Pak Police poorly trained, ill equipped to handle Taliban onslaught

Islamabad, July 6 (ANI): The Pakistani police force is underpaid, poorly trained and ill-equipped to handle the Taliban onslaught, as the army drives them from their strongholds in Swat and surrounding areas.

Experts say the Taliban has now stepped up their attacks on the police because they find them far easier targets than the military, which has employed helicopter gunships, tanks and heavy artillery to push the Taliban out of Swat.

Talat Masood, a military analyst, said the government had been slow to train and equip the police for a wave of attacks.

“The police in this situation are not trained, equipped or geared to fight insurgency,” said Malik Naveed Khan, the Inspector General of the NWFP police.

“It’s a very serious war. You’re fighting the shadows of an invisible army,” the Chicago Tribune quoted Khan, as saying.

“For a force of 50,000, Khan’s department has 7,500 bullet proof vests and 17,000 automatic rifles. The department lacks explosives-detection equipment, a computerised fingerprint database and updated ballistic lab equipment,” the paper reported.

The microscopes that technicians use to conduct ballistics examinations, Khan said, “are the same ones used in high schools.”

“The department has 12 armoured personnel carriers, only three of which function. They are Russian-made and from the 1960s. They’re so old that we have to put a mechanic inside while they run. Every 3 kilometres, they break down,” Khan said.

Sub-Inspector Naseem Hayat said that he is fighting a war he knows police should not be asked to. With a handful of officers, he spends his days and nights opening car trunks, never knowing whether the next vehicle that pulls up is the one primed to explode.

“We are on the front lines. We know this is not our job. But we have been ordered to do this, to check every vehicle. That’s why we do it,” he said.

The Taliban focuses its sights on police stations and checkpoints; police commanders know it takes more than fighting spirit to fend off the terrorists. (ANI)

Conservatives winning in Turkish Cypriot parliamentary elections

Nicosia/Ankara – The conservative National Unity Party (UBP) was winning by a wide margin in premliminary results after Turkish Cypriots voted Sunday in parliamentary elections.

The UBP had 44 per cent with about two thirds of the vote counted, according to Turkish television reports.

The governing left-wing Republican Turkish Party (CTP), which currently has 25 seats in the 50-seat Parliament, was at about 30 per cent.

A change in government in the breakaway Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), a state recognized only by Turkey, will not directly affect reunification talks with Greek Cyprus but could put pressure on TRNC President Mehmet Ali Talat to take a harder line.

The eastern Mediterranean island has been divided into a Greek Cypriot south and Turkish Cypriot north since 1974, when Turkey invaded in response to a coup by Greek Cypriots seeking unification of the island with mainland Greece.

Reunification hopes were scuppered in 2004 when – in twin referenda – Greek Cypriots rejected a UN-brokered deal that was accepted by Turkish Cypriots.

Reunification talks resumed in September, and mediators are hopeful that a new deal can be brokered within a year. (dpa)

Turkish Cypriots head for parliamentary elections

Ankara – Turkish Cypriots go to the polls on Sunday in parliamentary elections with surveys predicting a change in government that could hurt re-unification talks with the Greek south.

According to a poll carried out by KADEM, the conservative National Unity Party (UBP) is 19 points ahead of the governing left-wing Republican Turkish Party (CTP) which currently has 25 seats in the 50-seat parliament.

A change in government in the breakaway Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, a state only recognised by Turkey, will not directly affect reunification talks with Greek Cyprus but could put pressure on TRNC President Mehmet Ali Talat to take a harder stance. Talat is considered a moderate and has softened Turkish Cypriot policy to Greek Cyprus compared to previous long-term Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash.

Earlier this week Greek Cypriot President Dimitris Christofias warned that a UBP victory could derail the UN-mediated talks, saying that it was difficult enough to find a solution with Talat in charge, let alone anyone who might take a harder line.

Talat’s five-year term as president ends next year.

The eastern Mediterranean island has been divided into a Greek Cypriot south and Turkish Cypriot north since 1974 when Turkey invaded in response to a coup by Greek Cypriots seeking unification of the island with mainland Greece.

Reunification hopes were scuppered in 2004 when Greek Cypriots rejected a UN-brokered deal which was accepted by Turkish Cypriots in twin referenda.

Reunification talks resumed in September last year and mediators are hopeful a deal can be brokered within a year.

The two sides have agreed in principle to a settlement based on a federation, but the Turkish Cypriots want a looser federation, while the Greek Cypriots want a stronger central government and more limited regional powers which will prevent the island falling back into partition.

There is disagreement on whether a bi-zonal federation would permit free movement or try to enforce the ethnic majorities in the north and the south.(dpa)

Zardari must restore PM’s constitutional powers to save his political career: Expert

Islamabad/Lahore, Mar.15 (ANI): A retired Lieutenant General of the Pakistan Army and well-known security and political analyst, has claimed that President Asif Ali Zardari can save his political career only if he hands over constitutional powers to Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

Lt. Gen. (retired) Talat Masood said Zardari has proved to be a “disappointment” as President so far.

“People are very concerned about how their political leaders, especially Zardari, are handling affairs of state,” he said.

“He can only survive if he lets the prime minister take constitutional powers in the next 48 hours,” The Times quoted him, as saying.

The statement came as the Pakistan Army announced yesterday that its troops were on standby in case of violence at the mass demonstration in Islamabad on Monday.

Zardari is close to facing a revolt from inside his party, as negotiations to end a standoff with opposition leaders failed to make headway.

Zardari has spurred dissent in the ruling Pakistan People’s party (PPP) with his dictatorial handling of the crisis, which began last month when Nawaz Sharif, the opposition leader, was banned from holding public office and direct rule was imposed on his political heartland, Punjab, the country’s largest state.

Political analysts say Zardari, who came to power last year on a sympathy vote after the assassination of his wife Benazir Bhutto, has further alienated voters with his heavy-handed clampdown on a nationwide protest by lawyers demanding the reinstatement of senior judges sacked in 2007.

More than 400 protesters have been arrested and main roads blocked to stop the lawyers going ahead with a “long march” to the capital, Islamabad, in their campaign for judicial independence.

Zardari is reported to have angered both Gilani and Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Kayani, by refusing to accept a compromise deal they had proposed to avert chaos.

Under the deal, backed by Britain and the US, the ban on Sharif, a former prime minister, and his brother Shahbaz Sharif, former chief minister of Punjab, from holding office would be lifted. It would also end direct rule in Punjab and reinstate Iftikar Chaudhry, the former chief justice, to a senior judicial role.

Last night, in what was seen in Islamabad as a significant concession by Zardari, a government spokesman said a review would be held of the Supreme Court’s ban on Sharif and his brother holding office.

An emergency meeting of the ruling party’s executive this weekend was postponed because of fears there would be too much dissent.

The unrest has led to fears that the army may intervene, reimposing military rule just a year after civilian authorities took power.

Meanwhile, Nawaz Sharif has attempted to project himself as the voice of moderation when he said in Lahore that he was ready to work with Zardari, if the president stuck to his promises.

Doubts are growing about whether Zardari can meet the opposition’s demands and survive a political backlash from his own party faithful.

He has already backtracked on three earlier pledges to reinstate Chaudhry because the former chief justice opposed an amnesty that absolved Zardari of corruption charges during his late wife’s two terms as prime minister. (ANI)

Attack exposes a vulnerable Pakistan: Experts

Islamabad, Mar.8 (ANI): Last Tuesday’s terrorist attack on the visiting cricket team from Sri Lanka is forcing Pakistan to look inward, making it more difficult to blame the U.S., India or other outsiders for a growing threat within its own borders.

“Unfortunately in Pakistan, we have many people in responsible positions who blame outside factors for their own wrongdoings and mismanagement, but on the global level it does no good to our interests,” said retired Lt.Gen. Talat Masood, one of the nation’s most prominent security analysts.

Abdullah Gaznavi, a spokesman for Lashkar-e-Taiba, said: “The attack is the handiwork of Indian agencies to malign the freedom struggle of Kashmir and Pakistan.”

Lahore-based security and political analyst Hassan Askari Rizvi said: “Empirical evidence shows Pakistan has little ability to fight terrorism and to prevent the country from being a free field for extremists.”

A’shar Rahman, a senior editor of the Dawn newspaper, said: “It is primarily the responsibility of the state to prevent such attacks.”

Imtiaz Gul, head of the Center for Research and Security Studies, an Islamabad think tank, said: “Why would the world believe that Pakistan’s nuclear arms are in safe hands?” (ANI)

PCB management blamed for making Pak cricket “laughing stock in the world”

Lahore, Feb.7 (ANI): With numerous controversies surrounding the apex cricket body of the country, former top cricket officials have started criticizing the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) openly, and have charged the current set-up of the Board of ruining national cricket and maligning it on the international circuit.

Former Pak cricket team manager Talat Ali Malik has said that the present management of PCB has ruined Pakistan cricket.

“They have ruined it. They don’t know how to run the cricket affairs. Pakistan cricket has become a laughing stock around the globe,” The Daily Times quoted Malik, as saying.

He said the officials are involved in blame-game rather than working together to uplift the condition of the game in the country.

Malik also held PCB solely responsible for the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) decision to relocate the Champion’s Trophy from Pakistan, and to revert the earlier decision and handing over the 2006 Oval Test match to England.

“I see it as a weakness of the ICC. I think they have made it a joke by changing the result and I don’t rule out another change in the future. The PCB has also failed to take a stand against this change and they were also weak in handling this matter,” he said.

He also charged the ICC for naming Sri Lanka as the possible alternate venue for the Champions Trophy, saying that Sri Lanka itself is no stranger to terrorism.

Commenting on the sudden removal of Shoaib Malik from the captaincy, Malik termed the decision as a ‘hasty’ one.

“No one should be removed for just having one bad match and I thought the decision of Malik’s removal was a short-sighted one which doesn’t augur well for our future,” he added. (ANI)