are comfortable with the cooperation you’re getting from the Pakistani Government?”

Clinton answered: “Well, no, I didn’t say that. I said that we’ve gotten more cooperation and it’s been a real sea change in the commitment we’ve seen from the Pakistani Government. We want more. We expect more. We’ve made it very clear that if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan was to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences.”

Observing that Clinton’s quotes were not been taken in proper context, Holbrooke said: “I think that perhaps it was not fully understood for what she was saying by some people who didn’t see the full text or didn’t appreciate what she was saying. And of course, it was an edited interview.”

Meanwhile, a top Pentagon General strongly denied that he had ever told General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani that Pakistan was not being tough with the terrorists.

“Yes, there was an unfortunate news story that came out that was completely inaccurate that represented that I had expressed to General Kayani US policy on doing more, and that just didn’t happen. It was a one-on-one meeting and it did not occur. And I’d made it clear to General Kayani that I did not represent it that way,” General Stanley McChrystal, US and NATO Commander in Afghanistan told reporters at White House.

“I think that it is important that we understand that the insurgency faced by Pakistan, the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), is an essential threat. I mean, it’s a significant threat to their country. And it’s complimentary to what Afghanistan faces. So it puts the two nations with a common problem,” he said.

“The Afghan Taliban and TTP are distinct, but they are not completely unrelated, and therefore it’s important we sync our two campaigns together. And that’s why I spend a lot of time with General Kayani, who’s a good partner working that,” McChrystal said.

Pak envoy to US agrees that Times Square bomber acted `alone’

New York, May 11 (ANI): Pakistan”s Ambassador to the United States Abdullah Hussain Haroon has told CBS’ “Face the Nation,” that he does not agree with Obama administration officials that the alleged Times Square bomber, Faisal Shahzad, was trained by Tariqi Taliban in Pakistan.

“General Petraeus had it right that this was the act of a lone man,” he said.

Petraeus stated (prior to the administration”s claims Sunday) that he did not believe that Shahzad worked with other terrorists. And although Haroon said that the Obama administration may have other evidence, he said, “All I am saying is that the evidence I have points in one direction. It does not have its signature of the Taliban.”

Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon also contested Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s claim that the Pakistan Government knew the location of Osama bin Laden and other al Qaeda leaders.

Ambassador Haroon said that if the Pakistani government knew where Osama Bin Laden is, they would have gone after him.

He said that the Pakistani army — not the U.S. military — will have to decide when and how to send forces to North Waziristan, where it is believed bin Laden is hiding. (ANI)

McChrystal in ‘damage control’ mode after US’ ‘tough line’ with Pak post NY plot

Washington, May 11 (ANI): General Stanley McChrystal, the top US Commander in Afghanistan, has rubbished media reports that soon after the failed Times Square bombing he met Pakistan Army Chief General Parvez Kayani in Islamabad and asked him to launch a military offensive in North Waziristan.

“Yes, there was an unfortunate news story that came out that was completely inaccurate that represented that I had expressed to General Kayani US policy on doing more, and that just didn”t happen,” said General McChrystal, who commands US and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

“It was a one-on-one meeting and it did not occur. And I”d made it clear to Gen Kayani that I did not represent it that way,” he explained during a White House briefing.

Speaking during the briefing on Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai’s visit to Washington, White House’ Press Secretary Robert Gibbs tried to tone down the tension between the US and Pakistan, which has seen the Obama Administration openly warning Islamabad over its lack of action against extremists flourishing on its soil.

Commenting on Secretary of States Hillary Clinton’s stern warning to Pakistan that it would have to face “very severe consequences” if militants succeeded in attacking the US, Gibbs said the Pakistan government was also aware about the threat posed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is widely believed to have trained and assisted Faisal Shahzad, the confessed Times Square bomber.

“The Pakistani government recognises the threat that Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan poses to them, just as we recognise the threat it poses to us,” The Dawn quoted Gibbs, as saying.

“I think there is, without a doubt, an alignment of interest in understanding where that threat is and what it poses,” he added, while denying reports of any confrontation between US and Pakistan. (ANI)

Some people in Pakistan Government know where Osama and Mullah Omar are: Clinton

Washington, May 10 (ANI): U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that there are people in the Pakistan Government who know the whereabouts of Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

“I”m not saying that they”re at the highest levels but I believe that somewhere in this government are people who know where Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda is, where Mullah Omar and the leadership of the Afghan Taliban is and we expect more cooperation to help us bring to justice, capture or kill, those who attacked us on 9/11,” Clinton revealed on the CBS 60 Minutes show.

Clinton also said that she was of the view that the Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad was connected to a Pakistani-based terrorist group.

“There are connections. Exactly what they are, how deep they are, how long they”ve lasted, whether this was an operation encouraged or directed, those are questions that are still in the process of being sorted out,” Clinton said.

On the bomb in Times Square, she said that the message to the Pakistan Government was: “It”s very clear. This is a threat that we share, we have a common enemy. There is no time to waste in going after that common enemy as hard and fast as we can and we cannot tolerate having people encouraged, directed, trained and sent from Pakistan to attack us.”

“I have to stand up for the efforts the Pakistani government is taking. They have done a very significant move toward going after the terrorists within their own country,” she added.

She also said that she was never in favour of President Barack Obama considering her for the Supreme Court, given her legal background and credentials. (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.

Pakistan links of Times Square suspect grows stronger

Washington, May 7 (IANS) Faisal Shahzad, the Pakistani-American suspect in the Times Square bombing attempt, has been linked to Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and a Yemeni-American militant cleric who has inspired several recent attacks and plots.

The extent of Shahzad’s involvement with TTP has not been determined and could range from communications to training and does not necessarily mean that TTP directed the attack, CNN reported Thursday citing law enforcement and US intelligence officials.

CNN cited another official as saying 30-year-old Pakistani-American connections to TTP were ‘plausible,’ but noted that numerous connections among insurgent groups in Pakistan made it difficult to zero in on a single responsible group.

New leads developed from the Pakistani end of the investigation show Shahzad likely had training in Pakistan from extremists, CNN said citing another official who would not say if the training was specific to the Times Square bombing attempt. Investigators had not concluded from which group Shahzad may have received help, the news channel said citing yet another official.

But the New York Times said investigators believe he was trained by the Pakistani Taliban which previously focused mainly on Pakistani government targets. The influential daily cited a senior military official as saying Shahzad had told interrogators that he met with Pakistani Taliban operatives in North Waziristan in December and January. Later he received explosives training from the same operatives.

The Times also cited an official as saying Shahzad has told investigators that he was ‘inspired by’ the violent rhetoric of Yemeni-American cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Awlaki.

To counterterrorism officials it is no surprise to find that a terrorist suspect had been influenced by Awlaki, 39, now hiding in Yemen, who has emerged as perhaps the most prominent English-speaking advocate of violent jihad against the United States, the Times said.

Earlier this year, the Obama administration took the extraordinary step of authorising the killing of Awlaki, making him the first American citizen on the Central Intelligence Agency’s hit list, the daily noted.

In two recent US cases, Awlaki communicated directly with the person accused in the attack, the Times noted.

Nidal Malik Hasan, the US Army psychiatrist accused of killing 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas, in November, exchanged about 18 e-mail messages with Awlaki in the year before the shootings.

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian man accused of trying to blow up a trans-Atlantic airliner on Christmas Day, is also believed to have met Awlaki during his training by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

But it is unclear whether Shahzad ever directly communicated with Awlaki, the Times said.

Multiple media reports said a day before the failed attack, Shahzad carried out a dry run, parking his Isuzu SUV on West 38th Street between 9th and 10th avenues a few blocks from Times Square to be used the following day as a getaway car.

But on Saturday, after he left the smoking Pathfinder on West 45th Street just west of Broadway and walked to the Isuzu, he realised he didn’t have the Isuzu keys, the reports citing unnamed sources said. So he headed to Grand Central Terminal and boarded a train to Connecticut.

The Wall Street Journal said while investigators have so far found no evidence of any US accomplices – indeed, the fact that he parked his own getaway car suggests he was acting alone – they continue to chase leads in the case.

US piling up pressure on Pak to act over botched Times Square bombing investigations

Washington, May 6 (ANI): The United States is piling up pressure on Pakistan to follow the leads being provided to it over the attempted Times Square bombing with substantial action.

In a series of meetings and telephonic conversations with the Pakistani leadership, the Obama Administration has made it very clear that Islamabad would have to act after ‘clear links’ were established with Pakistan in the failed bombing plot.

Addressing a press briefing here, Assistant Secretary of State Philip Crowley said Washington has been in constant touch with Islamabad regarding the investigations, and that it has specifically been told what it should do.

“The purpose of the meetings was to inform Pakistan that there are clear links to Pakistan and that we would fully expect them to do what they should do and what they have been doing. Whatever leads are generated here in the United States … we would fully expect Pakistan to follow up on,” Crowley said.

“Pakistan, as you are seeing, has already taken its own steps. I”ll defer to the Pakistani government to describe what it is doing,” he added.

Crowley said US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson had detailed meetings with President Asif Ali Zardari, Foreign Minister Shah Memmood Qureshi and also talked to Interior Minister Rehman Malik over the issue.

President Obama’s Special Envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke also had a telephonic conversation with Qureshi, The Dawn reports.

When asked whether the US was satisfied with the action initiated by Pakistan, Crowley said : “I think it’s more a matter of what we do from this point forward.”

Crowley also clarified that the White House has not given Islamabad any list of things it wanted it to concerning the botched bombing attempt, but added that Washington will make specific requests as the probe proceeds.

“I expect we will make specific requests of Pakistan in terms of cooperation,” he said.

Crowley said that the attempt to bomb Times Square had “international implications” and the United States expected Pakistan to help explore those implications. (ANI)

Increasing terror strikes on Pak civilians akin to war crimes: Amnesty International

London, Apr.20 (ANI): Condemning last week”s terror strikes in Pakistan”s north western Kohat region in which over 40 people were killed and Monday”s suicide attack in Peshawar which claimed 24 people, Amnesty International has said that the increasing attacks on Pakistani civilians are akin to war crimes.

“The Pakistani Taliban and other insurgent groups seem to be escalating their attacks on civilians, in clear violation of the laws of war. Such attacks could constitute war crimes,” said Sam Zarifi, Asia-Pacific Director of the global human rights group.

Zarifi said the Taliban must stop killing innocent civilians, and added that the Pakistan government should tighten the noose on terror organisations to prevent terror attacks on people.

“The Taliban and other insurgent groups are subject to the international laws of war, and they must cease targeting of civilians. Meanwhile the Pakistani government has to do a better job of providing security and provisions for the hundreds of thousands of people displaced during the conflict,” he said.

It may be noted that banned militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi had claimed the responsibility for the terror strike on a refugee camp in Kohat last week.

The blast took place when the refugees queued up for rations at the camp. The majority of those killed in the attack belonged to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas” (FATA) restive Orakzai Agency, where the Pakistan Army is engaged in an intense battle with the Taliban and other extremist outfits.

Recent fighting in Orakzai and Kurram tribal agencies has displaced an additional 200,000 people.

According to an estimate, 3.1 million people were displaced last year in North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and FATA after the military launched an all out operation against the Taliban. (ANI)

Pakistan failed to protect Bhutto, probe death – U.N.

Pakistan failed to properly protect former prime minister Benazir Bhutto or investigate her assassination and “severely hampered” a United Nations inquiry, U.N. investigators said on Thursday.

Bhutto was killed in a gun and suicide bomb attack after an election rally in the city of Rawalpindi on Dec. 27, 2007, weeks after she returned to Pakistan from eight years in self-imposed exile.

“While she died when a 15-and-a-half-year-old suicide bomber detonated his explosives near her vehicle, no one believes that this boy acted alone,” the 65-page report by a U.N. commission of inquiry said.

“The commission was mystified by the efforts of certain high-ranking Pakistani government authorities to obstruct access to military and intelligence sources,” it said, while noting that many officials offered full cooperation.

The three U.N. investigators, who conducted a nine-month inquiry headed by Chile’s U.N. Ambassador Heraldo Munoz, believe the failure to effectively examine Bhutto’s death was “deliberate,” the report said.

It said their inquiry had been “severely hampered” though they were still able to establish the facts and circumstances of the assassination.

“Ms Bhutto’s assassination could have been prevented if adequate security measures had been taken,” it concluded.

Bhutto was mistrusted by parts of Pakistan’s military and security establishment and speculation has lingered she was the victim of a plot by allies of General Pervez Musharraf, the president at the time, who did not want her to come to power.

The report did not say who it believed was guilty of the crime, but suggested any credible investigation should also look at those who conceived, planned and financed the operation — and should not exclude the possible involvement of Pakistan’s powerful military and security establishment.

The commission urged Pakistan to properly investigate the assassination. The government had no immediate reaction.

The report was presented on Thursday to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Its release was delayed for just over two weeks because of a request by President Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto’s widower, to allow the commission to hear evidence from three unidentified heads of state.

NO AUTOPSY, NO FORENSIC EVIDENCE

Bhutto had returned to Pakistan, a key ally to the United States in its war against al Qaeda and the Taliban, to contest an election under a power-sharing deal with Musharraf that Washington had helped to broker.

A staunch opponent of Islamist militants, Bhutto survived a bomb attack on a rally hours after arriving home in the city of Karachi in October 2007. Some 149 people were killed.

After that bombing, Bhutto had spoken of a warning from a “friendly country” she did not identify. The U.N. report said Pakistan’s ISI intelligence service told investigators it had received information from Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates about threats against Bhutto.

The toughly worded U.N. report said Musharraf was aware of and tracking the many threats against Bhutto.

But his government “did little more than pass on those threats to her and to provincial authorities and were not proactive in neutralizing them or ensuring that the security provided was commensurate to the threats,” it said.

It said the government treated Bhutto in a “discriminatory manner in comparison with other ex-prime ministers,” who received much more effective protection.

The report described many failures in security on the day of the assassination and the ensuing investigation.

Police deployed on rooftops on the day of the attack were supposed to have binoculars and automatic rifles, the commission said. But not a single one had binoculars or knew that he should have been carrying them.

The Rawalpindi district police hosed down the scene and did not collect or preserve evidence, preventing a proper forensic examination. The failure to conduct an autopsy has also made it impossible to determine a precise cause of death.

The actions by police were deliberate, the report said.

“These officials, in part fearing involvement by the intelligence agencies, were unsure of how vigorously they ought to pursue actions that they knew, as professionals, they should have taken,” it said.

The former government that was led by allies of Musharraf blamed the late Pakistani Taliban leader and al Qaeda ally Baitullah Mehsud for Bhutto’s murder.

Mehsud was killed in a U.S. drone strike last August. Despite the accusations against Mehsud, conspiracy theories abound in Pakistan over who was behind the assassination.

The U.N. chief set up the panel in July 2009 at the request of Pakistan’s coalition government, led by Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party. Its original six-month mandate was extended due to the enormity of the task.

Any criminal investigation will be up to Pakistani authorities but Munoz has said the commission’s findings could complement government efforts.

(Additional reporting by Patrick Worsnip; Editing by John O’Callaghan and Eric Walsh)

UN denies receiving Pak govt’s request to delay Benazir murder report publication

Islamabad, Apr.7 (ANI): The United Nations (UN) has rejected reports in the Pakistani media that the government has sought a further delay in the publication of the investigation report of the UN commission probing the former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination.

“We have received no new request,” UN spokesperson Marie Okabe said, adding that the report would be released next week.

The Pakistani media had flashed reports that the government has requested the UN to further delay the publication of the report until June or even beyond, The Daily Times reports.

It may be noted that the report was due to be published last month, but the UN delayed the process following President Asif Ali Zardari’s request.

The three-member UN commission, headed by Chilean Ambassador Heraldo Munoz, was set up following a request by the Pakistani government to probe the December 2007 attack on Bhutto, and began its work in July 2009. (ANI)

Top Pak human rights activist coming to India on Ayesha’s mother’s request

Karachi, Apr.7 (ANI): Former federal minister and a leading Pakistani human rights activists Ansar Burney has termed the controversy surrounding cricketer Shoaib Malik and Indian tennis star Sania Mirza as an issue of ‘human dignity’ and ‘women rights’, and said he would soon be visiting India to ‘dig out’ the truth.

Burney said he decided to visit India after receiving a phone call from Ayesha Siddiqui’s mother requesting him to help the family and investigate the truth.

Burney said the marriage of Shoaib with Sania is their personal matter and he has nothing to do with it, but Ayesha’s claim has created serious doubts of alleged cheating and fraud.

“If the claim of Ayesha Siddiqui is correct then the Ansar Burney Trust will ask Shoaib Malik to accept his earlier marriage and say sorry to Ayesha, and if her claims are not proved she will have to say sorry,” The News quoted Burney, as saying.

Burney said he has already approached the Indian High Commission in Islamabad to issue him visa for India urgently, so that he could visit India to sort out issues between the Siddiquis’ and the Maliks’.

Earlier, Shoaib’s brother-in-law Imran Zafar arrived in New Delhi to seek legal action against the Siddiquis’, who have lodged a complaint against the all rounder.

Meanwhile, the Pakistani Government has stepped in and is keeping a watchful eye on the Sania-Shoaib-Ayesha muddle.

Pakistan has reportedly sent a diplomatic note to India, and requested for returning Malik’s passport as soon as possible.

Shoaib’s passport was seized by the Hyderabad police after Ayesha had lodged a police complaint with the Hyderabad Police against Shoaib under sections 498 A (harassment), 420 (cheating) and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code.

The Siddiquis’ claim that Malik married their daughter Ayesha in 2002, but has not divorced her till date. (ANI)

Top Pak human rights activist coming to India on Ayesha’s mother’s request

Karachi, Apr.7 (ANI): Former federal minister and a leading Pakistani human rights activists Ansar Burney has termed the controversy surrounding cricketer Shoaib Malik and Indian tennis star Sania Mirza as an issue of ‘human dignity’ and ‘women rights’, and said he would soon be visiting India to ‘dig out’ the truth.

Burney said he decided to visit India after receiving a phone call from Ayesha Siddiqui’s mother requesting him to help the family and investigate the truth.

Burney said the marriage of Shoaib with Sania is their personal matter and he has nothing to do with it, but Ayesha’s claim has created serious doubts of alleged cheating and fraud.

“If the claim of Ayesha Siddiqui is correct then the Ansar Burney Trust will ask Shoaib Malik to accept his earlier marriage and say sorry to Ayesha, and if her claims are not proved she will have to say sorry,” The News quoted Burney, as saying.

Burney said he has already approached the Indian High Commission in Islamabad to issue him visa for India urgently, so that he could visit India to sort out issues between the Siddiquis’ and the Maliks’.

Earlier, Shoaib’s brother-in-law Imran Zafar arrived in New Delhi to seek legal action against the Siddiquis’, who have lodged a complaint against the all rounder.

Meanwhile, the Pakistani Government has stepped in and is keeping a watchful eye on the Sania-Shoaib-Ayesha muddle.

Pakistan has reportedly sent a diplomatic note to India, and requested for returning Malik’s passport as soon as possible.

Shoaib’s passport was seized by the Hyderabad police after Ayesha had lodged a police complaint with the Hyderabad Police against Shoaib under sections 498 A (harassment), 420 (cheating) and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code.

The Siddiquis’ claim that Malik married their daughter Ayesha in 2002, but has not divorced her till date. (ANI)

Pakistan tables long-awaited constitutional reforms

(Reuters) – The Pakistani government introduced a constitutional bill in parliament Friday to transfer President Asif Ali Zardari’s sweeping powers to the prime minister, possibly ending months of political wrangling.

World

The set of reforms, known as the “18th Amendment Bill,” is expected to be passed by the two-chambered parliament, effectively turning Zardari into a titular head of state.

The development may help calm political opposition to Zardari, but the government faces mounting pressure from an assertive Supreme Court to reopen corruption cases against the president after it threw out a controversial amnesty law in December.

“I suspect that after the signing of the 18th amendment, it (the political environment) is going to change,” said Samina Ahmed, South Asia director for the International Crisis Group.

“Part of the problem is structural. Nobody knows where the locus of authority lies.”

Because of that uncertainty, she said all branches of government are trying to expand their powers at the expense of the others.

“There’s a little bit of muscle flexing all around.”

But if the 18th Amendment goes through smoothly, the center of authority goes to the parliament, “with the judiciary interpreting” — possibly leading to a less assertive bench.

“It will settle down,” Ahmed predicted.

That hasn’t happened yet. On Friday, Pakistan’s Attorney General Anwar Mansoor Khan resigned, just one day after he told the Supreme Court that the law minister and his ministry were not providing him documents relating to corruption cases against thousands of people, including Zardari.

“It had become impossible for me to work in such a situation,” Khan told Reuters.

Analysts say that even as a ceremonial president, Zardari would still yield considerable influence from his position as head of the Pakistan People’s Party, the country’s largest political party.

The PPP was once led by former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, Zardari’s wife, who was assassinated in December 2007.

Under the proposed constitutional amendments, the president will lose his key powers, including the authority to dissolve the national assembly and appoint powerful military chiefs and the chief election commissioner.

The bill gives the prime minister final say on dissolving the national assembly and appointing the heads of the armed forces. The bill also shifts Zardari’s powers to appoint judges to a commission comprised of senior judges and government figures.

Farah Ispahani, a senior PPP leader, said it was wrong to say the bill “stripped” Zardari of his powers, “as he himself sought to restore the constitution to its original form without the amendments imposed by dictators.”

Most analysts, however, say Zardari only agreed to the reforms reluctantly after intense political pressure.

“FOCUS OF STORMS”

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani, a staunch Bhutto loyalist, will emerge as the powerful head of the government after these constitutional reforms are adopted. Analysts say his role will come under increased scrutiny in the future.

“You think that the prime minister will become stronger after these amendments but I think now I will be the focus of all storms,” Gilani told parliament before the introduction of the bill.

“These proposals will strengthen democratic institutions.”

The reforms would also abolish the two-term limit on prime ministers, allowing Nawaz Sharif, a two-time former prime minister and now opposition leader, to contest for a third term after general elections due in 2013.

Under the bill, provinces will get greater autonomy, while the mainly ethnic Pashtun North West Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan gets a new name as “Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa” in a bid to represent its dominant population.

The legislation is likely to be passed by far more than the two-thirds super-majority needed in parliament because it has been drafted by a parliamentary committee made up of all political groups.

No date has been fixed for its adoption.

(Editing by Chris Allbritton and Jerry Norton)