Friday, November 28, 2014

Catastrophic Failure of PTI In Education Failure in Pakhtunkhwa when it is Needed Most.


Lacking urgency: Educationists flay govt for failure to enact Article 25-A
By Asad Zia
Published: November 27, 2014
Civil society organisations and the education department prepared a draft bill for free and compulsory education in the province. 

PESHAWAR: Education activists expressed concern over the four-year delay in enacting Article 25-A and urged the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) Assembly to approve the draft bill at the earliest.

During a news conference at the Peshawar Press Club on Thursday, activists said after the 18th Amendment, civil society organisations and the education department prepared a draft bill for free and compulsory education in the province. However, both the previous Awami National Party (ANP) regime and the current Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) failed to turn the bill into a law.



They pointed out 2.5 million children across the province were out of school and claimed the current government had not constructed a single school for them.

Addressing the audience, SPARC Regional Manager Jehanzaib Khan said although the government declared an education emergency in K-P, children lacked basic facilities and teachers at schools. “If there are no teachers or facilities, how can the children get an education,” he questioned.

ActionAid representative Aliya Rashid said the other three provinces enacted the law for free and compulsory education, while the draft had been pending before K-P lawmakers for the last four years. She said the previous government had done some work in this regard, but the current regime remained “motionless”. Rashid urged a swift approval of the draft bill for the 2.5 million out-of-school children in K-P.

“The government must enact the bill which will by law force parents to send their children to school,” said Advocate Noor Alam Khan. Financial constraints make parents send their children to madrassahs instead of schools, which are expensive, he added. This will force their hand, said Noor Alam.

Qaumi Watan Party MPA Miraj Humayun Khan stressed the government had doubled the education budget, but only spent Rs2 billion on education development. She said the province required 1,250 more schools, with five teachers per institute, to meet the needs of out-of-school children. However, the government claimed it lacked the resources to build schools in such large numbers, she noted.

ANP MPA Syed Jafar Shah said a draft bill was made at the end of the previous government, but could not be passed due to the lack of time. According to Shah, his party’s rule saw “record-breaking work” in the field of education.

He said the incumbent government had plenty of resources, but lacked political will due to which education was ignored.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 28th, 2014.

source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/798385/lacking-urgency-educationists-flay-govt-for-failure-to-enact-article-25-a/



Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Journalists of Pakhtunkhwa under PTSD and Severe Stress but Wont Seek Help.


Trauma centre to help Pakistani journalists, but stigma attached
By Reuters
Published: November 25, 2014
Psychology students study outside the Competence and Trauma Centre for Journalists inside a university's psychology department in Peshawar November 24, 2014.



PESHAWAR: Death threats, bombings and getting attacked is part of the job for many Pakistani journalists but they say one of the biggest barriers to seeking counselling to help cope is the stigma that they need it – and others in the business talking about it.

Immersion in the extreme violence and daily threats mean many journalists suffer from post traumatic stress disorder, health professionals said this week during the opening of the country’s first trauma centre for journalists.

The centre is supposed to help address Pakistan’s massive shortfall of trained counsellors and help journalists deal with the psychological fallout of reporting bombings, militancy and drone strikes.

Many of the problems that plague journalists also trouble frontline security forces, bomb technicians and civilians.

Few receive help – Pakistan has only 450 practising clinical psychologists for 180 million citizens, industry professionals said.

But many journalists say the fear of exposure by cutthroat colleagues keeps those in the industry from seeking help.

The competition for jobs is intense, and the country’s largest journalist union is split into feuding factions.

“The major challenge is your colleagues … They speak against you,” said Jamshed Baghwan, a television journalist for Express News.

His family home has been attacked three times but he doesn’t need counselling, he said.

That’s why the new German-funded Competence and Trauma Centre for Journalists, nestled amid the rose gardens and brick university buildings in Peshawar, says it keeps patient confidentiality absolute.

Dr Erum Irshad, head of the university’s psychology department, said that 14 of 20 journalists who participated in a pilot study suffered from severe stress. No larger studies exist.

Seven journalists had already sought help, she said.

Journalists at the opening told Reuters stories of being kidnapped by the Taliban, wading through hundreds of body parts at mass bombings, or witnessing decapitations.

But all said they would be reluctant to seek help.

Journalists who sought help privately say many counsellors are not equipped to deal with their daily exposure to violence.

One journalist told Reuters he saw three private psychologists and a psychiatrist after suffering severe panic attacks caused by death threats and violence he had witnessed.

Their advice: pray more.

“This is a very neglected field,” said Professor Syed Haroon Ahmed, head of the Pakistan Association for Mental Health.

“People are not dying, so it is not a priority.”

SOURCE: http://tribune.com.pk/story/796915/trauma-centre-to-help-pakistani-journalists-but-stigma-attached/

The Umpire (Punjabi establishment ) Strikes Back, Drama of Taliban Khan PTI + Qadri Against its own created Mian Taliban Sharif PMLN.


The Umpire Strikes Back
By Saroop Ijaz
Published: August 31, 2014



The writer is a lawyer and partner at Ijaz and Ijaz Co in Lahore saroop.ijaz@tribune.com.pk

Was this really about any demands (at least those made before the marches and the sit-ins), except, maybe, the very confusingly phrased singular demand, “Go Nawaz Go”? Mr Imran Khan just has the same anecdotal ‘evidence’ about rigging, which is also featuring less and less as days go on; the rest is ad hominem attacks and false bravado. Vanity is a dangerous sin. To hear Mr Khan talk about his prison days (yes, all eight of them, maybe he should just do a Gramsci and write his Prison Notebooks already) without any visible embarrassment is not that amusing anymore. The primary reason (apart from the obvious, blatant power lust) given by Mr Khan that he has tried legal avenues for fourteen months and now his ‘patience’ has run out. Really? One can only speculate on whatever subjective conception of the legal system he has in his head. What sell-out courts are these who have failed to factor in that he is a “fast bowler” and thus has a little patience, right? Never mind the institutional problems with the legal system that millions face every day. This exceptionalism is not surprising from a man, whose speeches constitute exclusively of “I, me and myself”.

Yet, there were finally some signs of humility, of ordinary human emotions from the Mighty Khan. It was moving to see him suppress giggles as he rushed to meet the ‘Chief’, almost like a child meeting his idol; an emotion countless have felt about seeing and meeting Imran Khan. Mr Khan wants to be something like General Raheel Sharif when he grows up. The Umpire has not lifted his finger yet, however, you have got his attention.

His holiness has one absolutely legitimate and non-negotiable point, the registration of theModel Town FIR. There is no grounds explaining the delay from the government; none. However, rest is hubris, at least in form, if not completely in substance. Yet, it was interesting to see his grace making the exception, letting “martyrdom”, “revolution” and other such elevated things wait, as he made his way to the “Sipahsalar”, and Dr Qadri’s speech post-meeting suggested that he had just met the perfect living specimen of humanity. It is time to dust off the old slogan from the days of infamy of the lawyers’ movement, “Chief teray jannisar, beshumaar, beshumaar” or of course the new “Raheel, teray phone say inqalaab aaye ga”.



One cannot be certain if the ‘Chief’ wanted it to be this way; however, one can be fairly certain, that the Chief is not complaining. What about the man that this country elected to govern this country? Mian Nawaz Sharif has not surrendered completely, yet he surrendered significantly on Thursday evening, when he asked the Army chief to ‘facilitate’. That was the prime minister, throwing his hands up, shrugging his shoulders, and in essence saying “I am just not up to it”. One can debate the semantics till Kingdom comes (might be sooner than Mian Sahib thinks), yet the point remains, that the prime minister buckled under pressure in the Parliament on Friday, and did not state the whole truth. Of course, Mr Imran Khan and Allama Qadri wanted the Army chief to ‘mediate’/ ‘facilitate’/ ‘arbitrate’ (no meaningful difference in this context, let go off the Oxford Dictionary) right from the get go. It was you Mian Sahib, who was supposed to resist and repose the trust in the Parliament which the Parliament reposed in you.

The Leader of the Opposition, Mr Khursheed Shah, made the best speech of the last 14 months on the floor of the House. Excellent and with moral clarity; no coups will go unresisted. Yet, that speech had to be made by Mian Sahib. Nawaz Sharif has never been a man of crisis, starting as a prodigy of General Jillani and General Ziaul Haq. The patriotic business tycoon from Punjab against the treasonous folks from the deep dark feudal fiefdoms of Sindh, he is used to having at least two out of the three power centres — the Army, Media or the Judiciary — with him. For the past five years, he had the media and judiciary who were vehemently anti-government. Now, Mian Nawaz Sharif has a government and a state with fragmented power centres, whereas one deal is good enough. It is a test of his nerves, the past is not confidence-inspiring on that account. Mian Nawaz Sharif lost his nerve and asked the Army Chief to intervene (even if demanded by Mr Imran Khan and Allama Qadri). The only honourable course of action was him apologising to the Parliament and assuring it that he is a man worthy of their trust and support. Instead he simply told a half-truth. Mian Nawaz Sharif cannot take stand like Syed Khursheed Shah, simply because he has never had the need. It has always been detached arrogance until tragedy strikes. Well, he has to learn now.

It took the government a good 14 hours to react to the news of the prime minister asking the army chief to intervene, like it took Mian Sahib the younger half a day to finally wake up to the Model Town massacre. The prime minister might survive still. Yet, Mian Nawaz Sharif has to publicly on the floor of the House apologise; he should not have asked the army chief to play a role, any role, in a political dispute, and of course if he survives start leading the house from INSIDE the house. He should now stake his job on ensuring that this is dealt with only by the Parliament and the political class.

The illusion of civilian, democratic supremacy has been the primary casualty of the fiasco thus far; the velvet coup is upon us already. The real possibility is that it will reduce the business of all governance to politics of survival; one long day at a time. The non-existent debate on social and economic rights will remain non-existent. There will be no time or energy for institutional reforms. In due course, the saturation point with the political drama, with the shenanigans of Imran and Qadri, on the one hand, and the indifference of Nawaz Sharif, will be reached on the other. The recently politicised urban middle class will go back to normal life, shrugging their shoulders and with the customary, “they are all the same”. The democratic project undermined now, will diminish further, perhaps worse, it will create a vacuum yet again for a demagogue egoist, another Imran Khan with hollow rhetoric to come in another few years. We do not need that.

Postscript: Mr Khan and Allama Qadri have brought the culture of viciousness and personal attacks in vogue. It is disturbing to hear of threats to excellent and courageous friends Mr Omar Quraishi and Mr Kamran Shafi. This government, it seems, can do little else at the moment, but it can at least track down and prosecute those who threaten dissenting voices.

Published in The Express Tribune, August 31st, 2014.

source;  http://ht.ly/ELb2b

Bhatta to Taliban a New trend under PTI,s Militant Wing Taliban


By Manzoor Ali

Published: November 24, 2014



PESHAWAR: When the province’s law and order was discussed in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Assembly on Monday, the government acknowledged that during its rule, incidents of grenade attacks and extortion have increased, but it also claimed that other crimes had decreased.

In response to an adjournment motion presented by Qaumi Watan Party (QWP) leader Sikandar Sherpao, Minister for Public Health Engineering Shah Farman told the house the number of suicide attacks, bomb blasts and vehicle-borne attacks has decreased during the current year as compared to the past two years.

According to the minister, the fact that parties which were under attack when they were in the government are now holding open public gatherings is an indicator of improving law and order under the PTI-led government.



Presenting some statistics in the house to support his claim, Farman said suicide attacks have reduced to 10 in 2014 from 21 and 18 in 2013 and 2012, respectively. Similarly, 218 bomb attacks have been reported in K-P so far when there were 284 and 271 such attacks in 2013 and 2012, respectively.

“Vehicle-borne attacks have decreased to three during the current year as compared to six in each of the past two years,” claimed Farman. “However, the deteriorating law and order issue is not specific to Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa; the entire country is facing the repercussions of the military operations in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas,” said the minister.

Earlier, when raising the motion, QWP’s Sikandar Sherpao informed the house a total of 109,449 crimes were reported this year between January 1 and October 15. According to Sherpao, 520 terror attacks, 291 extortion cases and 831 car theft cases were also reported during this period.

“Law and order is the fundamental right of citizens and is the provincial government’s responsibility,” stated Sherpao. Awami National Party’s Mian Jaffer Shah added the situation was deteriorating every day and the government should not hide the facts and go into a defensive mode.

On a point of order, opposition leader Maulana Lutfur Rehman also raised the issue of the deteriorating law and order. According to Rehman, incidents of extortion have risen by 900%, terrorism by 30%, kidnapping by 44% and crimes against women by 40%.

“Educated and well-off people of K-P are migrating to other provinces,” stated Rehman.

The opposition leader also touched upon the subject of increasing cases of polio, saying the situation can lead to international restrictions on Pakistan.

Rehman also condemned police violence against IPDs in Bannu a couple of weeks ago.

LG polls

Moreover, during Monday’s session, Minister for Local Government and Rural Development Inayatullah Khan informed the house the government was planning to hold local government (LG) elections by the end of April next year.

In response to a question, Khan said the Election Commission of Pakistan expressed its inability to conduct LG polls under biometric system before December 2015. Therefore, the provincial government has decided to go to the polls without the technology.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 25th, 2014.

source; http://tribune.com.pk/story/796529/up-for-discussion-govt-admits-increasing-extortion-incidents/

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

The Destruction of Mecca by Wahabi / Salafi Saudi Kings with Hate of History of Islam.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR By ZIAUDDIN SARDAR
SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

WHEN Malcolm X visited Mecca in 1964, he was enchanted. He found the city “as ancient as time  itself,” and wrote that the partly constructed extension to the Sacred Mosque “will surpass the  architectural beauty of India’s Taj Mahal.”

Fifty years on, no one could possibly describe Mecca as ancient, or associate beauty with Islam’s holiest city.

Pilgrims performing the hajj this week will search in vain for Mecca’s history. The dominant architectural site in the city is not the Sacred Mosque, where the Kaaba, the symbolic focus of Muslims everywhere, is.

 It is the obnoxious Makkah Royal Clock Tower hotel, which, at 1,972 feet, is among the world’s tallest buildings. 

Islamic Historic Sites Destroyed in Mecca 

Old Map Mecca and with Marking for historic Sites 


It is part of a mammoth development of skyscrapers that includes luxury shopping malls and hotels catering to the superrich. The skyline is no longer dominated by the rugged outline of encircling peaks. Ancient mountains have been flattened. 


The city is now surrounded by the brutalism of rectangular steel and concrete structures — an amalgam of Disneyland and Las Vegas. The “guardians” of the Holy City, the rulers of
Saudi Arabia and the clerics, have a deep hatred of history. They want everything to look brand-new. 

Meanwhile, the sites are expanding to accommodate the rising number of pilgrims, up to almost three million today from 200,000 in the 1960s.

The initial phase of Mecca’s destruction began in the mid-1970s, and I was there to witness it. Innumerable ancient buildings, including the Bilal mosque, dating from the time of the Prophet Muhammad, were bulldozed.

 The old Ottoman houses, with their elegant mashrabiyas — latticework
windows — and elaborately carved doors, were replaced with hideous modern ones. Within a few years, Mecca was transformed into a “modern” city with large multilane roads, spaghetti junctions, gaudy hotels and shopping malls.

The few remaining buildings and sites of religious and cultural significance were erased more recently. 

The Makkah Royal Clock Tower, completed in 2012, was built on the graves of an estimated 400 sites of cultural and historical significance, including the city’s few remaining millennium-old buildings.

Bulldozers arrived in the middle of the night, displacing families that had lived there for centuries.
The complex stands on top of Ajyad Fortress, built around 1780, to protect
Mecca from bandits and invaders. 

The house of Khadijah, the first wife of the Prophet Muhammad, has been turned into a block of toilets. The Makkah Hilton is built over the house of Abu Bakr, the closest companion of the
prophet and the first caliph. Apart from the Kaaba itself, only the inner core of the Sacred Mosque retains a fragment of history. 

It consists of intricately carved marble columns, adorned with calligraphy of the names of the prophet’s companions. Built by a succession of Ottoman sultans, the columns date from the early 16th century. And yet plans are afoot to demolish them, along with the whole of the interior of the Sacred Mosque, and to replace it with an ultramodern doughnut-shaped building.

The only other building of religious significance in the city is the house where the Prophet Muhammad lived.

During most of the Saudi era it was used first as a cattle market, then turned into a library, which is not open to the people. But even this is too much for the radical Saudi clerics
who have repeatedly called for its demolition. The clerics fear that, once inside, pilgrims would pray
to the prophet, rather than to God — an unpardonable sin. It is only a matter of time before it is razed and turned, probably, into a parking lot.

The cultural devastation of Mecca has radically transformed the city. Unlike Baghdad, Damascus and
Cairo, Mecca was never a great intellectual and cultural center of Islam. 

But it was always a pluralistic city where debate among different Muslim sects and schools of thought was not unusual. Now it has been reduced to a monolithic religious entity where only one, ahistoric, literal interpretation of Islam is permitted, and where all other sects, outside of the Salafist brand of Saudi Islam, are regarded as false. 

Indeed, zealots frequently threaten pilgrims of different sects. Last year, a group of Shiite pilgrims from Michigan were attacked with knives by extremists, and in August, a coalition of American Muslim groups wrote to the State Department asking for protection during this year’s hajj.

The erasure of Meccan history has had a tremendous impact on the hajj itself. The word “hajj” means effort. It is through the effort of traveling to Mecca, walking from one ritual site to another, finding and engaging with people from different cultures and sects, and soaking in the history of Islam that the pilgrims acquired knowledge as well as spiritual fulfillment.

Today, hajj is a packaged tour, where you move, tied to your group, from hotel to hotel, and seldom
encounter people of different cultures and ethnicities. Drained of history and religious and cultural plurality, hajj is no longer a transforming, once-in-a-lifetime spiritual experience. 

It has been reduced to a mundane exercise in rituals and shopping. Mecca is a microcosm of
the Muslim world. What happens to and in the city has a profound effect on Muslims everywhere. 

The spiritual heart of Islam is an ultramodern, monolithic enclave, where difference is not tolerated, history has no meaning, and consumerism is paramount.

It is hardly surprising then that literalism, and the murderous interpretations of Islam associated with it, have become so dominant in Muslim lands.

Ziauddin Sardar is the editor of the quarterly Critical Muslim and the author of “Mecca: The Sacred City.”

source: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/01/opinion/the-destruction-of-mecca.html?_r=0


Sunday, November 16, 2014

200 Year old Icon Khan Klub of Peshawar Heritage falls to Mullahcarcy and Punjabi Establishment Proxy Wars.






A view of Peshawar city’s iconic 200-year-old building Khan Klub. PHOTO: EXPRESS

PESHAWAR: Once upon a time, Khan Klub resembled a part of some fabled land right out of an ancient tale. Today the boutique hotel — that was actually a Hindu haveli — is enveloped in particles of flour, and looks nothing like it used to.

Once a favourite haunt of visiting foreigners, it is now employed for commercial purposes. The hotel building is now in a shambles and its halls have been turned into a flour godown.

Built over 200 years ago, the place was renovated and converted into a hotel in 1995 by Martin Jay Davis, an Irish-American, in partnership with a local by the name of Inayatullah. It soon emerged as one of the city’s most attractive hotels. Its rooms were named and designed according to certain themes, says Adil Zareef, head of the Sarhad Conservation Network.

Abdul Qayyum, who was once associated with the Khan Klub, told The Express Tribune that people from around the world have stayed here during their sojourn in Peshawar. “We have seen foreigners here from every part of the world who used to stay in the city without any fear,” said Qayyum.

After 2001 Khan Klub fell into a state of rapid decline. That was when militancy erupted and visitors started avoiding Peshawar.

“Ultimately the Klub had to be closed down. Before militancy, however, its boisterous New Year celebrations invoked the wrath of the Jamaat-e-Islami which accused it of spreading vulgarity in the city.”



“The federal government does not facilitate foreign tourists in K-P. Also, there is a lack of political will in K-P government officials to make efforts for the preservation of the 3,000-year old city,” said Zareef.

In Peshawar alone, there are 300 sites which can earn huge revenue through tourism. Before Khan Klub, Peshawar also lost Deans hotel — the only European-style hotel constructed by the British government — which has since been replaced by a shopping plaza.

The club in situated at the junction of the historical markets of the city, on a side of the old walled city of Peshawar. It has strong influences of old Peshawari architecture. The ceilings of some of its rooms are as high as 22 feet.



The spacious basement where once some of the most famous musicians performed the cultural music of the Pakhtuns is now a flour godown. Reminiscing about the good old days, Qayyum said that the Rabab along with tabla was a regular feature every day.

The Klub used to serve traditional as well as western foods and drinks, but Pakhtun culture was always prominent. In a dining hall done up to remind one of the Mughal era, tourists used to rest on traditional cushions and devour delicacies like Kabuli Pulao before washing down the same with Qahwa. Here was once the most expensive restaurant in the city. A small library of books on the history and culture of the province was also established there to provide maximum information to the visitors.

In Qayyum’s opinion, the club was opened mainly to entertain tourists, and it closed down due to an absence of foreigners. He added that when the owners of the building tried to sell it, no one was ready to invest such a huge amount of money, and potential buyers did not see it as economically feasible option.

“As a part of the fabric of society, buildings have a relation with the social, economic and political system. Without them, nothing will be left of our culture,” adds Zareef.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 16th, 2014.

source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/791922/khan-klub-another-icon-of-peshawar-heritage-falls/

The Art of peace ANP stalwart launches anti-war book





The book is based on the proceedings of a two-day event held in April 2012. The talks held during the event were then compiled in written form by Lala. PHOTO: NNI

PESHAWAR: Veteran politician of the Awami National Party, Afzal Khan Lala, launched his book ‘Da Pukhtano Pa Khawra Praday Jhagarha’ (Ghost war on Pakhtun soil) at a ceremony held at Peshawar Press Club on Saturday.

“Pukhtuns have not stood united as a nation since 1893,” said Lala while speaking on the occasion, referring to the year the Durand Line was drawn. “People cannot win without unity and Pukhtuns can never become a great nation unless they exhibit unity among them.”

Lala said Pakistan, Afghanistan and India should work towards bringing peace to their respective countries.



Pashto scholars and intellectuals can play an active role in bringing peace by using the power of their pens, but unfortunately, they are not writing anything positive in this regard, he lamented.

The book is based on the proceedings of a two-day event held in April 2012. The talks held during the event were then compiled in written form by Lala.

The event was an international one with participants from Afghanistan also in attendance. Speakers stressed on how peace could be restored in Pakistan and its western neighbour.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 16th, 2014.
source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/791760/the-art-of-peace-anp-stalwart-launches-anti-war-book/

Saturday, November 15, 2014

PTI Now Officially a Corrupt Right Wing Party of Punjabi Establishment .



Ideological Pakistan Tehrik-i- insaf worker are worried about PTI going way of corruption and also and spending the charity money on , lavish parties and other luxuries while PTI has forgotten Pakhtunhwa and Pashtuns ,and thier problem.
Shamefully the Party is now Having a Lot of Corruption and Nepotism when lotas have been Elected in PTI that were Part of Generals Musharaff,s a Cruel Dictators  Cabinet 



Dear fellow Pakistanis,

As you know the deteriorating situation in Pakistan with poverty, bloodshed, lack of leadership and other similar heart wrenching conditions. We can't stay aloof with what's happening in Pakistan and it is our moral duty to help improve situation in Pakistan. Under, this context, we believed PTI (Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf) was well set to tackle these problems but unfortunately, there is corruption, gross mismanagement, and lack of accountability within PTI.  Various office-bearers were caught stealing party funds, rigging intra party elections, and selling party tickets with impunity. For example, please refer to the third party independent Forensic Audit Report below which has found party office bearers have embezzled atleast 19 million rupees over just the last two years with impunity. Similarly, refer to the independent third party reports such as Tasneem Noornai Review Committee Report and Justice(r) Wajjhuddin's Election Tribunal Report below. Both of these reports identify systematic rigging of the last intra party election. Similarly, multiple office bearers are convicted bank defaulter but keep higher party posts though rigging, For example, President Punjab is a bank defaulter of 34 million rupees of Bank of Punjab. Head of Chairman's Secretariat, Naeemul Haque is also convicted in 2000 for a bank default.

This embezzlement has not only been in PTI Pakistan, but PTI USA LLC officials have also been allegedly travelling & throwing lavish parties at their homes in the name of PTI; all with PTI donors monies. Our attempts to inquire PTI USA LLC audit reports have been denied in past. We request you, to please inquire these questions and ask for a detail audit of the account before you donate.

In these circumstances, we, the ideological workers, request you, the PTI's supporters to hold your local PTI leadership accountable. Please, insist on complete audit reports of your donated monies.

Dear fellow Pakistanis, you all helped PTI become what it is today. You must do your part in reforming this party. Time is running out for Pakistan, we must actively engage and make sure that we transform PTI into an institution, so that it is well equipped with the highest standards of excellence and honesty and help achieve our shared dream of a Naya Pakistan...Insha-Allah!!!

Sincerely,
PTI's Ideological workers

 
1)      PTI Special Forensic Audit Report

2)      TasneemNoorani Review Committee Report

3)      Justice Wajjhuddin Order Sheet

4)      Ejaz Chaudhry Bank Defaulter
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_KYH0JxvCTfeEZ5UFVNQlVDZmM/edit

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Present Day Problems, Chapter Removed by Right wing Paltoo Parties of Punjabi Establishment.

Why Right wing Parties supported by Pakistani establishment like PTI + Jamaat Islami wants to promote, Jihalat and Backwardness just like thier militant wing Taliban wants to do on Pashtuns only in Pakistan is that a Policy of Pakistani eatablishment that forms favour with PTI and Jamaat Ialami who's founders were recently hanged a few days ago in Bangladesh for Inhuman and Unislamic Practices of Mass graves and rapes of thousand of women in East Pakistan in 1971 .


Imran Khan Aka Captian Taliban Khan 
Siraj Ul Haq also known as Subedar Sahib head of Jamaat Islami 

PESHAWAR: The Elementary and Secondary Education Department is set to remove a whole chapter from a school textbook highlighting the contemporary issues, their causes and veiled hints towards the invisible elements responsible for creating such issues that have made the lives of people miserable in the region, according to sources.

The chapter titled “Da Maujoda Dor Masalay” (problems of the present age) in the Pashto book for
grade-10 will be removed on the demand of Jamaat-i-Islami, they said. The chapter was included in the textbook by the previous ANP-led government to inform the students about the various issues engulfing the society for the last many years, said the sources in the education department.

In the third paragraph on page 65 of the chapter it is stated that due to political instability millions of
Afghans were compelled to migrate to Pakistan who brought with them many problems from Afghanistan that still existed in our society.

The text on page 66 conveys that “It is crystal clear that human beings have always used their
power and inflicted brutalities on others in the process to impose their religious, political, national
and economic supremacy on others. 

In history whenever any group in any area on the earth started ruling by adopting such practices has left examples of brutalities and inhuman practices that has bowed down the head of human beings in shame”.

Without naming any area or country, it is stated that the power game still continues which has
caused huge losses to the society, particularly to the poor people. It further says that rich countries
have been using all resources in the region for imposing their agenda and increasing influence in
the third world countries.

The students read in the chapter that the people of the third world countries getting financial support
to fulfil their daily needs of life are being exploited intentionally or unintentionally, consciously or
unconsciously at the hands of the rich countries for their agenda.

“Such acts are apparently good and pious, full of benefits in this world and the life after death, but
actually the planner behind such acts wanted to spread violence,” it is added. “As such, the society which couldn’t educate their children due to lack of resources is used at the hands of others for achieving their goals, causing unrest and terrorism in the country,” it states.

In the same chapter, the students are told that due to lack of education, some religious sects have been promoting their causes in the society through use of huge amount of money.

It has also been mentioned that in the race of leaving others behind, the religious extremism often causes differences, which is one of the big reasons for unrest in the society.

The writer has also listed the uncontrollable increase in population as one of the problems, stating that having more children and lacking resources most of the people couldn’t provide education
to their children. Resultantly, such children become child labourers or beggars.

The unchecked population growth results in rising joblessness, which leads to suicides, mental and psychological diseases and drug addiction in the society.

Everything mentioned in the chapter is based on the present day realities, said a senior teacher of a government school. “It will educate the students about the contemporary issues,” he said, adding such issues were discussed in the textbooks for the first time.

“Such issues should be also discussed in the English and Urdu textbooks to educate the students at larger scale,” another senior teacher told Dawn.

When contacted, a senior official in the education department told Dawn that the material given in the
chapter was based on reality, but it could create bad impression of the state among the students.

“Actually, different schools of thought are discussed between the lines which could increase hatred in the society,” said an activist of Jamaat-i-Islami, who was one of the members of the team which held meetings with the officials of the education department in this connection.

He said that distribution of resources was the real problem, not increase in population. “Linking problems with the population growth is the propaganda of the West,” he said.

Published in Dawn, October 26th, 2014

Monday, November 3, 2014

Liberals are scum of this country: Imran Khan is he an Idiot or ?


Imran Khan says that liberals were scum of the country. PHOTO: AFP
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) chairman Imran Khan said on Wednesday that liberals in Pakistan were the scum of the country who backed US policies.
In a tell-all interview with NDTV’s Barkha Dutt, who was visiting Pakistan recently, Khan shared his views ranging from the political to the personal, including martial laws, Memogate, corruption and allegations against him.
Talking about liberals, he said that liberals were the scum of this country and were fascists. Khan said that those liberals backed bombing of villages, drone attacks. He added that it was the liberals who backed US policies, including the War on Terror that had aggravated extremism in the country.
Answering a question on being called ‘Taliban Khan’, the PTI chief said that he was being labelled that since he encouraged dialogue with the Taliban instead of military action, a policy which the US eventually had to adopt too.
He also touched upon criticism against him about praying on stage during rallies, to which he said that he prayed five times a day and that praying on the stage was not an exception.
‘Age of martial law is over’
The PTI chairman told her that the age of martial law was over, adding that the people of Pakistan have moved on. Talking about Memogate, Khan said that the infamous case was enough for an army take over but had decided against it because it realised that the people were not going to accept military takeovers anymore.
Khan added that for the first time in the history of Pakistan, the Supreme Court had taken a stand against corruption. He praised the media as well for its vibrant role in creating political awareness amongst the public.
‘Parliament, a coalition of crooks’
Responding to a question on the contempt of court notice served to Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, Khan said that the current parliament was a “coalition of crooks” who were benefitting from this “corrupt system” and were simply protecting each other’s corruption.  He said that democracy is strengthened by rule of law and that there were instead different laws for the rich and poor in Pakistan.
Speaking on early elections, Khan said that both his party and the country felt that the sooner the elections took place, the better, adding that the sooner the country got rid of these “crooks”, the rebuilding process of the country could start.
Establishment backing
On allegations that his party was backed by the establishment, Khan referred to various polls, including the Pew polls that ranked the PTI as the number one party in terms of popularity in Pakistan, adding that he could not have manipulated those polls.
Alliance with Musharraf
On a possible alliance with former president and All Pakistan Muslim League chief, Pervez Musharraf, Khan said that although it was kind of Musharraf wanting to be a part of his alliance, the party would not accept him. He added that it was the former general’s NRO that had brought President Asif Zardari and other “criminals” in power, also mentioning his involvement in the war on terror, exacerbating the situation in Balochistan by assassinating Nawab Akbar Bugti and the Lal Masjid case.
Khan also adviced Musharraf about not coming to Pakistan as his life was in danger from the Baloch, in particular Bugti’s son who had put a ransom on Musharraf’s head.
M&M: Memogate and Mansoor Ijaz
Regarding the Memogate case, the PTI chairman said that everyone in Pakistan considered the case to be akin to treason since it was the government asking the US to help them against the Pakistan army.
Speaking about Mansoor Ijaz, the US born Pakistani, who was one of the central characters in the case, Khan said that he did not think highly of Ijaz, adding that he was a ‘non-entity’.
Khan refused to comment further on the case, stating it was sub judice.
Relations with India
When asked on what Khan ascendency to power meant for India and Kashmir issue, he said that he believes in a political solution to the issue instead of a military one. He emphasised on having a roadmap to resolve the crisis in Kashmir.
Speaking on relations with India, he said that he believed in having normal ties with the neighbouring country, stating that this region was one of the fastest growing in the world and that the entire sub-continent should be working together to get rid of poverty. He emphasised on a relationship built on truth and no double games, which was free of blame game particulary about promoting terrorism in either countries.
Mumbai Attacks: 26/11
On Jamaatud Dawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Saeed and his alleged involvement in the attack in Mumbai on 26/11, Khan said that the case was in Supreme Court and that he wanted the law to take its course.
On a question regarding his playboy image of the past, the even flamboyant Khan remarked that his spirituality had not made him an angel and that he was still a ‘humble sinner’ 
source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/323913/liberals-are-scum-of-this-country-imran-khan/


551 schools Destroyed by Anti Pashtun Taliban Targeting Education in Just a Year 2013-14.







PESHAWAR: 
At least 551 schools were destroyed in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) and Frontier Regions (FR) in 2013-14 due to ongoing militancy and floods. This was revealed in official papers issued by the FATA Secretariat regarding the Annual Development Programme (ADP) for 2014-15.
According to documents available with The Express Tribune, 362 boys schools and 189 girls schools have been destroyed in the tribal areas.
Going under
In Bajaur Agency, 85 schools—64 of which were boys schools and 21 girls schools—have been affected. Nearly 109 schools in Mohmand Agency were destroyed by militancy and floods, out of which 81 were for boys. At least 63 schools in Khyber Agency were destroyed in 2013-14; 35 of which were boys schools and 28 girls schools.
In Orakzai Agency, 168 schools were destroyed. At least 92 of these were boys schools. In Kurram Agency, 70 schools were destroyed due to militancy and floods. Nearly 54 of these were boys schools and 16 were girls schools
The documents added that 11 schools were razed to the ground in FR Peshawar. Five of these were girls schools.
During 2013-14, at least 28 schools were destroyed in FR Kohat. Out of these, half were girls schools. Five boys schools in FR Bannu, a boys school and girls schools in FR Lakki, nine boys schools in South Waziristan and another boys school in FR-Tank have also been affected.
Not nearly enough
According to the documents, only 85 educational institutions have been constructed so far in the region. Moreover, 152 schools are under construction and 229 remain non-functional.
According to another document issued by the FATA Secretariat, over Rs3 billion has been allocated for education in the ADP for 2014-15. It revealed Rs2 billion would be spent on 91 ongoing schemes proposed through the ADP whereas Rs1 billion would be set aside for the completion of 59 new projects.
Speaking to The Express Tribune, FATA Secretariat spokesperson Fazlullah said educational institutions in the tribal areas have faced increasing pressure as compared to other departments. As a result, the education sector has been given priority in the ADP for 2014-2015, he added.
According to Fazlullah, Governor Mehtab Abbasi has issued special directives to give priority to the education sector in the budget and reconstruct the schools destroyed in Fata. A large number of schools are being constructed and special emphasis has been placed on the education of girls, he added.
The FATA Secretariat spokesperson said construction work has stopped in some areas due to militancy. However, he insisted that work will resume once the situation is under control.
An abysmal state
A FATA Education Atlas 2011-12 report released by the FATA Directorate of Education, Education Management Information System has provided key facts and figures on the education of girls in Fata.
According to the report, 124,424 girls were enrolled in 1,551 primary schools. Nearly 19,614 girls were enrolled in 158 middle schools. The report added 13,837 girls were enrolled in 42 high schools whereas 1,134 girls have been enrolled in five higher secondary schools in Fata.
The proportion of girls enrolled in schools stands at 7.5% in South Waziristan, 4.26% in North Waziristan, 21.03% in Kurram Agency, 4.75% in Bajaur, 5.72% in Mohmand Agency. In Orakzai Agency and Khyber Agency, the proportion of girls enrolled at schools stands at 5.15% and 16.13%, respectively.
Similarly, the proportion stands at 5.88% in FR DI Khan, 1.81% in FR Lakki Marwat, 2.28% in FR Tank, 1.07% in FR-Bannu, 24.09% in FR Kohat and 16.66% in FR Peshawar.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 3rd, 2014.
source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/785218/education-woes-551-schools-in-fata-frs-devastated-by-militancy-floods-in-2013-14/

Common heritage: South Korean monks step through Peshawar’s window to Gandhara




PESHAWAR: 
An eight-member delegation of Buddhist monks from South Korea visited Peshawar Museum on Wednesday. Earlier, the monks performed religious rituals for the peace and stability of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) at the Gandharan Jaulian monastery in Haripur.
“Though our culture and religion are different, our grand ancestors were the same. It’s a link that keeps us close to each other,” said Haan Sang Beom, one of the monks, to The Express Tribune at Peshawar Museum. The South Korean delegation is currently in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) for a visit.
They said they had received a very warm welcome by the people of the province, contrary to the impression the world has of the region. “People think Pukhtuns hate statues and Buddhism but we found nothing of the sort here,” said Beom.
However, the monks were dismayed to see parts of ancient Gandhara sites in ruins; a condition they attributed to a lack of financial resources for preservation.
“Nonetheless, it was heart-warming when I first laid eyes on the stupas and statues, they still seem honoured by the people,” said Lee Sung Hee. She shared the monks offered special prayers at the ancient sites, also praying for stability and religious harmony in Pakistan. They usually offer such supplications on the first and 15th of the month or around the time of the full moon.
According to Bakht Mohammad, the curator of Peshawar Museum, there are 50,000 Gandharan artefacts from 1CE to 7CE. “When we refer to the Gandhara era, we mean the Buddhist era,” said Mohammad. He briefed the monks about the museum and the historical importance of the Peshawar valley.
Mohammad added the Directorate of Archaeology will arrange for the monks to see all Buddhist sites of the province.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 23rd, 2014.
source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/779548/common-heritage-south-korean-monks-step-through-peshawars-window-to-gandhara/