Thursday, December 25, 2014

Ghani Faces Tough Road Ahead In Taliban Negotiations





BY Abubakar Siddique

23.12.2014


Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has embarked on diplomacy and renewed cooperation with regional powers in an effort to restore peace to Afghanistan.

But he still faces major obstacles in negotiating peace with the Taliban, whose insurgency appears to have outlived the 13 year-old U.S.-led military campaign in Afghanistan and now overshadows the country's future.

Javed Ludin, a former Afghan deputy foreign minister, told RFE/RL Gandhara website that Ghani "has taken a lot of bold steps and taken some risks" because he senses significant opportunities for a breakthrough in the peace process.

"We are not starting from scratch; a lot of work has been done by [the former Afghan] President Hamid Karzai over the past few years," he said. "We have been ready for years now for the ultimate, which is a direct process of negotiations between the verifiable representatives of the Taliban and the government of Afghanistan."

Ludin says that since his inauguration in late September, the Afghan leader has approached China and Saudi Arabia to use their influence over Pakistan.

During his first official trip to Islamabad in November, Ghani visited the headquarters of Pakistan's powerful military and met with military chief General Raheel Sharif to solicit his support for peace in Afghanistan.

"The key shift has to come from the top leadership of Pakistan in their policies towards Afghanistan, and that's where the president's idea is focusing at the moment," he told RFE/RL's Gandhara website.

For years Kabul has urged Islamabad to help in holding negotiations with the Taliban’s leaders, who it believes are orchestrating their insurgency from sanctuaries inside Pakistan.

"If there is any degree of rational thinking in Pakistan, they wouldn't even need any encouragement from a third country," Ludin said. "They only have to see their own future and the future of their own people and what's in their best interest."

Following the December 16 massacre of nearly 150 pupils and teachers in a military-run school in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar, Kabul and Islamabad pledged cooperation against "terrorism and extremism." Unlike the past, the two countries have not engaged in public bickering over support to insurgents.

But there is still no indication of whether Islamabad will use its leverage over the Afghan Taliban.

Kabul seems to be divided about the prospects of peace talks with the Taliban. Last week a high-ranking member of the Afghan High Peace Council said that peace talks with the Taliban will begin in Qatar this week.

Musa Khan Hotak, the director of negotiations for the Afghan High Peace Council, said that talks about negotiations with the Taliban have recently gained momentum. "It is expected that representatives of the Taliban, Pakistan, and members of the High Peace Council will take part in the talks," he told RFA.

But Ismail Qasimyar, an advisor to the Afghan High Peace Council, told RFA on December 16 that no talks were planned in Qatar this week. "All these rumors about the peace talks are wrong. There are no talks," he said.

Michael Semple, a former EU and UN adviser in Afghanistan, told Gandhara that while bringing the Taliban to the negotiating table remains a top priority for Ghani, he has yet to make public his plans for proceeding. Calling Ghani a "very systematic person," he said, "There will be a clearly worked out strategy and one that he would stick to and it will not be impulsive."

Semple, however, said that Ghani has concluded that reassuring Pakistan's security establishment that he will look after their legitimate interests "will win their cooperation and support for a deal with the Taliban."

He said that the recent upsurge in violence across Afghanistan indicates that the Taliban leadership is committed to a military strategy.

Moreover, he says, the Taliban were disappointed by Ghani's rapid signing of the Bilateral Security Agreement with the United States one day after his inauguration on September 29.

"They [the Taliban] say ‘how can we make a deal with someone who has quite so clearly jumped into bed with the Americans?'"

Marvin Weinbaum, a South Asia specialist at the Middle East Institute, a think tank in Washington, D.C., agrees. He says that Ghani has made it clear that he is counting on U.S. assistance both for security and for future development.

This burgeoning relationship with Washington, Weinbaum argues, could complicate his efforts to engage the Taliban in talks.

"Given the feelings of the Taliban here about their minimal conditions of removing the so-called 'occupational forces' -- this is a contradiction here," he told Gandhara. "You can't at the same time have dependence on the United States and also satisfy what will be a minimal condition for the Taliban that is distancing from the U.S."

In addition, sources say that the Taliban are not happy with the reported resumption of night raids by Afghan special forces targeting Taliban leaders. President Karzai had banned such operations last year.

Afghan journalist Sami Yousafzai, however, sees hope on the horizon. He says the Afghan Taliban have matured politically and are in contact with President Ghani's relatives.

"Unlike the past, the Taliban know that without a political resolution it will be easy to keep the war going but difficult to win it," he said.

But Yousafzai also cautions that the Taliban are worried about preventing splits in their organization after the end of U.S.-led military operations in Afghanistan this year.

"They are worried that some factions might join the Islamic State militant group if they began negotiations with Kabul," he said.

"The major problem for the Taliban leaders is to persuade their ranks for joining peace after motivating them to fight in the name of Islam for 13 years."

RFE/RL Radio Free Afghanistan correspondent Ahmad Takal contributed reporting to this story.: http://gandhara.rferl.org/content/afghanistan-ghani-taliban-peace/26758899.html

Imran Khan Aka Taliban Khan Scared Nawaz Sharif on Decisive Action on Taliban for Saving Strategic Assets of Pakistan.


Written by Riaz ul Hasan
Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:52
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Asma Jahangir requires no introduction in Pakistan. She headed the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) and was elected president of the Supreme Court Bar Association. She has struggled in support of democratic institutions in the country and for the cause of the downtrodden for over forty years.

While this year’s Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Malala Yusufzai, the ‘Alternative Nobel’-- the Right Livelihood Award--- was awarded to Asma Jahangir, among others. During her visit to Stockholm on December 1st to receive her award she addressed a meeting of the Swedish-Pakistani community. She spoke on the political crisis in Pakistan, Balochistan, Kashmir, on civil-military relations and answered a number of questions.

On democratic gains:

During the sit-in staged by Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI), the democratic forces were united against anti-democratic forces. This was a historic first in the country’s history. While in practice the democratic forces did not do much, they remained firm in their resolve to defend democracy.

I do not consider the present government to be a model for good government. Governments are never good but unless political stability is achieved in Pakistan and the system is strengthened, we cannot move forward.

Look at India! True, poverty and many other problems persist. However, a middle class has emerged there and many have been lifted out of poverty. In Pakistan however, there is a lack of co-ordinated effort that marks both state institutions and civil society.

Take for example the recent petition for land reforms filed in the Supreme Court by Abid Hassan Manto, joined by the HRCP. The need for advocacy and a strong political campaign is ignored. In my opinion judges are not instruments of change. Rather they are instruments of regression.We cannot expect a court ruling to put an end to feudalism. Likewise, we need to educate ourselves on the question of feudalism. The critics say that feudalism is a thing of past in the case of Punjab. Likewise, in Sindh they say that feudalism no longer exists and it is ‘Waderaism’ that must be confronted.

On PTI agitation:

I am not against Imran Khan’s entry into politics. It is his right to do so. In fact, many more people should take an active part in politics. However, a dichotomy exists. On the one hand he declares that politics and politicians are bad. On the other he wants to be involved politically. Likewise, the PTI has attacked and undermined every institution of the state, including parliament and the judiciary. In a nutshell every thing is bad in Pakistan except the PTI. All politicians are bad, except Imran Khan. All institutions are bad, except the army. Our experience shows that judges, generals and politicians are not good. However, we need to allow the [democratic] system to achieve some stability.

It is true that voters often elect the wrong representatives. In India, for instance Modi was recently elected. But let the system take its course. If you subvert the system, anarchy will follow.

Sharif government’s response:

The Sharif government is utterly indecisive, clueless and lacks initiative. Above all it is inefficient. Just look at their priorities. They have two advisors for one department and none for another. Bureaucracy is undermining the government. This is understandable. When favourites are patronized and promoted at the cost of others, bureaucracy will react. But in some cases, civil servants have been ‘advised’ not to co-operate. We all know that this government is incapable of handling the challenge posed by PTI agitation. At the same time if I were in their shoes, I would be at a loss myself. It is not Imran Khan they fear. It is the people who back him.

According to information I have, and if the situation is correctly analyzed, it transpires that the military hierarchy does not want Imran Khan to jump the queue to occupy the prime ministerial slot. However, there is an active lobby group of retired generals. Both General Hameed Gul and Brigadier Ejaz Shah are frequently spotted at PTI meetings. I learned from credible sources that a couple of serving generals and brigadier-level officers with radical views are also instrumental in catalyzing the present agitation.

In view of such stark facts, we cannot play the role of naïve activists. We cannot just dismiss the agitation on the pretext that agitation is the PTI’s democratic right. Yes, you have the right to agitate. However, you don’t have the right to agitate on the incitement of hidden hands. One has the right to register an FIR (First Investigation Report). However, one does not have the right to fake it.

The PTI allegation providing the pretext for ongoing agitation is election rigging. Imran claims that his mandate was stolen in the 2013 general elections. However, even if the seats he claims he would have bagged in the absence of rigging, he would not have gained the required majority to form a government.

Personally, I do not believe that there was systematic rigging. Individuals may have stuffed ballots etc. however systematic rigging is not a fair charge. At HRCP, we received lot of complaints regarding rigging from Balochistan and KPK.

In short, what has Imran Khan achieved? He frightened the government into inaction and indecisiveness. They refuse to take any decisions or initiative on either the foreign front (India, Afghanistan) or the domestic front (economy, privatization and so on). It seems the sole purpose was to corner the government and to create a situation whereby we have a civilian façade while behind the scene the army pulls the strings.

On Balochistan:

Recently, our HRCP representative in Turbat received threats from the ISI. He was relocated immediately. After Rashid Rehman’s murder, we are reluctant to take any chances and the Rapid Action Plan was devised to defend our people. Well, he was relocated. But his extended family was picked up and tortured.

I visited Balochistan in October. I think the situation has improved to some extent. However, the question of missing persons remains unresolved. Mutilated dead bodies are still discovered every now and then. Though the frequency has diminished there is no end in sight. Likewise, the plight of Hazara is heart wrenching.

Taliban deprived of a safe haven:

Certain advances have been made. For instance, Operation Zarb-e-Azb broke the Taliban infrastructure in North Waziristan. In the past, an operation in North Waziristan was never an option. Instead, talks were preferred. North Waziristan became a safe haven. Now it is no more. This is a step forward. However, there has been criticism. There is no transparency. Most Taliban escaped before the operation. They could not be expected to wait on the army.

source: http://www.viewpointonline.net/2014/12/vp232/imran-khan-scared-sharif-govt-into-inaction-asma-jahangir

Eidhi welfare work as explained does not meet Noble Peace Prize Criteria of Working for Peace.


Living in Norway since 1975, Syed Mujahid Ali is a Pakistani-Norwegian journalist. In the past, he has worked with Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation NRK, Urdu Service. He hascontributed regular column for Norwegian daily Arbeiderbladet (now Dagsavisen) besides publishing and editing Urdu-language Monthly Karwan from Oslo (1981-1997). Presently, he is editing the news portal www.karwan.no since 2011. It is updated on daily basis. Apart from updating news, this portal covers world events with a critical perspective.In an interview with Viewpoint, he discusses various aspects of the debate generated by Malala Yusufzai's crowning as Noble laureate. Read on:

Written by Syed Mujahid Ali/Adnan Farooq
Thursday, 16 October 2014 17:02 
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Will you explain to us the procedure followed by the Noble Committee when it grants the Noble Peace Prize?

The Norwegian Nobel Committee is responsible for the selection of eligible candidates and the choice of the Nobel Peace Prize laureates. The Committee is composed of five members appointed by the Storting (Norwegian parliament). The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded in Oslo, Norway.


The process of selecting the candidates starts almost a year prior to the announcement. Suggestions are received by the 1st of February every year. Committee members can add further names to the list in a meeting held after this date. However, after this date the nomination process is closed. In the period February to March the candidates are shortlisted. Normally 20-25 candidates are selected for further consideration. Then the Nobel Committee’s experts or advisors give their opinion. These experts are normally Norwegian academics with knowledge in different fields. In certain cases, the Committee administration also gets opinion from international experts. This process is completed by September. The Committee then meets in the first week of October to select the winning candidate for that year.
Traditionally, the Committee tries to make a unanimous decision, but if that is not possiblethe winner is selected on the basis of majority opinion. The decision is announced on the 10th of October each year.
Who nominates the possible winners of the Noble Peace Prize?

The following can nominate a candidate for the Peace Prize:

Members of national assemblies and governments of states; Members of international courts; University rectors; Professors of social sciences, history, philosophy, law and theology; Directors of peace research institutes and foreign policy institutes; Persons who have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize; Board members of organizations that have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize; Active and former members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee (proposals by members of the Committee need to be submitted no later than at the first meeting of the Committee after the 1st of February); Former advisors to the Norwegian Nobel Committee

Is it true that former Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was also nominated for the Noble Peace Prize?

There is a fifty-year secrecy rule regarding the nominees of the Nobel Peace Prize. The Committee itself never announces the names of the nominees—neither to the media nor to the candidates themselves. Speculations in this respect are normally either guesswork or the result of disclosure by persons who have nominated the candidate. Therefore, it is not possible for me to confirm if the former Chief Justice was nominated or not. Information in the Nobel Committees’ nomination database is not made public until after fifty years.



Many in Pakistan have been questioning the wisdom of granting the Noble Peace Prize to Malala. Why, for instance, ask these critics, was Malala preferred over noted philanthropist Maulana Abdul SattarEdhi?

The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded according to the will of Alfred Nobel. The will states that award shall be given:

“to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between the nations and the abolition or reduction of standing armies and the formation and spreading of peace congresses”

The Nobel Committee has redefined this part of will, and has awarded the prize to people or organizations who according to them work towards eliminating causes giving birth to conflicts or wars. There is an intense debate within and outside Norway regarding this interpretation of the Committee. Many believe that the prize must go to a person who has played an active role in reducing armies or in stopping a war or an armed conflict.



Given this background, Maulana Abdul SattarEidhi and his welfare work does not fall under the defined criteria, although he remains a great man and an institution in his own capacity. This year’s prize has been awarded to KailashSatyarthi and Malala Yousafzai for their work for the rights of children. The Committee means that through this work these two have contributed greatly in achieving harmony in the world.

I personally believe that giving this prize to Malala is correct decision even if one follows Alfred Nobel’s will strictly. She is not merely an education activist, but courageouslyshe stood up to one of the greatest dangers to world peace today—extremists such as the Taliban. She has become a symbol of resistance to extremists and their warmongering. There have been reports in Norway that Malala was an extremely strong candidate even in 2013 but was not given the prize due to her young age. She was only sixteen then.

Tell us about media debates in Norway, if any, that routinely mark the occasion of the announcement of the Noble Peace Prize? Any debates over the Malala decision? Is it an attempt to win Pakistani voters who constitute the biggest migrant community in the country?

It is farfetched to state that the Nobel Committee selects a candidate to woo voters for a political party in Norwegian elections. Firstly, the government or political parties have no influence on the decisions of the Nobel Committee. Secondly, there are members of different political affiliations in the committee. It is unthinkable that they sit down to make a decision about the biggest peace prize in the world and have their constituency in mind. Thirdly, apart from greater Oslo,Pakistani immigrants are not concentrated in any other part of the country. Since there is proportional voting system in Norway where parties get seats according to the votes cast in their favour, immigrants cannot have much influence, especially in national elections—even if they function as one group and that is also unimaginable.

Within Norway, there is traditionally a debate about the merits and demerits of a decision of the Nobel Committee. Many a times, the Committee’s decision is bitterly criticized. However, this time the Norwegian media and the politicians have welcomed the decision. Almost all comments have been positive and supportive.

Malala has requested Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi to attend the Noble Prize award ceremony. Has there been any reaction to her suggestion in Norwegian media?

I have not read any big discussion on that topic in Norway. But the suggestion has been mentioned in press reports. Indian President Pranab Mukherjee was also asked about the invitation at the startof his official visit to Norway on October 13. He refused to comment on it and said that it was up to the Prime Ministers of both countries to make the decision. He congratulated the Nobel Committee in its decision to award this year’s prize to Kailash Satyarthi and Malala Yousafzaiand said that Malala was a brave girl who stood up for the cause of education despite threats to her life.

While many in Pakistan have welcomed and celebrated Malala’s peace prize, conservative circles and even the Taliban have criticized the decision. Any anti-Malala voices in Norway?

As I mentioned above, in Norway, support for awarding the prize to Malala is almost unanimous. There is a strong feeling that she has been awarded this prize for her courage and campaign against the methods and the cruelty of the Taliban. She was attacked by the Taliban in 2012 and barely survived the attack. She is under constant threat from extremists even now. Despite that, she stands bravely for the cause of girls’ right to education. She even travelled to Nigeria to reject Boko Haram’s methods and kidnapping of schoolgirls. The Malala Fund is also sponsoring a girl’s school in Nigeria.

One critic says:‘Malala is remarkable, but we must resist the urge to make her exceptional. There is a long legacy to the exceptionalizing narrative when it comes to Muslims, and it works like this: “The majority of folks ‘over there’ are either monsters or victims. Every now and then, there is an isolated solitary hero that stands against that. That hero supports‘our’ values”. That tendency to view the lone solitary hero(ine) of the Muslim masses, the need to have the solitary exceptional Muslim is part of the “good Muslim/bad Muslim” game. And we are done playing these games.’Your comments?

Firstly, the author of this note fails to register that this year’s Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to “one Muslim and one Hindu, an Indian and a Pakistani”. Therefore, there is no reason to apply this conspiracy theory to this case. Secondly, the comment also fails to note that the prize is not awarded for making Malala exceptional—she already was. That could be said about Satyarthi though, who was little known for his work in and outside India. Since he is a Hindu, the theory does not fit. Thirdly, this whole statement is based on the traditional conservative mind-set of ours that there is always a big intrigue against Pakistan and Muslims in all Western capitals. I do not buy conspiracy theories. Fourthly, the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded every year. Malala is only the seventh Muslim to get this Prize in the 114-year-old history of Nobel Peace Prizes. That is hardly the due share of Muslims if we see it in light of their population ratio in the world.The Nobel Peace Prize has earned its good name over the years because its integrity and neutrality is protected. It is an extreme view that the prize is political and awarded to safeguard the West’s political interests.

SOURCE: http://www.viewpointonline.net/2014/10/vp223/eidhi-s-welfare-work-does-not-meet-noble-s-criteria


Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Taliban Claims Peshawar School Massacre of Pashtuns Kids were Treated Like Jews of Saudia.


 Taliban Punjab Wing Jamaat Ahrar Part of LEJ and LET , spokesman: “The Peshawar attack is in complete accordance with the Prophet’s teachings” done to Jews of Tribe in Saudia Arabia . He thought Pashtuns should be treated like Jews may be as taught in Madrissah in Pakistan and Punjab to Treat the 5o Lakh Pashtuns Killed in last 35 Years of Jihadi Economy for Punjab Interests as Jews and Treated Like Jews for Sake of Islam. 


All 4 Died as Taliban thought Pashtuns are Jews 


December 18, 2014 10:04 am By Robert Spencer 31 Comments


According to Hindol Sengupta, the Editor-at-Large at Fortune India, Taliban spokesman Muhammad Khorasani has justified the Peshawar jihad massacre by likening it to Muhammad’s massacre of the Jewish Qurayzah tribe. 














Khorasani says: “The Mujahideen were instructed to only kill the older children. The Peshawar attack is in complete accordance with the Prophet’s teachings because when the Prophet killed the Jewish Tribe of Banu Qurayza, he put the same guideline, that only the children who have hair below their belly button (pubic hair) are allowed to be killed. Killing of women and children is also in accordance with the teachings of the Prophet. Those who object to this claim can refer to Sahih Bukhari, Volume 5, Hadith 148.” 

Taliban Claimed they checked the Puberty of Kids before Killing them Just like in East Pakistan Pakistan Army did in  1971. 


Sahih Bukhari volume 5, hadith 148 says this: “Narrated by Abu Said Al-Khudri: Some people (i.e. the Jews of Bani bin Quraiza) agreed to accept the verdict of Sad bin Muadh so the Prophet sent for him (i.e. Sad bin Muadh). He came riding a donkey, and when he approached the Mosque, the Prophet said, “Get up for the best amongst you.” or said, “Get up for your chief.” Then the Prophet said, “O Sad! These people have agreed to accept your verdict.” Sad said, “I judge that their warriors should be killed and their children and women should be taken as captives.” The Prophet said, “You have given a judgment similar to Allah’s Judgment (or the King’s judgment).” 



And his statement about pubic hair comes from this: “Narrated Atiyyah al-Qurazi: I was among the captives of Banu Qurayza. They (the Companions) examined us, and those who had begun to grow hair (pubes) were killed, and those who had not were not killed. I was among those who had not grown hair. (Sunan Abu Dawood 38:4390) 

Work of Taliban Punjab Wing. 


If this statement by Muhammad Khorasani is authentic, then Hindol Sengupta is absolutely right: this is the problem in a nutshell. For Western leaders continue to insist that Islamic jihad terrorism has nothing to do with Islam. Jihad terrorists, meanwhile, consistently and frequently invoke the Qur’an and Muhammad to justify their actions. When counter-jihadists point this out, they’re denounced as racist, bigoted “Islamophobes” and accused of “validating” the terrorists’ narrative. What we don’t see is any significant effort to refute that narrative on Islamic grounds. Instead, Islamic apologists such as Reza Aslan and Qasim Rashid crank out pieces claiming that massacres like this one have nothing to do with Islam, while ignoring altogether the passages Khorasani invokes to justify such massacres. 



And so there will be more jihad massacres, and again they will be justified by their perpetrators on Islamic grounds, and again any call for serious reform and a genuine attempt to address this problem will be denounced as “Islamophobia.”

:

source: http://www.jihadwatch.org/2014/12/taliban-spokesman-the-peshawar-attack-is-in-complete-accordance-with-the-prophets-teachings

Pashtuns and Baluchi this Will not be the Last Massacre





It wasn’t the final atrocity
Pervez Hoodbhoy
Updated Dec 20, 2014 09:23am

THE gut-wrenching massacre in Peshawar’s Army Public School has left Pakistan aghast and sickened. All political leaders have called for unity against terrorism. But this is no watershed event that can bridge the deep divides within. In another few days this episode of 134 dead children will become one like any other.

All tragedies provoke emotional exhortations. But nothing changed after Lakki Marwat when 105 spectators of a volleyball match were killed by a suicide bomber in a pickup truck. Or, when 96 Hazaras in a snooker club died in a double suicide attack. The 127 dead in the All Saints Church bombing in Peshawar, or the 90 Ahmadis killed while in prayer, are now dry statistics. In 2012, men in military uniforms stopped four buses bound from Rawalpindi to Gilgit, demanding that all 117 persons alight and show their national identification cards. Those with typical Shia names, like Abbas and Jafri, were separated. Minutes later corpses lay on the ground.

If Pakistan had a collective conscience, just one single fact could have woken it up: the murder of nearly 60 polio workers — women and men who work to save children from a crippling disease — at the hands of the fanatics.

Hence the horrible inevitability: from time to time, Pakistan shall continue to witness more such catastrophes. No security measures can ever prevent attacks on soft targets. The only possible solution is to change mindsets. For this we must grapple with three hard facts.

First, let’s openly admit that the killers are not outsiders or infidels. Instead, they are fighting a war for the reason Boko Haram fights in Nigeria, IS in Iraq and Syria, Al Shabab in Kenya, etc. The men who slaughtered our children are fighting for a dream — to destroy Pakistan as a Muslim state and recreate it as an Islamic state. This is why they also attack airports and shoot at PIA planes. They see these as necessary steps towards their utopia.
Let’s openly admit that the killers are not outsiders or infidels.

No one should speculate about the identity of the killers. Taliban spokesman Muhammad Umar Khorasani released pictures of the eight ‘martyrs’, justifying the killing of minors with reference to Hadith (a horrific perversion, of course). Dizzied by religious passions, the men roamed the school searching for children hiding under desks and shouted “Allah-o-Akbar” before opening fire. Shot in both legs, Shahrukh Khan, 16, says he survived by playing dead. Another surviving student, Aamir Ali, says that two clean-shaven gunmen told students to recite the kalima before shooting them multiple times.

Second, Pakistan must scorn and punish those who either support terrorism publicly or lie to us about the identity of terrorists. Television anchors and political personalities have made their fortunes and careers by fabricating wild theories. For example, retired Gen Hamid Gul and his son Abdullah Gul have adamantly insisted multiple times on TV that suicide attackers were not circumcised and hence not Muslim. Though body parts are plentifully available for inspection these days, they have not retracted earlier claims.

Those on the state’s payroll that encourage violence against the state must be dismissed. Maulana Abdul Aziz of Islamabad’s Lal Masjid — a government mosque — led an insurrection in 2007 against the Pakistani state. He flatly refuses to condemn the Peshawar massacre. Other state employees have called upon all to not pray for army soldiers killed in action. At another level is Jamaatud Dawa’s supremo, Hafiz Saeed. He blames India for the Peshawar massacre and, ignoring ironclad evidence, misguides Pakistanis about the identity of the enemy.

Among political leaders, none is more blameworthy than Imran Khan, the icon of millions of immature minds. He has never named the Taliban as terrorists even when they claimed responsibility for various atrocities. That the TTP may be involved in the Peshawar massacre is the first exception, but this is contained only in a tweet. For a man who uses the strongest language against political opponents and has hogged TV channels for months, he has yet to condemn TTP before a national audience. Why the reticence?

It was even worse earlier. In 2009, as the Taliban took over Swat, on Hamid Mir’s Capital Talk he claimed that the Swat Taliban were fighting a war of liberation against the Americans. When I asked why they were fighting in Pakistan and killing our policemen and soldiers, he accused me of being an American agent and then, later, attempted to physically attack me. Readers can google this video.

Third, if Pakistan is to be at peace with itself then it must seek peace with its neighbours and begin disassembling the apparatus of jihad. The bitter truth is that you reap what you sow. Today, massive militant establishments hold the Pakistani state hostage. They run their own training centres, hospitals, and disaster relief programmes. When Sartaj Aziz, adviser to the prime minister on foreign affairs, said that Pakistan was not going to target militant groups which “did not pose a threat to the state”, he accidentally spilled the beans. In fact he was merely restating Pakistan’s well-known zero-sum paradigm — we live to hurt others, not to better ourselves.

While bewailing the murder of our children, let us acknowledge that Pakistan’s soil has been used time and again for inflicting grief and sorrow across the world. Today it is not just India and Afghanistan who accuse us, but also China and Iran.

By launching Zarb-i-Azb, Gen Raheel Sharif has broken with his timid predecessor, Gen Kayani. North Waziristan should never have become the epicentre of terrorism. He has done well to meet President Ashraf Ghani in Kabul and demand the extradition of TTP’s Mullah Fazlullah, now ensconced on the Afghan side. But what of Mullah Omar? The Pakistani Taliban and the Afghan Taliban are two sides of the same coin. I wonder if President Ghani asked General Sharif to help extradite Mullah Omar for facing justice before the Afghan people.

The author teaches physics in Lahore and Islamabad.

Published in Dawn December 20th , 2014: http://www.dawn.com/news/1151930/it-wasnt-the-final-atrocity

Pakistan in State of Delusion with its Strategic Assets Taliban

Policy Makers of Pakistan. 



Pakistan False History taught in Schools and false Notions of Islamic Nationalism created via a false Ideology of Pakistan , that are created by a Few Incompetent bureaucrats and Generals in Pakistan Army from Punjab .

who themselves are sons of Hindu Punjabi Sikhs but fail to Acknowledge it as they call themselves sons of Arabs as Mian and Syeds , Abbasis, and Qureshi linking them with Arab Pedigree is root of Problem for Pakistan.

it is Presenting Punjabi nationalism as Islamic Nationalism to Rest of Pakistan. 

They use the Taliban and Islamic Parties like Jammat Islami , JUI and all these lashkars and Jaishes Militants as their Ideological Guardians and also Guardians of Pakistan State and its Objectives like " Strategic Depth, to conquer the Central Asia and Afghanistan for Making it Mini Super Power with Nuclear Power .

While the world thinks Pakistan as Trouble Maker of the World as Pariah State , with No control over Taliban  which it Made in Pakistan, although they Kill in Pakhtunkhwa , Baluchistan , Sindh and FATA only Leaving the Punjab as its safety Zone where there families reside cosily with All Goodies of Earth Provided to them and their families .  




by Mr. Husain Haqqani

The murder by the Taliban of more than 130 schoolchildren in Peshawar on December 16 has stunned Pakistan, and indeed the world. But the incident marks only an escalation in the brutality of jihadis, not its beginning. Over the years, Pakistan’s homegrown terrorists have bombed Shia and Ahmadi mosques, Sunni shrines, Christian churches and Hindu temples. Over a thousand attacks on schools by the Taliban have been reported since 2009, mainly in the northwestern Pakhtunkhwa province. Jihadi targets over the years have included localISI offices in several cities, naval and air force bases in Karachi and Kamra, the Karachi International Airport and even the army’s General Headquarters. If the breadth of attrition has not cured Pakistan’s jihadi addiction, would the death of innocent children and the burning alive of their teachers in a Peshawar school result in a fundamental change of heart?

Soon after the Peshawar carnage, Maulana Abdul Aziz of the infamous Islamabad Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, refused to condemn the Taliban’s action, indicating the stubbornness of the jihadi worldview. Taliban apologist Imran Khan parsed his words to condemn the act but not its perpetrators by name. Another Pakistani establishment favourite, Hafiz Muhammad Saeed of Lashkar-e-Toiba/Jamaat-ud-Dawa, went on television to blame India for the Taliban’s school attack and vowed revenge inside India.

Taliban Assets of Pakistan Mullah Military Alliance 


The roots of Pakistan’s jihadism lie in its establishment’s obsession with India, which goes back to partition, the twonation theory and the fear that powerful forces want the dismemberment of Pakistan. The break-up of Pakistan in 1971, and the emergence of an independent Bangladesh in erstwhile East Pakistan, has reinforced national paranoia instead of convincing the country’s Punjabi elite of the need to come to terms with Pakistan’s size and power and finding security within the parameters of reality.

Pakistan’s constructed identity emphasises religion and ideology at the expense of ethnic, linguistic and sectarian diversity of a complex society. As a result, the country’s approach to national security has been driven by ideological rather than pragmatic considerations. Although Pakistan’s military and civil bureaucracy both originated from institutions created under the British, their approach and attitudes have progressively been driven more by the ‘ideology of Pakistan’ than the professionalism that they often project to outsiders.

The relationship between Pakistan and jihadism cannot be understood without understanding the country’s ideological dimension, the fact that it was created as a result of an idea. Pakistan has a national narrative, a national milieu and a national identity all built around Islam. For the first 30 years of Pakistan’s existence the clamour was for religiosity within and Pan-Islamism in foreign policy. For the next 30 years global jihadism has been the overarching security and foreign policy idea that has advanced the Pakistani ideology.

Even though three successive commanders of the Pakistani army-Gen Pervez Musharraf, Gen Ashfaq Kayani and now Gen Raheel Sharif-have sought to curtail the jihadis’ influence within Pakistan, including through military operations, their efforts have always fallen short because of the nation’s ideological compulsions. The ideology of Pakistan, and the falsified historic narrative taught in schools to justify it, produces sympathy in society for Sharia rule, for an Islamic caliphate and an Islamic state. This works in favour of more than 33 militant groups that operate out of Pakistan. Pakistan’s strategic planners may see no difficulty in eliminating global terrorists and fighting local jihadis while supporting regional ones. But the general public is conflicted in its attitude towards jihadi groups. Unfortunately for those who want to stop the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, their rhetoric about Sharia and against western values resonates with supporters of other, ostensibly ‘more palatable’, jihadi groups even if their methods are abhorred by Pakistanis.

For most countries, nuclear weapons are the ultimate guarantee against invasion or territorial extinction. But to the disciples of the ‘ideology of Pakistan’, security is not enough. Built in into the two-nation theory is the notion of parity between Muslim Pakistan and Hindu India. The events of the last 67 years may have rendered the two nation theory redundant. The number of Muslims living in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh is now roughly equal and there are more Muslims in the subcontinent that live outside Pakistan than in it. But the ideological conception of Pakistan requires that it claim the mantle of Muslim nationhood and pursue equivalence to India in status, power and international standing.

Pakistan’s size and economy does not allow it to be on a par with a much larger and increasingly wealthier India. The machinations of the Cold War that enabled Pakistani leaders to punch beyond their weight through alliance with the West, especially the United States, is also over. That leaves asymmetric warfare through jihadis as the only strategic option for Pakistan’s ideologues. The other course, that of pursuing security and prosperity of geographic Pakistan and its people without insisting on the ideology of Pakistan, has simply not found sufficient resonance among Islamabad’s powerful quarters.

STRAINS OF IDEOLOGICAL NATIONALISM

The case made by Pakistan’s ideologues is appealing to Pakistanis even as it drags the country down the road of tragedies similar to the recent one in Peshawar. In 1947, the country inherited few resources and feared strangulation at birth. The partition riots and the exclusion of Jammu and Kashmir scarred Pakistan’s founding generation. The country survived because of its people’s resilience and its leaders’ adept Cold War alliances.

As early as 1948, Pakistan’s first military foray into Kashmir involved lashkars from the tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan. The irregular fighter added to the Pakistani military’s muscle. Engaging the tribesmen in jihad across the Indus, in Kashmir, pre-empted the possibility of their becoming involved in schemes for Pashtunistan-the land of the Pashtuns-advocated at the time by Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan and the government of Afghanistan. Thus began Pakistan’s tolerance and support for non-state actors tied by ideological nationalism to the strategic vision of Pakistan’s military establishment.

In the 1980s, Pakistan’s policy received a shot in the arm with the US decision to support the mujahideen in Afghanistan in order to combat the Soviet Union. As substantial amounts of money, weapons and fighters flowed in, Pakistan’s security establishment began setting up camps to not only train fighters to battle in Afghanistan, but also in Jammu and Kashmir. Today, a wide array of militant organisations operate in Pakistan with safe havens in urban and rural areas. Some of these include sectarian organisations that target religious minorities and Muslim sects (Sipah-e-Sahaba), anti-India outfits (Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed), anti-Afghanistan groups (Mullah Omar’s Taliban and the Haqqani network), and militants waging war against the Pakistani military (Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan).

The 9/11 attacks and the subsequent invasion of Afghanistan was the first turning point in the nature of militancy in Pakistan. General Musharraf was quick to sever ties with the Taliban government in Kabul and supported American operations in Afghanistan. To give the peace process with India some traction, he put a temporary halt on militant flow into Jammu and Kashmir. In April 1999, Musharraf had told a group of retired military officers that “Taliban are my strategic reserve and I can unleash them in tens of thousands against India when I want”. By 2002, he had changed his tune, nominally banning groups such as the Lashkar-e-Toiba. But the banned organisations and their leadership were allowed to operate under new names.

Under Musharraf, Pakistan began differentiating between jihadi groups. While foreign terrorists with links to al-Qaeda were handed over to the United States, local and regional militants (sectarian, anti-India and anti-Afghan groups) were left alone. Some militants built capacity to challenge the writ of the state right under the nose of Pakistani security forces. They have inflicted huge casualties on security forces in Pakistan and Afghanistan over the years. Other groups such as the Haqqani network were ‘managed’ by intelligence agencies in a bid to exert influence on events in Afghanistan.

The current Pakistani problem of increasing terrorism at home is the result of that policy. While the state might differentiate among terrorists, the jihadis often tend to be sympathetic and supportive towards one another. The jihadis supported by the establishment end up supporting terrorists attacking Pakistan’s army and civilians. As is often the case with ideologically motivated militants, ideology takes precedence over strategy and, in the case of jihadis, even those accepting Pakistani state support see the value of some fighters using force to Islamise Pakistan further even at the cost of undermining the country’s stability. According to the South Asia Terrorism Portal, 19,152 civilians and 5,839 security force personnel lost their lives in terrorismrelated violence between 2003 and 2014, excluding the casualties of the latest massacre in Peshawar.

Pakistan’s adherence to an ideological nationalism based on Islam has allowed radical groups to propagate their message and raise large sums of money without much hindrance. Further, while the military and intelligence coercive apparatus has been strong, the local police has never been provided the political support, resources and skills required to be able to combat these radical outfits. Faced with a poorly trained and demoralised police force, some groups run extortion and kidnapping rackets in urban centres. They also raise money through narcotics trafficking and trade of smuggled goods. The militant organisations have thus a sophisticated system of raising funds to support their activities that would enable them to operate even after the Pakistani state has made a final decision to cut them off. So far, unfortunately, that decision itself seems elusive. For years, Pakistan has been living in denial. For years, Pakistan denied support for the Afghan Taliban or the existence of Kashmiri jihadi training camps. The presence of al Qaeda leaders, including Osama bin Laden, was attributed to the inadvertent consequences of Pakistan’s involvement in the anti-Soviet jihad of the 1980s. But denial does not offer a way forward. Pakistan’s Islamo-nationalism has bred radicalism, diminished economic growth and weakened its international standing. Also unknown is the extent of ideological radicalisation within Pakistan’s armed forces, which remain the country’s dominant institution.

A FAILING STATE?


Catastrophic Failures of Pakistan Army 


There have been numerous instances of military officers, non-commissioned officers and enlisted men co-operating with jihadists or deserting their service to join jihadist ranks. But the Pakistani military tends to hold back information on the matter, making an assessment of the extent of this problem difficult. Incidents such as the attacks on the Pakistani naval base ‘Mehran’ in 2011, air force base Kamra in 2012 and the 2014 foiled attempt by Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) to take over a navy frigate in Karachi harbour point to the persistence of jihadi influence within the ranks of the armed forces.

TALIBAN PUNJAB WING IN FRONT OS ISI HQ IN ISLAMABAD 


Jamat-ud-Dawaleader Hafiz Saeed during Arallyin Islamabad In May, Courtesy: AFPAs US and NATO forces withdraw from Afghanistan, it is unlikely that the Pakistani establishment would want to give up its decades-long pursuit of paramountcy over Afghanistan. Faced with international pressure as well as growing threats from the Pakistani Taliban, Pakistan has cleared out the known jihadist sanctuaries in North Waziristan. This has deprived Afghan groups such as the Haqqani network of their former headquarters. But Pakistan has neither acted against nor militarily confronted the Afghan Taliban leaders and the Haqqani network is believed to have relocated to other parts ofFATA.

Pakistan’s policy in the immediate future would likely be to engage with the government of Afghanistan and the US in negotiations, with the stated objective of finding a negotiated settlement with the Taliban. At the same time Pakistan will most likely continue to try and militarily change the ground situation in Afghanistan in an effort to force the world to deal with de facto Taliban control of parts of Afghanistan as fait accompli. In Islamabad’s view, this would enable it to determine the final terms of an Afghan settlement, resulting in India’s exclusion from Afghanistan and the northwestern neighbour being acknowledged as Pakistan’s sphere of influence.

But are fantasies of parity with India and paramountcy over Afghanistan realistic policies? For 67 years, Pakistan has developed one element of national power-the military one-at the cost of all other elements of national power. The country’s institutions, ranging from schools and universities to the judiciary, are in a state of general decline. The economy’s stuttering growth is dependent largely on the flow of concessional flows of external resources. Pakistan’s GDP stands at $245 billion in absolute terms and $845 billion in purchasing price parity-the smallest economy of any country that has so far tested nuclear weapons.

Twenty-two per cent of the population lives below the poverty line and another 21 per cent lives just above it, resulting in almost half the people of Pakistan being very poor. It is little comfort for Pakistanis living in poverty when they are told that poverty across the border in India or Afghanistan is even starker.

Soon after independence, 16.4 per cent of Pakistan’s population was literate compared with 18.3 per cent of the much larger population in India. By 2011 India had managed to attain 74.04 per cent literacy while Pakistan’s literacy rate stood at 57 per cent. What was atwo percentage points difference in literacy rates has expanded into a nearly 20 percentage points difference in 67 years. In 2009, Pakistan allocated 2.7 per cent of its budget for education-the school life expectancy is seven years.

A staggering 38 per cent of Pakistanis between the school-going age of five and 15 are completely out of school. With a population of 180-190 million out of which 60 per cent fall in the working age category of 15-64 and another 35 per cent under 14 years of age, Pakistan has a demographic dividend which can also turn into a demographic nightmare. The low literacy rate and inadequate investment in education has led to a decline in Pakistan’s technological base, which in turn hampers economic modernisation. Textiles is the country’s major industry but despite being a major cotton-producer, Pakistan has been unable to become a leader in value-added textile products.

With one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios in the world of around 9 per cent, a GDP growth rate of 1.7-2.4 per cent and population growth rate of 1.5 per cent, Pakistan needs foreign as well as domestic investment in addition to drastic changes in local laws, all of which need broad political consensus and stability, both of which are lacking.

With almost 40 per cent of its population urbanised, the Pakistan government spends around 2.6 per cent on public healthcare. As a result, social services are also in a state of decline. On the other hand, Pakistan spends almost 6 per cent of its GDP on defence and is still unable to match the conventional forces of India, which outspends Pakistan 3 to 1 while allocating less than 3 per cent of GDP to military spending.

Over the decades, Pakistan has managed to evade crises and failure status primarily because the international community has bailed it out. But now the rest of the world sees Pakistan as ‘jihad central.’ Training camps nestled in the tribal areas have trained and equipped militants who have gone on to fight in the name of Allah in different regions of the world. Foreign fighters trained in Pakistan have reportedly been in action in Syria, Iraq, Somalia, Mali, Nigeria and China’s Xinjiang region. It is no longer possible to keep Pakistani jihadis as a strategic reserve only to cause damage to India.

Instead of securing parity with India and paramountcy over Afghanistan, jihadis have only created greater internal crises and disruption within Pakistan. It might be a difficult decision but Pakistan must recognise the heavy cost being exacted by its pursuit of regional influence through asymmetric warfare. Fighting some jihadis while embracing others is self-defeating. Thirty years of escalated jihadism since the anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan has caused erosion of the writ of the Pakistani state and decline in capacity of state institutions, especially the coercive apparatus.

Even with sporadic military operations, Pakistan’s tribal areas will remain host for some time to a wide range of militant organisations with local, regional and global agendas. Pakistan’s most populous area, Punjab, is now the main recruitment area not only for the Pakistani army but also for assorted jihadi groups. The growing presence of jihadis in south Punjab and northern Sind and even Pakistan’s financial hub, Karachi, does not augur well for Pakistan’s economy.

Pakistan’s jihadis are already exercising virtual veto over Pakistan’s relations with India. The Mumbai attack proved Lashkar-e-Toiba’s ability to undermine the initiatives of a civilian government for normalisation of India-Pakistan relations. They could, in future, force the Pakistani military’s hand in a similar manner. Pakistan needs to get out of denial that there are any jihadi groups that can be trusted or considered allies of the state. However useful they might have been for external purposes, non-state actors will always be a danger for the state internally. Instead of increasing Pakistan’s strategic options, as they were designed to do, the jihadis are now limiting Pakistan’s foreign policy choices.

Instead of doubling down on its jihadist misadventure, Pakistan could plot its course out of the disaster. To do so, it would have to change the defensive national narrative about Pakistan’s creation, raison d’etre and prospects of survival. So far, any discussion of the nation’s origins that does not conform to the ‘ideology of Pakistan’ has been treated not as history but as an attack on the country’s foundation.

A LOOK BACK TO LOOK AHEAD

After mobilising support for the demand for Pakistan, and establishing it as an independent country, successive Pakistani leaders have chosen to keep alive the divisive frenzy that led to Partition. If Pakistan was attained with the slogan ‘Islam in danger’, it has been built on the slogan ‘Pakistan in danger’, creating a constant sense of insecurity among its people, especially in relation to India and internal demands for ethnic identity or pluralism. This might be the time to revisit the ideas of Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan and Bengal’s Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, who had opposed the conjuring of this ‘ideology of Pakistan’.

Suhrawardy had told Pakistan’s Constituent Assembly in March 1948 against building Pakistani nationalism around the notion of Islam being under threat. According to him, the rhetoric used to mobilise Muslims for the creation of Pakistan was no longer needed after independence. “You are raising the cry,” he said, “of Pakistan in danger for the purpose of arousing Muslim sentiments and binding them together in order to maintain you in power.” Suhrawardy warned against transforming Pakistan into a state “founded on sentiments, namely that of Islam in danger or of Pakistan in danger”. He declared that “a state which will be held together by raising the bogey of attacks” and “friction” with enemies “will be full of alarms and excursions”. Suhrawardy’s words seem almost prophetic today. He said, “You think that you will get away with it but in that state there will be no commerce, no business and no trade. There will be lawlessness and those lawless elements that may be turned today against non-Muslims will be turned later on, once those fratricidal tendencies have been aroused, against the Muslim gentry and I want you to be warned in time.” He also defined the two key issues for the new country.The “fundamental aspect of the foundations of Pakistan”, he asserted, should be “the goodwill of the people and of the citizens of Pakistan within the state” and “the mutual relationship between the Dominion of Pakistan and the sister dominion, Indian Union”.

If the Pakistani establishment decides to turn the corner, it would have to stop treating Pakistan’s anti-jihadists as its enemies and gradually embrace a new national narrative for the country. Confronting the jihadists comprehensively would make Pakistan more secure, paving the way for greater prosperity and a place under the sun. Refusing to confront and marginalise them will only lead to recurrent tragedies like the one in Peshawar, followed by grief and outrage.

source: http://www.hudson.org/research/10885-state-of-delusion

How Punjab Taliban and their Name was Omitted from Counter Terrorism Strategy as Establishment want to Protect its Strategic Assets.

Pakistan state and its Establishment is still in Delusion about its Taliban Assets as it is Feeding the Snakes with Blood from Deaths in Baluchistan , Pakhtunkhwa , Sindh and FATA , thinking it will help them in Making Afghanistan its Fifth Province and it do something which  USSR , USA , Mongols Chengez Khan ,/ Mughals , Alexander the Great and many more could not do it want to do that is making Slave and Subjects of Afghans and Pashtuns via Taliban Strategic Assets tucked Safely in Punjab 






Titled : Not on their watch
by  Cyril Almeida


SOMETIMES, anecdotes suffice. Late last year, after a wave of terror attacks in KP had forced the government to think about militancy, the prime minister held a round of consultations with the usual suspects from the media, the analyst community, civil society and the like.

At one of those meetings, the prime minister said he was simply there to listen, invited everyone he had gathered to speak their minds and patiently held a pencil in his hand, occasionally jotting something down.

For hours, folk you read and hear and watch if you’re interested in politics and security talked exhaustively about militancy and terrorism and what they individually thought needed to be done.

Many talked about the counter-insurgency in Fata. Afghanistan was debated. The US was discussed. India was mentioned. Civil-military was analysed. Lack of resources, how to find those resources, how to build on existing resources, it was all parsed.

Collating all the thoughts and opinions voiced that afternoon it amounted to a fairly comprehensive and impressive action plan — if the state were ever to get serious about fighting the militants who are fighting it.
The political and military leadership knows it can happen again. It knows it can’t stop it from happening again.

One thing stood out though: there was no discussion of Punjab. It was not even mentioned. It was all TTP, Fata, KP, Karachi, Islamabad, bad militants, Afghan Taliban, Haqqanis even. But no Punjab.

Perhaps propriety dictated that, given the host that afternoon is the king of Punjab. But the topic was terrorism and how to make Pakistan safe and the host had urged a frank discussion. So, at the end, after everyone had spoken and no one had mentioned Punjab, I asked the prime minister about his province.

What’s the point in talking about militancy if the debate is limited to the fires that are already raging; what about Punjab, where everyone knows there’s a militancy presence bigger than Fata and KP combined and where the PML-N is known to be in bed with at least some militants?

That was the only time in those several hours that Nawaz became animated. He quickly and flatly denied any links between his party and Punjab-based militants and denied that Punjab has an outsize militancy problem. He didn’t need to.

The few ministers in attendance leapt to their boss and their province’s defence. Not true. No terrorism in Punjab. No such thing. No understanding with any militant groups. It’s all a lie. Everyone else at that table knew they were lying, possibly to themselves, certainly to us.

Another anecdote. From the Kayani era, an anecdote relevant still because it extends to the decisive, dashing Raheel era. The anecdote was narrated second-hand.

Gen K had invited a small group of civilian security experts for a chat. They were there to talk about the counter-insurgency in Fata and the spillover into the cities. At some point, one of the participants asked the general about Punjab.

Nothing you do in Fata or KP will matter as long as Punjab remains untouched, as long as Hafiz Saeed and his ilk are allowed to run around. The two zones are connected, you can’t fix one problem without addressing the other; why aren’t you dealing with Punjab, Gen K was asked.

As he was inclined to do when asked a difficult question, Gen K puffed on his cigarette, said nothing for a while and then quietly turned to address someone else. After the meeting though, Gen K pulled aside his guest who had asked about Punjab.

I was not avoiding your question, he said, I didn’t want to answer it in front of everyone else. Then, in typical Kayani style, he responded with a question of his own: do you want me to break the army, to fracture it by opening another front? I won’t allow that on my watch.

Not on my watch. There it was, an honest answer, given in private, the same answer that Nawaz would probably give in a private, honest moment. Not on my watch.

But things, awful, terrible things, do happen on their watch. We lived through one this week. Why, people ask, is that never enough to spur the political and military leadership into saying, enough. Never again. Not on my or anyone else’s watch.

Because bad things happening does not mean worse cannot happen. What the people don’t know, the political and military leadership does: better — politically and militarily better — to deal with the bad than to have to deal with the worse.

Most here have forgotten why Musharraf delayed action against Lal Masjid for six months in 2007 and what happened after the raid. Which is also why most here cannot understand why that odious man, Abdul Aziz, is allowed to mock the nation’s pain and threaten peaceful citizens gathered outside his mosque.

“If I am arrested the administration will not be able to control the protest rallies all over Pakistan. And if they kill me then there would be so many suicide attacks that it would surpass the reaction that followed the death of my brother, Abdul Rashid Ghazi,” that odious man, Abdul Aziz, threatened on Friday from inside his mosque.

Aziz was being honest. The political and military leadership knows that. That political and military leadership saw what happened after July 2007, when a wave of suicide bombings and fidayeen attacks that convulsed the country were traced back to anger over the Lal Masjid raid.

The political and military leadership knows it can happen again. The political and military leadership knows it can’t stop it from happening again. The political and military leadership does not want it to happen again, at least not on their watch.

Better then to keep Aziz onside, especially since he is willing to remain on the right side. Like so many in Punjab.

So it’s fear then? Weak leadership and a broken state? Not entirely.

Because you always have to wonder, of the men deployed to track Abdul Aziz’s ugly threats, how many are there to keep an eye on Aziz and how many to stand in prayer behind him?

The writer is a member of staff.

cyril.a@gmail.com

Twitter: @cyalm

Published in Dawn, December 21st, 2014: http://www.dawn.com/news/1152145/not-on-their-watch

Friday, December 19, 2014

Accomplice or Failure ?- 10 questions Pakistan Army fans can’t answer


Pakistan has lost 100,000 of its people to terrorism. The figure of policemen and jawans killed stands somewhere between ten and twenty thousands. Earlier this week, Taliban launched the deadliest of all attacks of Pakistan’s history which (to last counts) has killed 162 including 140+ children in APS&C Peshawar.
There is no national consensus still and Pakistan Army and its cronies continue to confuse masses with their usual conspiracy theories and blaming neighboring India and Afghanistan while running away from any responsibility by trying to prove terrorists were not Muslim and came from some unknown place. 

The fact remains that the terrorism in Pakistan is an outcome of policy of strategic depth of Pakistan Army which is enabled by the Jihadi narrative popularised in Pakistan by Deobandi madressah network, on behest and funding of Pakistan Army. The chicken have now come home to roost but Pakistan Army continues its policy of good and bad Taliban and is not willing to reverse its narrative and take on extremism.

 What is more tragic is the unflinching support that Pakistan Army enjoys, specially in urban centers by young educated lot who find it unpatriotic and traitorous to question Pakistan Army. So, here are my ten questions to Pakistan Army fan boys and girls….

1. Who lets Mullah Omar operate from Quetta?



Mullah Omar, head of Afghan Taliban operates from Quetta in Pakistan

Mullah Omar, who is the Ameer (head/leader) of the Afghan Taliban has been operating from Quetta in Pakistan for a long time. The whole Afghan Taliban Shura (shadow cabinet) was relocated to Pakistan by Pakistan Army to help them remain safe from US attacks in Afghanistan. If Pakistan Army is leading a war operation against the Taliban, why is it hosting them in Quetta at the cost of Shia blood? Are Afghan Taliban good because they kill Indians and Afghanis but Pakistani Taliban are bad because they are out of control of Pakistan Army?

2. Why Army gave a helicopter ride to Malik Ishaq of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi?




Malik Ishaq of LeJ was given a helicopter ride from Lahore jail to GHQ

In the year 2009, self proclaimed Shia killer and head of ruthless terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Jhangvi was flown on a military helicopter by Pakistan Army from Lahore’s Kot Lakhpat Jail to GHQ. Newsreports suggests he was flown in to broker a deal between the LeJ militants and Pakistan Army as LeJ militants had a dozen or so Army personnel held hostage in the GHQ in Rawalpindi. There were widespread Shia killings in the time that followed and analysts believe LeJ was given free hand to kill Shias in return for freeing Army personnel.
3. How Osama managed to live a KM away from Army cantonment for years?



Osama Bin Laden lived less than a mile away from Army’s cantonment for years in Pakistan ??


Osama Bin Laden, the world’s most deadliest terrorist of Al-Qaeda lived in a compound built on 3500 square meter plot of land with 7 feet high walls. Ironically, this compound is located less than a mile away from Pakistan Army’s cantonment in Abbotabad which is one of the most strategic military bases in the region. For over a decade, Pakistan Army received coalition funds in the name of fighting terror and was well equipped and lavished with financial help but still could not find Osama living at stone’s throw away from them? Either the armed forces were hiding Osama, or the premier Intelligence Agency ISI is completely inefficient and inept.

4. Who helps Haqqani network to escape drone attacks?



Pakistan Army has provided secret information to Haqqani Network on several occassions to escape drone attacks.

Haqqani Network is a terrorist group allied with the Afghan Taliban and are loyal to Pakistan Army. They have launched several attacks on US-led NATO forces as well as on Afghan government officials and institutions and operate from Pakistani border. The US, with assistance from Pakistan Army has launched several drone attacks on Haqqani network but reports suggest they were able to escape every time before the attack making the US believe that Pakistan Army was playing a double game. The US, later on, launched independent drone attacks without information to Pakistan Army and they were found successful. This further proves that Pakistan Army is not ready to give up on strategic depth and continues to support terrorists across the border.

5. How ISIS/Taliban head at stone’s throw away from ISIS HQ is safe and untouched?



Maulana Abdul Aziz of Lal Masjid has declared allegiance to ISIS and Taliban sitting just opposite ISI HQ

Maulana Abdul Aziz, current head of the notorius Lal Masjid and Jamia Hafsa has declared allegiance to ISIS and has on live TV said that his madressah students support ISIS and Taliban and has welcomed ISIS in Pakistan. From his madressah, the students run the world’s most dangerous online forum named Jamia Hafsa Urdu forum where videos of madressah students (working with Taliban and other outfits) butchering people are shared, as well as Jihadi propaganda is circulated. The cleric is regularly given airtime on live TV and has been untouched so far. Ironically, his madressah is at stone’s throw away from the premier intelligence agency ISI’s headquarter in the capital city. What stops ISI and Pakistan Army from taking action in the capital?

6. Who gives free hand to terrorists in cantonment called Quetta?

Quetta city in Baluchistan province is perhaps Pakistan’s biggest cantonment – the city is practically run by and under the control of Pakistan Army and FC for decades. Nothing moves in the city without the Armed forces knowing it. It is, in these circumstances, surprising to believe that terrorist outfits like Lashkar-e-Jhangvi can operate with impunity and mass murder Hazara Shias as and when they like and still remain untouched, while the Baloch rebels can not even run a Baloch newspaper. ASWJ, the terrorist sister outfit of LeJ was helped by Pakistan Army to establish a stronghold in Baluchistan and now Ramzan Mengal is one of the most feared terrorists in the region. Maulana Fazlur Rehman Deobandi’s jalsa was bombed by Mengal for the reason that he refused to invite him to the jalsa on instrucuctions of security forces. Army fan boys can let us know how these terrorists operate with impunity in biggest cantonment of Pakistan?



Hazara Shia killings have been rampant for a few years.

7. Do you get the value for 700 billion expenditure of Armed forces?



Pakistan Armed forces received 1100  billion in last budget
Pakistan Armed forces received 700 billion rupees in the last budget – that’s almost 10 times Health andeducation combined. Pakistan Army also received 1800 billion rupees from 2002 to 2010 from coalition fund. The security institutions have also received further funding from international bodies/funders as well as from Pakistani Government in the name of fighting terror. Can the fans of Pakistan Army economically justify this massive expenditure considering the outcome? As citizens, Pakistanis have paid 10 times over their health and education and what have they received in return except bloodshed, death and destruction?

8. Which other Army runs an economic business empire?



Pakistan Army runs a business empire like no other Army

Pakistan Army is perhaps unique in the sense that it runs an economic business empire like no other Army in the world. It deals in all sort of businesses across the country, and perhaps that explains why they are so inefficient at the job we pay them to do – protect and defend us. An incomplete list of Pakistan Army business can be seen here but fan boys and girls kindly tell us which Army makes corn flakes, cement, ghee, shoes, oil guard and operates in over a dozen business like insurance, banks, real estate, CNG and fuel?

9. Who helped 7/7 bomber Rashid Rauf escape jail?



Rashid Rauf, a 7/7 bomber was helped by Pakistan Army to escape jail. 

On 14 December 2007, Rashif Rauf one of the London 7/7 bombers mysteriously escaped from jail. Authorities say he escaped after freeing himself from handcuffs. Rauf was later killed in a US drone strike on Pakistan Army friendly terrorists on AfPak border.

source: http://blog.ale.com.pk/?p=2572

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Massive Corruption Under PTI Government in Chitral Pakhtunkhwa No Progress in Development Projects.





Protests against corruption in different developmental projects continued in parts of Chitral. A sizeable protest rally led by Jounali Qazi Abdul Rauf marched from Chewo Bridge and ended up in Polo Ground. There it turned into a large public assemblage and representatives of civil society and political parties addressed the people.

Speakers said that Abdul Wali Khan Bypass was supposed to complete in 2011 and still remains incomplete. The contractor of the bypass, it turns out, is a government employee working as laboratory attendant in Government Degree College, upper Dir. As a contractor he is enjoying government support for dilly-dallying the work on the road and allegedly shares commissions with officials.
The speakers also pointed out that the bridge on Molin Goul stream near Chitral Scouts Headquarter, currently under construction, shows that it has been poorly built with substandard material. It poses threat and clearly indicates that it is not going to sustain any pressure of water or floods in summer.

They said that 340 million rupees were spent on Golian Water supply scheme.But here too, defective and cheap pipes were used in the project. People are still deprived of water. They alleged that the contractor paid huge commissions in this project to local PMA and Public Health Engineering high-ups. They demanded of the National Accountability Bureau to recover the 340 million rupees from the Public Health department corrupt officers and from the contractor.
They said that Goulian Hydel Power station would be completed next year and demanded 30 MW electricity from this project for Chitral as Chitral is passing through energy crises. They also demanded up-gradation of Saingor Power House.

A resolution was passed on the occasion where it demanded from Chairman and Director General NAB to investigate and recover the 340 million rupees of Goulain Goal project. 30 MW electricity from Goulian Hydel Power House should be allocated for Chitral and the bypass should be completed without any further delay.

source: http://www.dardistantimes.com/chitral/News/1763575980/corruption-developmental-projects-trigger-protests-chitral



Wednesday, December 3, 2014

No Accommodation for FATA Students on Federal Seat in Punjab Universities

From the NewspaperPublished Nov 30, 2014 07:28am
Letter of Poor FATA Student 



I RECENTLY completed my graduation from Government College University Lahore in philosophy and applied to the Punjab University Lahore for M.Phil.

I was selected after a tough competition in the department of philosophy. Hailing from South Waziristan Agency (Federally Administrated Tribal Area) the Mahsud tribe, I had no accommodation in Lahore and applied for a room in the university hostel.

After a fortnight I was allotted a room in Sir Syed International Boys Hostel No 2.
When I visited the hostel, I was told that my documents were being processed and another two weeks passed. During this time I lived in a private hostel and found it difficult to concentrate on my academics as this place was far from the university and expensive as well.

After another two weeks when I asked the hostel superintendent about my room, I was told that I would not get a room because I belonged to South Waziristan Agency, Fata and the international students residing there may feel insecure because of my presence in the hostel. As an M.Phil student I am at a loss to understand the administration’s logic.

Campuses are supposed to be places where people from diverse backgrounds come and understand each other. In this way they develop a room for imbibing diversity in themselves and are in a better position to later serve in society.

Disallowing people from different backgrounds to come close to each other is promoting and reinforcing stereotypes about each other. This should not be the essence of any educational institution.

Unfortunately in our universities, the participatory culture is not applied so that students from diverse backgrounds can understand each other. This practise becomes all the more alarming when it becomes the policy of an institution of higher learning to segregate students which happened in my case. These practices reflect adversely on our society.
Rafi ud din Mahsud
South Waziristan Agency, Fata
Published in Dawn, November 30th , 2014
source; http://www.dawn.com/news/1147773