POK PM says he is as patriotic as any other Pakistani citizen

Islamabad, May 12 (ANI): Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK) Prime Minister Raja Farooq Haider has denied allegations levelled against him in a TV programme, and said that he is “as patriotic as any other Pakistani citizen, while fulfilling the role of a key person in the valley’s administrative matters.”

Addressing a press conference, he said he would inform Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani about the details of the TV programme, and “ask him to take action against the person responsible for deliberately defaming and demoralising him at the forum of state-run media.”

He also ruled out differences in the All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference (AKJMC), saying the “ruling party is successfully running POK’s affairs”.

Paying respect and homage to Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the POK premier said he was “shocked beyond belief” over accusations that he had spoken disrespectfully of Jinnah.

“How I can utter such words,” the Daily Times quoted him, as saying.

Haider added that he and his forefathers had never accepted the slavery of English rulers, and played a cohesive role in the freedom movement, and succeeded in gaining a separate homeland. (ANI)

Pakistani airports placed under severe terror threat: Sources

Lahore, Mar. 15 (ANI): Pakistan intelligence have been placed under severe terrorist threat following indications that Taliban fighters may attempt to hijack aircrafts in the near future.

Pakistani security forces have so far foiled several bids to smuggle weapons onto aircrafts, the Daily Times reports.

On March 10, the authorities arrested a man who tried to bring a pistol and explosive material on board a Dubai-bound flight at the Quaid-e-Azam International Airport in Karachi.

Investigators are still trying to determine whether the arrested man had any other accomplice travelling with him on the same flight, the sources said.

On Saturday, security forces foiled another attempt to bring a weapon onboard a Karachi-bound flight at the Allama Iqbal International Airport in Lahore.

A disassembled pistol was recovered from the hand-carry luggage of a passenger.

Sources said the criminal had tried to bring the disassembled parts of the weapon in two separate luggage bags.

The Punjab Home Department has alerted the police and other law enforcement agencies against terrorist threats at sensitive locations across Rawalpindi, Islamabad and Lahore.

A circular issued by the Punjab Home Department stated that a group of suicide bombers have been trained to target Peshawar, Rawalpindi, Islamabad and Lahore.

The group has been provided with suicide jackets and Remote Controlled Improvised Explosive Devices (RCIDs), it added. (ANI)

Zardari signs anti-women harassment bill

Islamabad, Mar.10 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has signed the Protection Against Harassment of Women Bill, 2010, which prohibits harassment of women at the workplace.

Addressing a gathering of some distinguished women guests at the Presidency after signing the historic bill, Zardari said people wanting to harm the ideology of Muhammed Ali Jinnah would not be spared, and that the government is committed to providing a bright future for the coming generations.

“We have to create a Pakistan where the coming generations, my daughters, can be proud of the fact that they live on an equal level as men. We will make sure that those who wish to harm the ideology of Quaid-e-Azam, which was equality for men and women, shall not succeed,” Zardari, as said.

Zardari also asked the private sector to cooperate in the implementation of the act in letter and spirit, The Daily Times reports.

Under the bill, each organisation would constitute an inquiry committee, comprising three members, including a female member, within 30 days to enquire into complaints

The Protection against Harassment of Women at Workplace Bill makes the offence punishable with imprisonment, which may extend to three years, or a fine of up to 500,000 rupees or both. (ANI)

Gujarat Govt. in line of fire for sales of RSS ideologue’s book

Ahmedabad, Aug 28 (ANI): After Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi banned Jaswant Singh’s book on Jinnah, the sale of ‘The Tragic Story of Partition’ written by RSS ideologue H V Seshadri, that has uncomplimentary references to Nehru and Patel, has come under the line of fire.

Sahitya Sadhana Trust, part of the RSS Headquarter, has sold thousands of copies in Gujarat in the last 27 years.

Sadhna publication defends the book terming it as history, as opposed to Jaswant Singh’s book, which they claim has more of prejudiced elements.

“Seshadri’s point of view is not prejudiced. He has written after taking all the aspects in mind. He has given lot of references at every instance. What Jaswant Singh has written, seems as if it has been written by keeping only one point of view and by keeping only one person in mind and it has more of prejudice and less of history,” said Bachubhai Thakkar, editor, Sadhna Publications.

Seshadri’s book holds Patel and Nehru responsible for partition, which is what Jaswant Singh has done in his book, ‘Jinnah: India, Independence, Partition’.

And since both the books come to the same conclusion, people argued that the Gujarat Government should ban Seshadri’s book as well.

“‘The Tragic Story of Partition’ written by Seshadri, who is an RSS ideologue is actually coming to the conclusion, which is the conclusion of Jaswant Singh’s book. So there is no basic difference between these two books. If you ban one book, you should also ban the second book, which was written more than 25 years back,” said Hemant Shah, a history professor.

The book ‘Jinnah – India, Partition, Independence’ has triggered a political storm in the country.

Newspapers quoted Jaswant Singh’s book, as saying that Pakistan’s founder was ‘demonised in India’.

In his book, Jaswant Singh observes that Jinnah, the Quaid-e-Azam, did not create Pakistan, as Congress leaders Jawaharlal Nehru and Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel ‘conceded’ to the proposals of the colonial British rulers who acted as an ever helpful midwife in the birth of Pakistan. (ANI)

Is Musharraf planning another coup in Pakistan?

Islamabad/Dubai, Aug. 26 (ANI): Sources close to Pakistan’s former military ruler Pervez Musharraf have revealed that he may consider seizing power again, only a year after a marathon 9-year innings at the helm.

“Musharraf is planning a return to power. He is discussing it with his close aides. He is not done yet,” a source close to the former president said.

The web site daily.pk quoted the source, as saying that, Musharraf, who quit in August 2008 under immense national and international pressure, has called a meeting of his aides in Dubai to discuss his return.

“The date for the meeting has not yet been finalised but Mr. Musharraf will be flying to Dubai from London this week and then will summon his close aides there,” the source said.

The source said Musharraf held a meeting with his close political aides and some Nazims (mayors) in London recently and discussed with them his future political ambitions as his two years ban on political activities will expire in November this year.

The source said that the former ruling party Pakistan Muslim League (Quaid-e-Azam)’s secretary-general Humayun Akhtar Khan also held a meeting with Musharraf in London.

Meanwhile, former Pakistan Prime Minister Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain has said that he will not make efforts to unify Muslim League factions as envisaged by Musharraf. (ANI)

‘Aslam Jinnah is not Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s great grandson’

Karachi, June 30 (ANI): Liaquat Merchant, the grandson of Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s sister Maryam Bai, has nullified Aslam Jinnah’s claim that he is the great grandson of the founder of Pakistan.

“He might belong to Nathoo Poonja’s family, who is Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s father’s brother, but he does not directly belong to the Quaid’s family and I say this firmly on the basis of my personal knowledge,” the Daily Times quoted Merchant, as saying.

Recently, the Pakistan Government had announced that Aslam Jinnah would be given a house, car and a monthly allotment of 50, 000 rupees.

“I do not object to the government giving him (Aslam Jinnah) anything, but he must stop introducing himself as Quaid-e-Azam’s family member. All I am concerned with is the fact that Aslam Jinnah is not from Quaid-e-Azam’s family and nothing else,” said Merchant, the great grandson of (Jinnah’s sister).

He was recently invited to present Jinnah’s Anthology, which has been published recently.

Merchant said that Jinnah’s father was Jina Poonja and his uncles were Walji Poonja and Nathoo Poonja.

“Only Walji Poonja’s son is alive and lives in Khaaradar,” he said.

Jinnah had four sisters, including Rehmat Bai, Mariam bai, Ahmed Shirin Bai and Fatima Jinnah, Merchant said.

He said Nusli Wadia, the son of Jinnah’s daughter Dina Wadia still lives in Mumbai with his two sons Jay Wadia and Ness Wadia.

Merchant, 68, said his last name comes from the fact that his father, Habib Hussain, was a Mumbai based businessman.

Merchant is a reputed lawyer in Karachi and his daughter Fouzia and son Akbar, are also lawyers. (ANI)

Jinnah’s ‘penniless’ great grandson finally gets his maiden flight

Rawalpindi, June 29 (ANI): Pakistan’s Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s penniless great grandson travelled for the first time on an aeroplane on Sunday.

Aslam Jinnah, who is the son of Jinnah’s niece, got a warm welcome on arrival at the Benazir Bhutto International Airport.

Bait-ul-Maal Managing Director (MD) Zumurrad Khan had invited Aslam Jinnah along with his family for the maiden visit to the federal capital.

Aslam, his wife Suraya Jinnah and 20-year-old handicapped daughter Zanib Jinnah were garlanded, and showered with rose petals as they came out of the VVIP lounge.

Aslam told reporters that he was thankful to God for giving him a chance to see the capital of the country his great grandfather had created in 1947.

With tearful eyes, he said it’s his and the family’s first-ever travel by an airplane and they had never thought of getting such a tremendous welcome at the Benazir Bhutto Shaheed Airport.

Aslam said he didn’t own a house and was leading a miserable life in a Karachi slum before the Bait-ul-Maal recently provided him and the family with basic facilities of life.

The Daily Times quoted Aslam as saying that his family makes plastic bags to earn a living. He said President Asif Zardari had promised to ensure free treatment of his disabled daughter Zainab, 20, in the US.

Bait-ul-Maal Zumurrad Khan said Jinnah’s family was the state’s guest and would stay in Islamabad for a week.

According to him, Aslam Jinnah and family are scheduled to meet Zardari, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and other dignitaries during the stay. He said Jinnah’s family would visit parliament on Monday to meet National Assembly Speaker Fehmida Mirza and other dignitaries. (ANI)

Partition of India weakened Muslims: MQM

Lahore, June 29 (ANI): MQM chief Altaf Hussain has said the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947 weakened Muslims, as it divided their power.

In an interview with Najam Sethi on Dunya News, Altaf said the partition harmed the Muslims, as a result of the formation of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, and divided their power into three parts.

He said there would have been no partition had the Congress accepted the Quaid-e-Azam’s 14 points.

Altaf said few people knew that even Allama Iqbal had not demanded the establishment of Pakistan in his famous Allahabad address in 1930.

“He had in fact demanded the creation of Muslim states in the Muslim majority areas,” he said, adding that Iqbal son Justice (r) Javed Iqbal could confirm this.

Altaf said that both Pakistan and India should learn a lesson from European countries and normalise their relations.

He said it was unfortunate that the ruling elite of India had always projected Pakistan as a threat to India while the Pakistani ruling elite had always ‘taught’ Pakistani masses that India was a threat to Pakistan.

He said several wars had been fought in Europe, including the First and Second World Wars, yet European countries had learnt a lesson from these wars and forged a unity, manifested in the European Union.

Altaf requested the Indian leadership and Pakistani establishment to follow the European example and work towards improving relations between the two countries. (ANI)

Politics, personal ‘vested’ interests ruining women’s hockey in Pakistan

Lahore, May 2 (ANI): Pakistan women’s hockey has been going through difficult times in the recent past, and if immediate measures to resurrect the sagging status of the game are not taken, the day is not far when women’s hockey in Pakistan would be an extinct sport.

People who have been involved with the game from years believe that politics and vested interests of certain individuals have destroyed women’s hockey in the country, which now stands on the verge of collapse.

“Ever since present Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF) women wing’s general secretary Ms Parveen Gill got involved with the affairs of women’s hockey in 1978, the game has not only gone to the dogs but it is almost non-existent now,” the Daily Times quoted an expert, as saying.

Sources said that Gill has no technical knowledge about the game, as she was the municipal corporation lady sweepers’ supervisor before making her way into the PHF women’s wing through her political connections.

“Officials close to her have always been non-technical individuals with little knowledge of the sport and who have been helping her on the way as she left Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) for Pakistan Muslim League Quaid-e-Azam (PML-Q) in order to climb up the political ladder,” they added.

Experts charged Gill for her ‘one-woman show’ in the women’s hockey association in the country.

They also criticized her for sticking on to the post despite her tenure ending three years ago in 2006, and delaying the elections of the association for so long. (ANI)

Pak rehearses two-step on air strikes

Islamabad, Apr.16 (ANI): Both Pakistan and the United States, it seems, have grown accustomed to an unusual diplomatic dance over the deployment of drones over Pakistan’s volatile tribal areas.

But according to the New York Times, for all their public protests, behind the scenes, Pakistani officials might accept the reality and necessity of drones more than Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi’s strong rebuke last week, saying that American drone strikes against militants in Pakistan’s tribal areas were eroding trust between the allies.

The Americans have defended their strategy for Pakistan, saying Qureshi reprimand was to be expected.

In fact, both sides have would suggest, Pakistan and American analysts and officials say.

Why else would Pakistani military officials be requesting that the United States give them the drones to operate, asked Professor Riffat Hussain of the Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad.

Hussain believes Pakistani officials consider the drones one of their only effective tools against the militants and their presence also takes pressure off the Pakistani Army, which has proved reluctant to fight the militants, or incapable of doing so, in the rugged mountains along the Afghan border.

Most of the aircraft, about the size of a Cessna, take off with Pakistani assent from a base inside Pakistan, American and Pakistani officials acknowledge. A small group of Pakistani intelligence operatives assigned to the tribal areas help choose targets, while the drones, armed with Hellfire missiles, are remotely piloted from the United States, experts say.

Permission for the aircraft to strike in the tribal areas was negotiated by the Bush administration with the former president, Pervez Musharraf, and then with the current leader, Asif Ali Zardari. The Obama administration has renewed those understandings, American and Pakistani officials say.

The cooperation has been successful. Nine out of 20 senior operatives from Al Qaeda on a list compiled last year have been killed, according to American military commanders, a fact the Pakistanis do not dispute.

But as effective as the attacks have proved, the Pakistanis’ discomfort with the drones is real. The larger issue surrounding the drone strikes is the trade-off between decapitating the militant hierarchy and the risk of further destabilizing Pakistan.Then there is the matter of public perception, particularly over the civilian casualties caused by the drone strikes, which infuriate Pakistani politicians and the media.

The deaths make it difficult for any Pakistani leader to support the drones publicly. At the same time, the Pakistani disavowals only reinforce the popular notion that the war against the militants merely furthers America’s interests, not Pakistan’s own. (ANI)

Pakistan girl denies flogging, but rallies condemn Taliban

Islamabad, April 6 (IANS) The girl who was reportedly whipped by the Taliban in Pakistan’s Swat Valley has denied the incident even as a rally was taken out in Karachi to condemn the public lashing. The Supreme Court Monday ordered a probe into the matter.

The girl was reportedly flogged by a Taliban cleric for ‘coming out of her house with another man who was not her husband’.

The girl’s statement before a magistrate was presented in the Supreme Court through Attorney General Latif Khosa. ‘The girl has denied the alleged flogging incident,’ Geo TV reported. The lashing footage was telacast on many TV news channels worldwide.

The victim was not present during the hearing.

Senior officials, including the interior secretary and the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) inspector general of police, appeared before the eight-member bench of the Supreme Court headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, which is hearing the Swat lashing case.

Chaudhry said that ‘investigations be conducted’ into the incident.

A two-minute video showed the 17-year-old, burqa-clad girl screaming while being whipped by Taliban fighters.

The grainy video, shot on a mobile phone, showed the girl face down on the ground. Two men held her arms and feet while a third, a black-turbaned fighter with a flowing beard, whipped her repeatedly, London’s Guardian newspaper reported.

The newspaper said it received the video through Samar Minallah, a Pashtoon documentary maker.

After 34 lashes the punishment stopped and the wailing girl was led into a stone building.

The MQM Sunday condemned the flogging of the girl and its women wing staged a rally near Quaid-e-Azam’s mausoleum in Karachi, the Nation newspaper reported.

MQM activists wore black armbands and hung effigies of Taliban.

The Minhajul Quran Women League (MQWL) Saturday staged a demonstration outside the Lahore Press Club to condemn the flogging and demanded strict action against those involved in the incident, the News International reported.

Addressing the protesters, MQWL chief Fatima Mashadi said those who flogged the girl were not following Islam and they had brought a bad name to the religion and the country.

The NWFP government ceded authority to the Taliban under a peace deal, giving the militants a free hand to impose their puritan Islamic rule on the around 600,000 people of Swat and its neighbouring districts.

The peace accord signed with pro-Taliban cleric Maulana Sufi Mohammad includes measures to establish Islamic courts, a ban on music, expulsion of prostitutes and pimps from the area, closure of businesses during prayer times, and a campaign against what they call obscenity.

Cricket in Pak will benefit more from batting-friendly pitches: Miandad

Karachi, Jan (ANI): Pakistan Cricket Board’s (PCB) Director General Javed Miandad feels that cricket in the country will benefit more from batting-friendly strips.

The former Pakistan captain told reporters here that he has instructed the country’s chief curator to prepare wickets that can enable high-scoring matches instead of green tops in domestic tournaments like the ongoing Quaid-e-Azam Trophy.

Miandad said that sub-standard wickets were prepared for the initial rounds of the tournament, which is why most of the first-class matches ended within two or three days.

He said Pakistan should have wickets on which a team can score 500 or 600 runs, The News reported.

“We need to produce world class batsmen. We need seven good batsmen for the national team and you cannot groom them on sub-standard wickets,” he said.

Senior Pakistani cricketers like pacer Shoaib Akhtar and batsman Younis Khan have in the recent times urged for sporting wickets.

They wanted the PCB to order wickets that can support fast bowlers.

However, Miandad made it clear that the Board will not vote in the favour of bouncy and green-top wickets. “Fast wickets will not serve the purpose.”

“If you see all over the world, wickets are becoming more batting friendly because spectators come to see runs being scored. We also need our domestic matches to be high-scoring encounters,” he said. (ANI)