-
Archives
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
-
Meta
Tag Archives: letter to the Swiss authorities
China to be Pakistan’s friend, come rain or shine
Tayyab Hussain 2 hours ago |
Comments
- Chinese Premier Li arrives, accorded Nishan-e-Pakistan
- Both sides agree on building Gwadar-China economic corridor
- Several agreements, MoUs inked for cementing strategic partnership
- Zardari says Gwadar project to improve connectivity for economic, trade corridor
You’ll be the PM on 5th, Zardari tells Nawaz
Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) President Nawaz Sharif is likely to take oath as prime minister of the country for a third term on June 5, as the president has decided to summon National Assembly’s session on May 28, Pakistan Today has learnt. A source said the decision was taken during a one-on-one meeting between Nawaz and Zardari on Wednesday at the Presidency after the luncheon banquet hosted for Chinese Premier Li Keqiang. During the meeting, the president apprised Nawaz about the oath-taking ceremony for the new PM. Both leaders discussed the overall situation in the country and issues relating to the run-up to transition. Sources told Pakistan Today that it was a desire of Nawaz to see the oath-taking of newly elected members of the National Assembly on May 28, as this date was memorable for him, as Pakistan had went atomic when then PML-N government conducted five nuclear tests on May 28, 1998. The sources said that during the meeting, President Zardari told Nawaz that to honour his desire, the median session of the National Assembly had been summoned on May 28. The president also apprised Nawaz that his oath-taking ceremony would be held on June 5. The sources said the president was of the view that by that time (June 5), elections of speakers and deputy speakers of National Assembly would be completed. After the meeting, Zardari told reporters that the Presidency would cooperate fully with Nawaz-led government to pull the country out of existing problems. The president said he already considered the PML-N chief as the prime minister. To a query on his party voting for Nawaz in prime minister’s elections, the president said that he had no role to play in party affairs and decision in this regard would be made by party leader Amin Faheem. Nawaz said everyone would have to work together to resolves problems being confronted by the country. The PML-N chief said the Charter of Democracy would be abided by and fully implemented. He said that he had no grudge against President Zardari. To a query, he said he had made no demand for the resignation of President Asif Ali Zardari, as he was elected democratically. The would-be prime minister further said, “We have the country’s interest in the mind not our own.” President’s spokesman Farhatullah Babar said the meeting took place after the luncheon banquet hosted for Chinese Premier Li Keqiang. The President congratulated Nawaz for securing a heavy mandate in the general elections and gave his best wishes to the new government. He said the president thanked Nawaz for accepting the luncheon invitation hosted in honour of the Chinese PM and expressed confidence that after political transition, the new government would successfully address the problems and issues facing the country.
UK soldier beheaded in London street by men ‘chanting Allah Akbar’
British Prime Minister David Cameron has called a meeting of his government's emergency Cobra security committee after the killing of a British soldier in London. Britain's government convenes Cobra meetings only to deal with incidents that have implications for national security. Cameron said that there were "strong indications" that a killing in London was terror-related. "It is the most appalling crime," Cameron said, before cutting short a visit to Paris. "The police are urgently seeking the full facts about this case but there are strong indications that it is a terrorist incident." Media reports said the soldier was killed in the incident in the Woolwich district in the southeast of the British capital. Two attackers with knives killed a man on Wednesday on the streets of London, witnesses said. They described the weapons as machetes or meat cleavers. Onlookers described the man as being "beheaded". The Express reported that a Whitehall source claimed the men were heard to shout 'Allah Akbar' as they attacked the victim in broad daylight. Police responded, shooting and injuring the two attackers in the south-eastern district of Woolwich, Metropolitan Police commander Simon Letchford said. "The prime minister says the killing in Woolwich is truly shocking and he has asked the home secretary [internal affairs minister] to chair a Cobra meeting," his office told Reuters. "A number of weapons were reportedly being used in the attack, and this included reports of a firearm," police said in a statement. Security was tightened in the area immediately after the incident. Helicopters hovered above and nearby roads were sealed off by the police. Earlier, a teacher at a local school told the BBC he saw a body on the road and afterwards heard gunshots. Photographs posted on social media showed at least two people on the ground who appeared to be injured, but no further details were immediately available.
China rubbishes Indian concerns on Pak-China nuclear cooperation
China has brushed aside Indian concerns about its cooperation with Pakistan in the field of civilian nuclear energy and it may agree to build more nuclear power reactors on Pakistani soil to help its neighbour overcome the grave energy crisis that has crippled the country’s economy. The Indian leadership expressed its concern to China during the visit of Chinese Premier Li Keqiang to India that concluded on Wednesday, diplomatic sources said. However, they said the Indian authorities had been told by the Chinese leadership that there concerns regarding Pakistan-China civilian nuclear energy cooperation were not valid, as that cooperation was meant only for peaceful purposes to help a friendly nation overcome the severe energy crisis it was confronting. The Chinese PM reached Islamabad on Wednesday from India and discussed with Pakistani leadership in detail the problem of prolonged power shortages along with other issues of mutual interest, sources said. “The Chinese leadership is very concerned over Pakistan’s energy crunch and it has assured all possible assistance to Islamabad to overcome this crisis that has paralysed the country’s economy,” a source said while seeking anonymity. He said China could also give its nod to the building of more nuclear power plants in Pakistan given the serious nature of Islamabad’s energy needs and requirements. However, he said he was not aware of any specific talks on Wednesday between the Chinese PM and Pakistani leadership on the construction of nuclear power plants. Beijing has already provided Islamabad with two nuclear reactors, each with a capacity of 300MW at Chashma near Mianwali. According to some media reports, Pakistan and China are also planning to build two more reactors with the same capacity at Chashma. The reports also speculated about the construction of a fifth nuclear power plant by China in Pakistan, but the sources said Chinese authorities had yet to give their nod to any such project. They said the Chinese were sympathetic and they understood the gravity of the energy situation that Pakistan was facing, but so far they (Chinese leaders) had not made any decision on the nuclear power plant about which speculations were being made in the media. India has been opposing cooperation with Pakistan in the field of civilian nuclear energy cooperation not only on part of China, but also the United States, despite the fact that it has clinched such an accord with the US itself. India claims that China’s supply of nuclear reactors to Pakistan is against the guidelines of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), a 46-nation global body that prohibits the sale of nuclear technology to countries that have not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). New Delhi had to secure the NSG waiver before the conclusion of its civilian nuclear deal with the US, but it opposes any such relaxation for Islamabad. The sources said China’s reaction to India’s opposition to the nuclear energy cooperation with Pakistan showed the depth of ties between Islamabad and Beijing. They said that the visit of Chinese PM to Pakistani capital would go a long way in further cementing the bilateral cooperation in various sectors including energy, defence and economy. “Apart from cooperation in the field of energy, China may also extend the financial support to Pakistan for the next budget,” a source added.
Pakistan, China ink accords on Economic Corridor Plan, maritime cooperation
APP 3 hours ago | Comments
Pakistan and China on Wednesday inked several agreements and memoranda of understanding (MoUs) that mainly included the long-term Economic Corridor Plan, maritime cooperation and satellite navigation. President Asif Ali Zardari and Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang witnessed the signing ceremony as the representatives of the two countries inked the documents at a ceremony held at the Aiwan-e-Sadr. The visit of the Chinese premier marked the signing of important documents aimed at long-term cooperation between the two countries in multiple areas. The MoU on maritime cooperation between the two governments, an agreement on Boundary Management System between China's Xinjiang and Gilgit-Baltistan area, and another agreement on border ports and their management system was signed by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Pakistan's Foreign Secretary Jalil Abbas Jilani. The MoU on cooperation for long-term plan on China-Pakistan Economic Corridor was signed by China National Development and Reform Commission Chairman Xu Shao Shi and, Advisor to the Prime Minister Shahid Amjad Chaudhry. China's Minister for Commerce Gao Hucheng and Pakistan's Economic Affairs Secretary Shahzad Arbab signed the Agreement on Economic and Technical Cooperation and the handing over certificate of Seismographic Network. The MoU on cooperation in the field of marine science and technology between the State Oceanic Administration (SOA) of China and the Ministry of Science and Technology of Pakistan was signed by SOA Administrator and Ministry of Science and Technology Secretary Akhlaq Ahmad Tarar. The agreement between China Satellite Navigation Office (CSNO) and Pakistan Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission for Cooperation (SUPARCO) was inked by CSNO Director Ran Chengqi and Major General (r) Ahmed Bilal. The agreement on establishment of Confucius Institute at the KarachiUniversity was signed by Xu Lin, head of National Office for Chinese Language and Muhammad Qaiser, KarachiUniversity vice chancellor. The other documents that were signed by the Pakistani and Chinese authorities included Annual Blister Purchase Contract and Greige Fabric Contract.
Li offers to help Pakistan cope with energy crisis
MONITORING DESK 2 Comments
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday said that China and Pakistan should cooperate on power generation a priority as Islamabad seeks to end an energy crisis that triggers power cuts of up to 20 hours a day, bringing the economy to a near standstill. Li arrived in the Pakistan capital on Wednesday on the second leg of his first official trip since taking office in March after a visit to India. Tight security included shutting down mobile phone networks across the city. Pakistan was one of the first countries to switch diplomatic allegiance from Taiwan to China, in 1950, and they consider each other “all-weather friends”. In an interview with Pakistan media, Li said there was still “great potential” for the relationship. Bilateral trade last year rose above $12 billion for the first time and both sides are aiming to reach $15 billion in the next two or three years. “Our two sides should focus on carrying out priority projects in connectivity, energy development and power generation and promoting the building of a China-Pakistan economic corridor,” Li said. The power shortages have sparked violent protests and crippled key industries, costing hundreds of thousands of jobs in a country already beset by high unemployment, a failing economy, widespread poverty, sectarian bloodshed and a Taliban insurgency. There are several joint energy and infrastructure projects under way in Pakistan and China has taken over operation of the strategically important Gwadar port. When complete, the port, which is close to the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil shipping lane, is seen opening up an energy and trade corridor from the Gulf, across Pakistan to western China, and could be used by the Chinese Navy, upsetting India. Li this week offered India a “handshake across the Himalayas” and said the world's two most populous nations could become a new engine for the global economy - if they could avoid friction. China and India disagree about large areas of their 4,000 kilometre border and their troops faced off for three weeks last month on a windswept Himalayan plateau where they fought a brief but bloody war in 1962. Pakistan and India have fought three wars, two of them over disputed Kashmir. India has responded cautiously to Li's overtures, partly because of China's friendship with Pakistan. For its part, Beijing is concerned about India's growing relations with the United States. “I wish to reiterate solemnly China's continue firm support to Pakistan in its efforts to uphold independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity,” Li said in a possible reference to India and to the United States, which angers many with drone strikes targeting militants in Pakistan.
No place for favouritism: SC suspends all transfers‚ postings made by caretaker govt
INP Comments
The Supreme Court of Pakistan (SC) on Wednesday suspended all the postings and transfers made by the caretaker government, saying personal likes could not be allowed to deride merit. A three-member bench of the apex court headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry heard the case against postings of 13 high-ranking officials by the caretaker government. The postings included managing directors of Sui Southern and Northern Gas Pipelines, National Highway Authority chairman, National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) chairman, Pakistan Mineral MD, National Fertilisers chairman, Oil and Gas Development Company (OGDC) MD, Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) DG and officers of Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA). In its orders‚ the apex court declared that the caretaker government had no mandate for posting and transfers of government officials. “Its only job was to hold general elections besides looking into daily affairs of the state,” the court said. The bench directed the federal government to submit its reply in the case on the next hearing, the 4th of next month. In an unprecedented move, the caretaker government of Balochistan announced the creation of two more districts, Sohbatpur and Lehri, days before its departure. Sources said the reason for this was not administrative, but political. Dividing the Khosa and Domki strongholds would allegedly benefit both the outgoing Balochistan caretaker CM and the caretaker prime minister. Caretaker Chief Minister Nawab Ghaus Bakhsh Barozai’s brother lost the elections in Sibi. It is, reportedly, after this incident that the decision to separate Sibi from Lehri was taken to ensure that Barozai retained his seat from Sibi. Hailing from Sohbatpur, caretaker Prime Minister Khoso was also seen supporting a candidate who eventually lost to Mir Zafarullah Jamali from Jaffarabad constituency. Khoso, upset at the defeat, reportedly separated Sohbatpur from Jaffarabad district to ensure undivided political influence in the region in the future. During the hearing, the SC remarked that the caretaker government could not make any appointment and posting that might affect the policies of the incoming government. The CJP said, “The new government should know well that appointments of choice and against the norms of merit will not be allowed. Doctrine of merit will stand implemented for the sake of good governance and the discretionary powers will also have to be exercised in the light of verdicts of the court.” Khawaja Asif said the caretaker government was a government of limited powers. “The sitting government has made new appointments, transfers and temporary appointments during election days. Appointments were made in sensitive institutions like NEPRA. Member legal was sacked in IT. Contract was awarded in PIA for which the caretaker government was not authorised. Their mandate was only to hold transparent elections and they could not formulate policy. They cannot steal the mandate of the new government.” The CJP said a new government was in sight and “it will also have to maintain the highest standard of transparency and bring to end the culture of likes and dislikes”. In its order the court said, “We have heard the petitioner and AG and noted that the caretaker government should not have done so at this stage. It should not have made appointments on such posts which could affect the new government. Law minister already has rejected such appointments. We agree with the stance of the AG. However, we direct that we suspend all the postings and appointments which have been made by the caretaker government on daily basis. If some one has been affected individually by these appointments he can approach the court and we will issue proper order in this respect. Further hearing will take place on June 4 and the caretaker government cannot make any appointment or transfer until the completion of hearing of this case.”
Altaf announces to begin ‘reformation’ within MQM ranks
STAFF REPORT
5 Comments
Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) chief Altaf Hussain on Wednesday announced the instigation of a ‘reformation’ process within the party ranks.
Speaking to members of the party’s Rabita (coordination) Committee via telephone from London, the MQM chief prohibited collecting any sort of donations from the general public. He said there is a ban imposed on funds collection, adding that the basic party membership of culpable worker/workers will be revoked upon any such complaints.
Hussain said the MQM follows “zero tolerance policy” when it comes to “China Cutting,” settlements and land-grabbing. “There is no room in MQM for people involved in these unlawful activities,” he added.
The MQM chief urged any party activist, involved in land and property grabbing or sale/purchase of houses, apartments or plots, to voluntarily resign from the party membership. Otherwise, he added, upon receiving any such complaint, party membership of the guilty worker will be terminated.
On Tuesday night, Altaf Hussain had also disbanded his party’s Karachi Tanzeemi (organising) Committee citing ‘hooliganism’ during his speech on Sunday morning.
PML-N caught between the devil and the deep sea in Balochistan
SHAHZADA ZULFIQAR
2 hours ago | Comments
The PML-N finds itself caught between the devil and the deep sea after Sardar Sanaullah Zehri, the party’s provincial head, has refused to give up his efforts to gain the office of the Balochistan chief minister against the wishes of the party leadership. There are three strong candidates – two from the PML-N and one from the National Party – to lead the future ruling coalition in Balochistan. They include Zehri, the newly-appointed parliamentary leader of the PML-N and provincial party president, Nawabzada Changaiz Marri, another senior party leader and Dr Abdul Malik Baloch, head of the National Party. Zehri, who declared his candidature for the top slot without taking the party's central leadership in confidence, started his efforts soon after the general elections entering into negotiations with the political groups and independent members, and promising them lucrative portfolios. Party insiders say Zehri’s solo flight annoyed the central PML-N leadership. Marri put all his energies in the central party cadre lobby for himself. The party leadership appeared to be tilted in his favour for being the eldest son of Baloch separatist, Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, who is considered to be leading a militant group, the Baloch Liberation Army, in the province. On the other hand, Dr Abdul Malik Baloch, a soft spoken belonging to the middle class, has the backing of Pashtun nationalist group, the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, which bagged 10 seats in the elections. Mir Hasil Bezenjo, a senior party leader, did extensive lobbying for his party’s chief to win the top slot in the province. PkMAP chief Mahmood Khan Achakzai is said to have asked Shahbaz Sharif to consider Dr Abdul Malik for the position of chief minister if the PML-N wanted to have a corruption-free coalition and rule of law in Balochistan. Party insiders claim that on Tuesday, the party leadership started consulting the would-be coalition partners as well as Sardar Akhtar Mengal, the head of Balochistan National Party-Mengal over government formation in Balochistan. Both Zehri and Marri are said to be making efforts to convince the leadership in their favour. Marri has an edge over his competitor because of being noncontroversial. Zehri on the other hand is involved in blood feuds and differences within the family as well as with other tribes. He also developed differences with Baloch nationalists when he nominated two elderly Baloch leaders Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri and Sardar Attaullah Mengal as well as their scions including Sardar Akhtar Mengal in the murder of his son, brother and nephew. Although the Baloch Liberation Front, headed by Dr Allah Nazar Baloch, claimed responsibility for the triple murder, Zehri still thinks the elderly nationalists are behind the murder. However, the three nationalist leaders deny the charges, saying Zehri was being misguided by intelligence agencies. The PML-N leadership is being convinced to not to nominate Zehri, who is allegedly said to be desperate to take revenge for the murders of his son, brother and nephew and could go to any extent in settling the score if becomes the chief minister. And in such circumstances, Zehri’s actions against Marri and Mengal tribes may ignite a tribal war in Balochistan that may shatter Nawaz Sharif’s dream of turning Balochistan “a cradle of peace”. And no assurances have come from Zehri for the party leadership that his “tribal affairs” will not influence the administrative affairs of the province once he takes over as chief minister. Mengal, the MPA elect and head of the BNP-M, is said to have categorically asked Nawaz, who has a soft corner for Mengal, not to include his party in the future coalition if Zehri is chosen for the top slot. The party leaders have suggested to Nawaz that if he opts for a party member to be made chief minister, he should go for Marri, and if he doen go with Marri, he should drop both Marri and Zehri and extend parliamentary support to Balochistan nationalist Dr Abdul Malik Baloch who already has the support of 25 MPs. In such a case, the PML-N will be one of major coalition partners having some influence over the day-to-day affairs of the province. It is now up to the PML-N leader whether he wants his dream of a peaceful Balochistan to be materialised through a clean and a stable ruling coalition or not.
FBI shoots, kills man linked to Boston bomb suspect
Agencies
2 hours ago | Comments
A man being questioned by the FBI over the Boston Marathon bombings was killed on Wednesday in an altercation after becoming violent, the FBI said. US media outlets said the man knew one of the Boston bombers and was shot by an FBI agent in the early morning incident in Orlando, Florida. The Federal Bureau of Investigation said the man initiated a "violent confrontation" during the questioning and was killed and that an FBI agent suffered "non-life threatening injuries". The FBI did not name the killed man, but the Orlando Sentinel newspaper identified him as Ibragim Todashev, 27. The man was being questioned by the FBI agent, two Massachusetts state troopers and other law enforcement personnel, the FBI said in a statement. It gave no other details. Todashev was reported to be a friend of deceased Boston bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, whom he knew through their shared hobby of mixed martial-arts fighting. Tsarnaev, 26, and his brother Dzhokhar, 19, were the alleged perpetrators of the April 15 Boston Marathon bombing that killed three people and wounded more than 260 near the finish line of the race. Tamerlan Tsarnaev died in a shootout with police. His brother was captured after an exhaustive manhunt and is in custody. On Wednesday Todashev allegedly attacked an FBI agent with a knife, broadcaster NBC reported, adding that he had spent time in the Boston area but was not suspected of having played any part in last month's attack. Citing investigators, NBC said Todashev had confessed to the agent in Florida that he played a role in a triple 2011 murder in which the bodies of three men were discovered in an apartment in the Boston area. Khusn Taramiv, a friend of Todashev's, told local broadcaster WESH that Todashev had lived in Boston and, like the older Tsarnaev, practiced martial arts. He added that Todashev spoke briefly by phone with Tsarnaev last month and that the FBI had expressed interest in him since the bombings.
Nation defeated misguided minority apprehending delay in elections: Kayani
Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Pervaiz Kayani on Wednesday said there were a lot of concerns over the peaceful holding of the general elections but the nation had defeated a misguided minority that held such apprehensions. General Kayani made these remarks in an informal talk with the reporters at the Presidency on the eve of a dinner hosted for the visiting Chinese prime minister, Li Keqiang. A reporter complimented the army chief, saying his speech made on Youm-e-Shuhda had helped remove all doubts about the alleged delay in the elections. General Kayani nodded and said there were lots of concerns about the holding of the elections, but there was no doubt that a misguided minority had been defeated. He said the army had provided complete support to the Election Commission of Pakistan in maintaining security on the polling day which resulted in a big voter turnout.
Bin Laden’s burial pictures to remain classified: US court
Special Correspondent
3 hours ago | Comments
A United States (US) federal appeals court ruled that photos of American military personnel burying al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden at sea, after his death in a special forces’ raid at Abbottabad in May 2011, will remain classified. According to the Washington Post, the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit sided with the government in finding that the release of postmortem images of the al Qaeda leader could cause “exceptionally grave harm” to Americans. A conservative-leaning group, Judicial Watch, had been pressing the Defense Department and the CIA to release at least a subset of 59 photos of bin Laden after he was killed in a raid on his compound in Pakistan. A three-panel judge wrote in a 14-page opinion that it was persuaded by testimony submitted by national security officials who had reviewed the photos and said that images displaying the bullet wound that killed bin Laden were “quite graphic” and “gruesome.” Attorneys for Judicial Watch had argued that other seemingly innocuous images that depict a dignified burial at sea were unlikely to cause any damage to US national security. But the court said these were not just any photos but “an extraordinary set of images” of US military personnel burying the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks. “It is undisputed that the government is withholding the images not to shield wrongdoing or avoid embarrassment, but rather to prevent the killing of Americans and violence against American interests,” according to the opinion from the judges. The court made specific reference to other instances in which national security officials said similar disclosures had incited anti-American violence.

High





