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Sharif family tiger sparks Pakistan row

Siberian tiger

By Syed Shoaib Hasan
BBC News, Islamabad

The family of Pakistan’s main opposition leader says it has handed over a tiger obtained in contravention of local laws to the government.

The Siberian tiger was imported by Sulieman Sharif, nephew of former PM Nawaz Sharif and son of Shahbaz Sharif, the chief minster of Punjab province.

News of the imported tiger led to an outcry because it was to be kept in its own air-conditioned compound.

Pakistanis are currently enduring sweltering heat amid severe power cuts.

Cooled compound

Sulieman Sharif obtained the tiger from Canada on 23 July despite a ban on the private import of large cats into Pakistan since February 2009.

The tiger was set to be housed in an electrically-cooled compound on the family estate of Raiwind, a few kilometres outside Lahore, the Punjab capital.

But a huge hue and cry was raised by the press and public after it emerged the compound would run on local electricity.

Pakistan’s nationwide power shortages are so severe that daily outages last 10-12 hours.

Subsequently, Shahbaz Sharif is said to have ordered the tiger to be taken away immediately.

The World Wildlife Fund’s (WWF) Pakistan chapter says the Sharifs have now agreed they should no longer keep the tiger.

"We understand it has now been handed over to the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) government," Ali Hassan Habib of the WWF told the BBC.

It is not clear why NWFP has been chosen, but one possibility is that it is cooler there than in Punjab.

"After the matter came into the press, the Sharifs approached us themselves for help," Mr Habib said.

"We don’t have the facilities here to keep the animal, but we willing to help relocate him elsewhere. The question does arise as to how the tiger got in, as the environment ministry had recently banned its import."

It is expected the tiger will either be housed in a public zoo in Pakistan, or relocated abroad.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pak refuses to arrest Saeed saying ‘not enough proof’ of his involvement in 26/11

Pakistan has denied arresting Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Saeed, in connection with the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
Interior Advisor Rehman Malik said there is ‘not enough proof’ of Saeed’s involvement in the 26/11 carnage, so the alleged mastermind could not be put behind bars.
Malik said Islamabad has asked New Delhi to provide details of [...]

Culture wars

By David Loyn
BBC News, Islamabad

It would cost a million dollars to stage the Lahore International Arts Festival – not much to restore a sense of hope in a city that sometimes feels under siege.

The last festival was bombed in November last year, so even without the global economic downturn, the big sponsors would have shied away from connection with the event this year.

The Taliban have staged their most spectacular attacks in Pakistan recently on five-star hotels – the Pearl Continental in Peshawar and the Marriott in Islamabad – but it is the Punjab province capital, Lahore, that has faced the most constant attention.

Since the festival bombing, targets have included a cafe belonging to the Peerzada family who stage the festival, and theatres across the city in co-ordinated overnight raids.

Cultural frontline

Salman Shahid, who has a popular TV chat show, says that every time people go out for the evening, there is a danger that was not there a couple of years ago.

"Somewhere at the back of your mind there is a thought that you are taking a bit of a risk," he says.

A dancer at one of Lahore's theatres

To go backstage in one of the theatres that was bombed, I climbed a steep and narrow metal staircase, squeezing along stained walls in a side street in Lahore.

On stage, some of Pakistan’s biggest screen stars are playing parts amid the poor lighting and makeshift scenery. Their industry has failed to keep up with Bollywood in recent years.

The theatre’s owner Bilal Ahmed said: "The cinema of Pakistan has been facing a lot of crisis. There was a time when Pakistan and India were going neck to neck.

"We do not have the state of the art equipment our neighbour does. It is just hopeless in Pakistan."

Windows broken in the bomb attack have still not been repaired at the front of the theatre, but Mr Ahmed was not giving up. Like everyone I spoke to on this cultural frontline, he saw his theatre work as having a role beyond mere entertainment.

Bawdy shows

Being able to put on vulgar bawdy shows about Punjab family life was in some way standing up for a civilisation in peril from the Taliban.

"It is the best form of fighting terrorism to expose them, so that normal people will have no sympathy for them"

Younis Butt

Map

Although his dancers were clothed from head to foot, their gyrations miming to Bollywood movies have to be passed by the censor, and the police do come and check.

It is as if the theatre is on a tightrope, and could fall off any time.

TV in contrast does not face censorship, and Pakistan has seen fierce competition in recent years. One of the most successful channels, Geo TV, like many institutions in the country, has taken a far harder line against the Taliban this year than before.

The tolerance for brave Islamic fighters was fine when they were fighting foreign wars in Afghanistan and in Indian-controlled Kashmir.

But now that Pakistan faces an internal Islamist threat, the real nature of the kind of life the fundamentalists want has brought a new unity against them.

Younis Butt has launched a comedy show specifically to respond to the Taliban threat, including a spoof Taliban TV channel, complete with a woman singer who sits in silence with her back to the camera, and time-checks made by bullets striking a bell.

Mr Butt says: "It is the best form of fighting terrorism to expose them, so that normal people will have no sympathy for them. That is only way we can isolate them, then we can fight them."

He says his lampooning of US policy has caused complaints from Americans, too.

Mainstream v mullahs

"Americans say if this truth is by Jon Stewart or by David Letterman then that is good, but if you are doing it in Pakistan then you are not doing good work," he says.

A man dressed in a mask, holding a gun, on Taliban TV

But he believes that if he is getting strong protests from both the US and the Taliban, then he is fulfilling his function as a safety valve for a society that needs to laugh.

The Peerzada family, still hoping against the odds to stage their international festival, stress Pakistan’s Sufi Islamic traditions as a counter to the Taliban.

Usman Peerzada said: "This is the moment people need the arts, need music to relax. This is the moment that people need to see drama."

Lahore is full of shrines remembering Sufi saints – a type of religion that the Taliban detest.

Faizan Peerzada has been on a long tour of Sufi areas, collecting stories, music and poetry.

‘Total war’

And he has promoted a Sufi singer, Sain Zahoor, now internationally famous.

A performer on the stage in Lahore

Sain Zahoor sings ancient poetry that tells of past conflicts between the Sufi mainstream and mullahs who wanted a more restrictive vision of Islamic life – a reminder that the Taliban represent an old viewpoint, appearing in a modern guise.

All of these artists are striking back with the only weapons they have – drama, music and above all humour. And the public are responding.

The day after the arts festival was bombed last year, the open-air theatre was packed.

Lahori people walked through the debris, some bringing babies and small children, in defiance of the threat. Those who were there said the atmosphere was electric.

Sadaan Peerzada said: "It is a total war. They are trying to choke and discourage. They are bold. We have to do the same and keep doing it."

Pakistan feels like a country on a hinge of history. This year for the first time it has turned on the extremist version of Islam that it nurtured for so long.

But the decisive battles in its war with the Taliban might not turn out to be on the North West Frontier Province, but on this cultural frontier of hearts and minds, as a nation struggles with its identity in the world. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

PCB to seek ICC assurance on govt. permission to play in World Cup

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ijaz Butt will meet ICC president David Morgan on Tuesday to discuss the possible solutions to a scenario in which the Pakistan cricket team is not allowed to play its 2011 World Cup home matches in India or if the Pakistan Government does not allow its team to play in [...]

Musharraf’s trial ‘need of the hour’: Sharif

Supporting the Supreme Court’s decision to summon former President General Pervez Musharraf, former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has said the military ruler’s trial was the ‘need of the hour’.
Sharif said Musharraf must be tried and punished for “breaching the constitution”.
“Such a man deserves to be tried and imprisoned instead of being given guard of [...]

Defying militants

By Bill Law
BBC Radio 4, Crossing Continents

Jamia Naeemia

Pakistani madrassas, religious schools, are often seen in the west as incubators for terrorism. Most do not fit that stereotype.

Madrassas stress Koranic studies but many also provide what is called a modern education – maths, sciences, computer technology. They provide free education where the state cannot.

I recently visited one that paid a terrible price for its moderate stand. Jamia Naeemia is a madrassah in Lahore.

On the 12 June this year, the Imam, Dr Safrez Naeemi, was talking to a student in his office. Dr Naeemi had drawn international attention by speaking out against the Taliban.

He had issued a fatwa condemning suicide attacks.

Students at Jamia Naeemia

In planning my trip I had arranged to speak to Dr Naeemi about the message of moderation he was preaching. It was not to be.

On that day, 12 June, a young man walked into his office and detonated a bomb jacket. Dr Naeemi, the student and the bomber died instantly.

Killing Dr Naeemi sent a chilling message from the extremists to religious moderates – criticise us, condemn us and we will kill you. The space for dialogue in a dangerously divided Pakistan narrowed even further.

Ignorance

While I was there, the office was being repaired but windows in the student dormitories above the courtyard were still blown out, and outside walls scarred with the impact of the explosion.

Ragib Naeemi

Muhammed Ragip Hussein Naeemi, Dr Naeemi’s son, heard about the attack in a phone call while he was driving.

He says he was angry, very angry but he knew immediately what he had to do.

"I realised that I would have to be very calm. So I ordered all of my father’s students not to harm anyone, not to start fires, not to kill anyone."

Ragip Naeemi says that what the Taliban wanted was to create further instability in an already insecure city:

"Those people who planned this nasty action against my father, they thought that after he died there would be violence, there would be riots and killing of other people."

I talked to one of Dr Naeemi’s students and asked him how he felt about the suicide bomber. He paused and I could feel his sadness and then he said:

"The suicide bomber was just a child, he knew nothing about it, whether he was doing right or wrong. He was brainwashed and he was doing what he was given training for."

Violence

The extremists feed off the widespread anger amongst Pakistan’s estimated 100 million young people. Many have no education, no jobs, no future.

Ragib Naeemi says the Taliban understand how badly Pakistan has failed to provide for its citizens and exploit that knowledge skilfully:

"Violence is in our society. When young people express their views, they express them very violently and this anger is in all our young people. And whoever puts a small fire to their anger – it will explode".

Dr Naeemi's grave with banner

Ragib Naeemi and the students he has inherited from his father say they will continue to denounce violence.

As we leave I pass the place where Dr Naeemi is buried. The soil on the grave is still fresh. And on the wall is a banner. It says in Urdu:

"Dr Safrez Naeemi, martyred. Long live Islam. Long live Pakistan."

I learn later that just about the time I am leaving the madrassa a suicide bomber has blown himself up in an attack on a bus in Rawalpindi.

He was said to be 20 years old.


Crossing Continents: Pakistan is broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Thursday, 23 July 2009 at 1100 BST and repeated on Monday, 27 July at 2030 BST.

You can also listen to Crossing Continents on the BBC iPlayeror subscribe to the podcast.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pak death row inmate Sarabjit Singh files fresh application in Supreme Court

A fresh application has been filed before the Pakistan Supreme Court seeking review of its decision to dismiss the Indian death row inmate Sarabjit Singh’s petition challenging his death penalty, The Daily Times reports.
The apex court had dismissed Singh’s petition last month, as his lawyer failed to appear before it.
Singh’s lawyer, Rana Abdul Hameed had [...]

Reporters Uncensored: Twitter Revolution or Iranian Evolution?

Parsi admits all forms of social networking tools remain critical to documenting injustices inside Iran, but some, he believes, were not as competitive as Facebook and SMS.

Fading democracy

By David Loyn
BBC News, Attock, Pakistan

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people"

Maj Tahir Sadik

Maj Tahir Sadik

Retired Pakistani army Maj Tahir Sadik will leave office as the elected "Nazim", mayor of Attock, with mixed feelings in October.

"Eight years is a hell of a long time," he told me as we drove around the town.

Remembering the thousands of small issues he had dealt with, the grievances heard, the arguments settled, he added rather quietly, "they even pray for us".

He could not stand again as he has served the maximum two terms. But he is now leading a national campaign to save the Nazim system, which is being allowed to fade away when the mandate of those elected across the country expires in October, with no fresh elections planned.

Attock marks the historic crossing point of the Indus River, where armies since Alexander the Great have come after crossing the deserts and mountains of Afghanistan with India to the east in their sights.

Scuffles

But history has passed the town by as nowadays a motorway bridge further north is the route to the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), giving the ancient border town a forgotten air.

Bridge in Attock

Maj Tahir says that the Nazim system offers voters unique access to the levers of power that they do not have when their political rulers are far away in the Punjabi power centre of Lahore, or the national capital Islamabad.

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people, small problems, scuffles between people, and development issues, where a road goes, where a school should be built," he says.

In the eight years that he has been in power a public park has been built along with hospitals and sports facilities, rural bridges, eight dams and 375 school upgrades.

The system provides direct elections for village representatives, who come together with neighbouring villages to discuss issues, and vote for the district nazim, the post held in Attock by Maj Tahir. One third of the seats are reserved for women.

In a nation that has struggled to settle its constitution, veering between periods of military rule and unstable democratic control, ironically it has been military rulers who have done most for rural democracy.

The nazim system was introduced in 2001 by Gen Musharraf. Earlier attempts to introduce local voting were made in two other periods of military rule, under Ayub Khan in the late 1950s and Zia al-Haq in the 1980s.

Maj Tahir claims that since democracy was restored after the military dictatorship ended at the beginning of last year, not a single school has been upgraded in Attock as the provincial government has starved the nazims of funds ahead of suspending local government.

Taliban threat

The local government minister, retired Justice Abdul Razak Thahim, insists that local democracy is not being abolished for good.

He says that elections will be held after a period, but hinted that with elections already for the president, parliament, and assemblies for the four Pakistani provinces, that was enough democracy for now.

Polling in Pakistan

Justice Thahim says that it would be too difficult to hold elections now while the country is facing a threat from the Taliban.

This would make voting hazardous not just in NWFP, where Pakistani forces are fighting an intense campaign for control.

"How could elections be held in the provinces, when terrorists are so busy" he asked. "All the provinces are in the grip of terrorists and we are taking action against them."

After the terms of the nazims expire in October, local power will return to non-elected officials controlled from the centre.

It is easy to be cynical about what lies behind any political move in Pakistan, where the restoration of national democracy in 2008 has not reduced corruption.

Unprecedented

And Maj Tahir is tied by marriage to a powerful Punjabi political dynasty, the Chaudharys of Gujarat, political opponents of both of the major national ruling parties.

Map

But he says that the place to settle this is in the voting booth, not by scrapping polls.

And the fact remains that the suspension of polls will centralise power, and reduce local accountability.

It seems there will be little public agitation to preserve the system as people are more worried about the threat of terrorism and how to get through the long hot summer faced by power cuts on an unprecedented scale.

A leading political analyst, Rasul Baksh Rais, from the Lahore University of Management Sciences, says that the abolition of local voting is a backward step, and blames all political parties for failing to provide a platform for public arguments on policy.

"The centralised decision-making within the political parties will hurt the cause of democracy. People will think that instead of Pervez Musharraf who wore a military uniform, now we have civilian dictators," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fading democracy

By David Loyn
BBC News, Attock, Pakistan

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people"

Maj Tahir Sadik

Maj Tahir Sadik

Retired Pakistani army Maj Tahir Sadik will leave office as the elected "Nazim", mayor of Attock, with mixed feelings in October.

"Eight years is a hell of a long time," he told me as we drove around the town.

Remembering the thousands of small issues he had dealt with, the grievances heard, the arguments settled, he added rather quietly, "they even pray for us".

He could not stand again as he has served the maximum two terms. But he is now leading a national campaign to save the Nazim system, which is being allowed to fade away when the mandate of those elected across the country expires in October, with no fresh elections planned.

Attock marks the historic crossing point of the Indus River, where armies since Alexander the Great have come after crossing the deserts and mountains of Afghanistan with India to the east in their sights.

Scuffles

But history has passed the town by as nowadays a motorway bridge further north is the route to the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), giving the ancient border town a forgotten air.

Bridge in Attock

Maj Tahir says that the Nazim system offers voters unique access to the levers of power that they do not have when their political rulers are far away in the Punjabi power centre of Lahore, or the national capital Islamabad.

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people, small problems, scuffles between people, and development issues, where a road goes, where a school should be built," he says.

In the eight years that he has been in power a public park has been built along with hospitals and sports facilities, rural bridges, eight dams and 375 school upgrades.

The system provides direct elections for village representatives, who come together with neighbouring villages to discuss issues, and vote for the district nazim, the post held in Attock by Maj Tahir. One third of the seats are reserved for women.

In a nation that has struggled to settle its constitution, veering between periods of military rule and unstable democratic control, ironically it has been military rulers who have done most for rural democracy.

The nazim system was introduced in 2001 by Gen Musharraf. Earlier attempts to introduce local voting were made in two other periods of military rule, under Ayub Khan in the late 1950s and Zia al-Haq in the 1980s.

Maj Tahir claims that since democracy was restored after the military dictatorship ended at the beginning of last year, not a single school has been upgraded in Attock as the provincial government has starved the nazims of funds ahead of suspending local government.

Taliban threat

The local government minister, retired Justice Abdul Razak Thahim, insists that local democracy is not being abolished for good.

He says that elections will be held after a period, but hinted that with elections already for the president, parliament, and assemblies for the four Pakistani provinces, that was enough democracy for now.

Polling in Pakistan

Justice Thahim says that it would be too difficult to hold elections now while the country is facing a threat from the Taliban.

This would make voting hazardous not just in NWFP, where Pakistani forces are fighting an intense campaign for control.

"How could elections be held in the provinces, when terrorists are so busy" he asked. "All the provinces are in the grip of terrorists and we are taking action against them."

After the terms of the nazims expire in October, local power will return to non-elected officials controlled from the centre.

It is easy to be cynical about what lies behind any political move in Pakistan, where the restoration of national democracy in 2008 has not reduced corruption.

Unprecedented

And Maj Tahir is tied by marriage to a powerful Punjabi political dynasty, the Chaudharys of Gujarat, political opponents of both of the major national ruling parties.

Map

But he says that the place to settle this is in the voting booth, not by scrapping polls.

And the fact remains that the suspension of polls will centralise power, and reduce local accountability.

It seems there will be little public agitation to preserve the system as people are more worried about the threat of terrorism and how to get through the long hot summer faced by power cuts on an unprecedented scale.

A leading political analyst, Rasul Baksh Rais, from the Lahore University of Management Sciences, says that the abolition of local voting is a backward step, and blames all political parties for failing to provide a platform for public arguments on policy.

"The centralised decision-making within the political parties will hurt the cause of democracy. People will think that instead of Pervez Musharraf who wore a military uniform, now we have civilian dictators," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Public anger boils over


LAHORE/KARACHI – Protest demonstrations and rallies were held Tuesday across the country against continuous loadshedding and price-hike.
Angry mobs attacked trains, ransacked government offices and other buildings. Traders shut down their businesses paralysing the normal life while one protester was killed during a demonstration in Faisalabad.
In most Punjab cities all types of businesses remained closed to protest against loadshedding.
In Faisalabad, a 45-year-old man was killed when a stone hit him during a protest. Some 47 people received multiple injuries during clashes between people and police in different forceful protests. The angry mob burnt tyres on different roads, pelted stones on moving vehicles, Wapda offices and at police stations.
In Sargodha, traders and citizens torched tyres during protests and blocked the road. Hundreds of people attacked the office of Executive Engineer WAPDA. A partial transport strike was also observed during which passengers and citizens faced great difficulties.
In Jhang, protesters threw stones, stopped a train and set on fire its four bogies. Another train was attacked in Okara.
In Chiniot, police baton-charged and fired in air to stop protesters from going to grid station.
Protesters blocked Sargodha-Faisalabad Road by torching tyres. Participants of a rally in Hujra Shahmuqeem attacked the WAPDA office and set office record and equipment on fire.
In Arifwala, traders took out rallies and set tyres on fire. Protesters were raising slogans against the government and the WAPDA. Complete shutterdown strike was observed in Sheikhupura where rallies were taken out while shops and trade centres remained closed in Chichawatni.
In Mandi Ahmedabad, a protest rally was taken out and participants raised slogans against the WAPDA.
Complete shutterdown was also observed in Kasur, Hafizabad, Gaggu Mandi, Pasrur, Chunian, Nurpur Thal, Pindi Bhattian and rallies were taken out.
Traders and shopkeepers observed shutdown strike on the call of businessmen bodies and also staged strong protest demos against the worst-ever loadshedding, increase in electricity tariff and raise in oil prices.
Angry protesters pelted police with stones while the police wielded to batons to keep things under control in various parts of the province.
A good number of protesters sustained injuries during the clashes, which erupted between the police and the angry mob in the Punjab, police sources said, adding that police have detained dozens of protesters for damaging public property and creating law and order situation.
In Lahore, police badly baton-charged the women protesters in Islampura area, which triggered clashes between public and the police. However, the top cops suspended the SHO concerned to cool down the angry mob.
Protesters also stopped Pak-India Dosti Bus in Baghbanpura area during protests and smashed the windowpanes of other private vehicles.
Heavy police contingents including senior officers rushed to the spot and managed to provide alternative route to the Dosti bus.
Most of the traders and shopkeepers observed complete shutterdown strike in Lahore while according to reports, complete and partial shutterdown was also witnessed in all the big cities and districts of the province.
In Lahore, the traders and shopkeepers closed down their businesses and took to streets to protest against the worst power outages and increase in fuel and electricity tariff.
Clashes also witnessed in different parts of the City between the pro-strike and anti-strike traders, as they confronted each other at the Mall Road and Liberty Market.
However, heavy police contingents reached the spot and managed to disperse the protesters.
Interestingly, people hard hit by loadshedding from different walks of life supported the strike and urged the masses to took to the streets to force the govt to end power outages and withdraw steep increase in the fuel and electricity prices.
According to reports, traders also observed strike in other big cities of the Punjab including Gujranwala, Multan, Faisalabad, Kasur, Sheikhupura, Okara, Sahiwal, Pakpattan, Vehari, Burewala, Bahawalpur, and staged protest demos against loadshedding.
‘The complete shutter down strike is an eye-opener for the govt. The govt should immediately take concrete steps to overcome energy crisis or step down’, Rashid Khan, one of the protesters commented while talking to The Nation at The Mall.
The traders also took out protest rallies against the worst loadshedding at the Mall Road, Kot Lakhpat and GT Road Bhagbanpura.
The protesters also blocked the roads by setting the tyres on fire in different parts of the City and chanted slogans against the PPP-led govt and WAPDA.
Mostly all the leading commercial markets, business centres and shopping malls situated in different parts of the City were closed down.
However, few shops were opened at the Mall Road, Main Boulevard Gulberg, and Liberty market as some traders groups opposed the strike call and opened their business.
The protesters in several areas of the LESCO region including Dharampura, Gulshan-i-Ravi, Multan Road, Hujra Shah Muqim and Kasur attacked the LESCO Sub divisional and XEN offices and thrashed the on-duty LESCO staff.
The enraged protesters consisting of mostly youth and led by the traders blocked the roads in various parts of the City by setting the tyres on fire, disrupting the traffic flow for a long time. They also set ablaze electricity bills during protests and blocked the roads besides chanting anti-govt slogans.
In Jhang, the irresponsible attitude of FESCO officials led the protesters to burn and destroy public and private properties. They also attacked a train and burnt its four bogies.
Hundreds of protesters carrying batons and iron-rods gathered at Ayub Chowk to agitate against the federal government and FESCO. They blocked the roads for hours and later enraged groups stormed into various parts of the city and damaged the government and private properties.
In Karachi, enraged people continued their demonstrations on third consecutive day against unabated power outages, disturbing routine life in several areas.
The power supply remained suspended in many areas including some parts of Lyari, Chakiwara and Baghdadi.
Enraged residents of Lyari took out a rally and marched towards the CM House to record their protest. However, the rally was dispersed at PIDC House, when police baton charged the protestors, besides tear-gassing them.
Other disturbed areas included Malir City, Liaquatabad, Shahra-e-Faisal, DHA, Gulsha-e-Iqbal, where the people took to the streets against prolonged and unannounced load shedding of the KESC Hundreds of angry people from Lines Area and nearby localities staged a protest demonstration outside the Karachi Electric Supply Company head office at Abdullah Haroon Road.
They also tried to break the gate of KESC head office, but a heavy police contingent reached and restrained the protestors from ransacking the KESC assets. Many protestors after recording their protest for some hours dispersed peacefully; however, hundreds of demonstrators were still present in front of the KESC head office till the filing of this report.
In many other areas of the city, including, Quaidabad, Banares, Old Sabzi Mandi, Shara-e-Faisal, Nataha Khan Bridge, some parts of Gulistan-e-Johar, and North Karachi, the infuriated people blocked main roads and set old tyres and junk on fire. They pelted the passing vehicles with stones, breaking windscreens and windowpanes of some vehicles. A few motorists also received minor injuries.
The angry people also pelted some police mobiles with stones.
Protest demonstrations were also reported in Rawalipindi, Islamabad and several cities of Peshawar. The protesters blocked roads and burnt tyres, raising anti-govt slogans.

Life lessons

By Arman Sabir
BBC Urdu service, Karachi

Zeba Raman is a 28-year-old Pakistani sex worker. Born into the profession in Karachi’s red light district of Napier Road, she plies her trade all over the city.

"I did not know that precautionary measures should be taken during sex"

Nadia, sex worker

nadia

She is celebrating the launch of an initiative to promote health awareness among sex workers.

"We are now revealed to society," says Ms Rahman.

But prostitution remains illegal and anathema to many in Muslim-majority Pakistan. It is an ever-present fact of life, but never really acknowledged.

The last two decades, given the increasing Islamisation of Pakistani society, have further reinforced stereotypes about such women.

But the profession has only grown.

Karachi alone has at least 100,000 female sex workers, according to data gathered by local welfare organisations.

Lahore has 75,000 sex workers while the military garrison town of Rawalpindi has at least 25,000.

‘Spirit of openness’

Pakistan’s first workshop on health awareness among sex workers has contributed to a new spirit of openness in the profession.

"Earlier we were doing our jobs secretly, but now we can raise our voice for our rights," Ms Raman says.

"It was very difficult to gather sex workers under one roof. Many were simply afraid of being arrested"

Dr Ghulam Murtaza

ghulam murtaza

The three-day event was recently held in Karachi by Gender & Reproductive Health Forum (GRHF) – a local social welfare organisation – in collaboration with the United Nations Fund for Population (UNFPA).

"I am very happy that a number of sex workers attended the workshop," says Ms Raman.

"This has provided us an opportunity to gather and exchange views and experiences."

She is not the only one to have benefited.

"I became a sex worker five years back," says Nadia, 26.

Nadia said that she learned about safe sex measures at the workshop.

"I had heard about HIV/Aids, but I thought that it could only be transmitted through blood transfusions.

"I did not know that precautionary measures should be taken during sex as well," she said.

Before the workshop, most of sex workers who attended did not know about measures for safe sex, Nadia added.

Dr Ghulam Murtaza is the head of the GRHF organisation and the man behind the workshop.

Ziba Raman

The man behind the workshop, GRHF head Dr Ghulam Murtaza , said the organisation was working to create awareness of safe sex among female sex workers.

"It was very difficult to gather sex workers under one roof. Many were simply afraid of being arrested," he said.

"We offered several incentives and assurances and paid them 1,000 rupees ($20) per day for their attendance," he said.

"Finally, we succeeded in gathering almost 100 sex workers at the workshop held at a local hotel".

Most of the sex workers who attended avoided the cameramen there., saying they were afraid of being exposed to their families.

Many said their husbands or family members did not know they were sex workers. They told their families that they work for private firms.

Despite these barriers, Dr Murtaza said the workshop had been successful.

"We have trained some female sex workers. They will now go to their community to create awareness among their co-workers."

‘Reinvigorated’

The international participants at the workshop were of the view that Pakistan was still relatively safe as far as HIV/Aids was concerned.

"I can now continue with my profession with more confidence"

Zeba Raman

The UNFPA representative, Dr Safdar Kamal Pasha, said at least 100 HIV- positive sex workers had been found in central Punjab. But the number of HIV-positive women was not high among female sex workers in Pakistan.

"It can be controlled by creating awareness about the disease among sex workers and about usage of precautionary measures," he said.

The workshop was widely considered to be a success and Dr Pasha said they were considering organising a national convention for sex workers next year.

The sex workers themselves were moved by the workshop.

"Having attended the workshop, I feel reinvigorated," Zeba Raman declares.

"I can now continue with my profession with more confidence."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Govt. knows Bhutto’s assassins: Lahore High Court CJ

While the UN commission is in the country to probe former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination, the Lahore High Court Chief Justice Khawaja Sharif’s shocking claims that the government is aware about all the facts regarding the murder, has raised questions over the PPP-led government’s intentions.
Addressing the members of the Islamabad District Bar [...]

Zardari, Nawaz agree to democratise Constitution


LAHORE – President Asif Ali Zardari and PML-N Quaid Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif met at latterÂ’s Raiwind residence here on Friday, and reiterated their resolve to purge the Constitution of all undemocratic clauses, including the most controversial 17th Amendment, but fell short of giving a time frame to undo the unconstitutional changes done by the former govt.
In their four-hour long meeting, which took place after a gap of eight months, the two leaders agreed to work together to steer the country out of the current crisis.
The meeting was in pursuance of the telephonic talk between the two leaders on Monday.
In his meeting with PML-N chief, President Asif Ali Zardari was assisted by Raja Pervez Ashraf, Mian Raza Rabbani, Jehangir Badar, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Babar Awan, Nazar Muhammad Gondal, Syed Khurshid Shah and Farhatullah Babar.
The other side comprised of PML-N Quaid Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif, Chief Minister Punjab Shahbaz Sharif, Raja Zafarul Haq, Syed Ghous Ali Shah, Sardar Zulfiqar Ali Khan Khosa, Senator Pervez Rasheed, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, Khawaja Saad Rafique, Sardar Mehtab Abbasi and Sardar Yaqoob Nasir.
In the 11-point joint declaration issued at the end of meeting, the two parties reiterated that dialogue and discussions was the essence of the democratic process and that the doors to meaningful and result-oriented talks should always remain open.
They reiterated that after the February 2008 elections, installation of democratic govt and getting hold of Presidency by democratic forces, it was necessary to remove the controversial clauses from the Constitution that had been inserted into it by successive dictatorships without the consent of the masses.
The two parties reiterated commitment to the principles laid down in the Charter of Democracy (CoD) to democratise the Constitution and rid it of all undemocratic clauses including 17th Amendment.
They expressed the hope that the Parliamentary Committee set up to review the Constitution would complete its task in the shortest possible time and propose suitable amendments in it.
The two parties expressed the view that the situation in Balochistan needed to be addressed urgently and seriously.
Political dialogue and development of the province should be pressed into service to remove the sense of alienation of the people of the province.
They expressed the view that the Parliament should play a more pro-active role in meeting the aspirations of the people of Balochistan.
Both sides agreed that the problems faced by the country were too stupendous to be resolved by any one political party or State institution and required the collective efforts of all political forces and parties.
The two parties also agreed that militancy posed the most serious threat to national security and that holistic approach was needed to address the issue. They agreed that the terrorists should not be allowed to impose their agenda on the people through guns and bullets.
They agreed that more of such contacts and meetings would help push forward the process of democratisation of the Constitution in the light of CoD and to find solutions to the problems faced by the country particularly national security, economic and energy crisis, price-hike and unemployment compounded by the military dictatorship.
According to insiders, the two leaders discussed several issues in frank and candid manner as overall mood of the meeting was cordial from very start to culmination, though they did express reservations they had about each other on various issues.
Nawaz reportedly told Zardari that his party wanted to go alongwith PPP, but they were prevented from doing so, first by getting them ineligible from contesting elections and then by imposition of GovernorÂ’s Rule.
President Zardari, in turn, assured Nawaz that his party would not create any problem for PML-N in future.
Nawaz assured Zardari that his party would not destabilise PPP govt and allow it to complete its full term.
Earlier, President Asif Ali Zardari was accorded a warm welcome at Lahore Airport and was received by Punjab Governor Salman Taseer, CM Punjab Shahbaz Sharif, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, Senior minister Raja Riaz and other big wigs of the govt.
Accompanied by CM Punjab Shahbaz Sharif, Federal Ministers Khurshid Shah, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, Nazar Muhammad Gondal, PPP Secretary General Jahangir Badr, President Zardari set off for Raiwind in a helicopter.
Nawaz Sharif alongwith central party leaders, Khawaja Asif, Sardar Zulfiqar Ali Khosa, Chief Secretary Javed Mehmood and others welcomed him at Jatti Umra helipad.
President Asif Ali Zardari greeted Nawaz Sharif on his acquittal from plane hijacking case. He termed the Supreme Court decision to acquit Nawaz from plane hijacking case as a welcome development, saying it would help strengthening democracy in the country.
From the helipad, President Asif Ali Zardari, PML-N chief Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif, Chief Minister Punjab Shahbaz Sharif used one car to reach SharifsÂ’ residence in Raiwind, as President Zardari invited Sharif brothers to accompany him in his own car.
Meanwhile, before his meeting with President Asif Ali Zardari,Nawaz Sharif held an important meeting with party senior leaders and took them into confidence on different issues. He also sought suggestions from them to be discussed with President Zardari.
During the meeting, all the party stalwarts endorsed his decisions and announced to extend all out support to him.
Raja Zafarul Haq, Sardar Zulfiqar Ali Khosa, Javed Hashmi, Khawaja Asif, Khawaja Saad Rafiq, Pervaiz Rashid, Sardar Yaqoob and other senior leaders attended the meeting. Opposition leader in National Assembly Ch. Nisar Ali Khan and Iqbal Zafar Jhagra joined the meeting through telephone.
Nawaz Sharif also hosted a luncheon reception in the honour of President Asif Ali Zardari and his delegation. Both wearing shalwar kameez and waistcoat talked in a friendly manner and avoided peeping into bitter past. After the lunch they held 4-hour meeting in a happy mood.
The organiser of the meeting announced to make Press briefing to inform the media about the upshot of the meeting but later Press briefing was cancelled without mentioning any reason.

‘Foreign hands’ involved in attack on Sri Lanka cricket team: Pak Interior Ministry

The Pakistan government has claimed the involvement of ‘foreign hands’ in the terror strike on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore in March this year, in which eight persons were killed and seven Lankan cricketers were injured.
A report submitted by the Interior Ministry to the National Assembly’s (NA) Standing Committee on Sports said the [...]

Deadly blast in Pakistani village

Map

At least nine people have been killed and more than 50 injured after a blast hit a Pakistani village east of the city of Lahore, police say.

The explosion took place at a house used for teaching religious lessons to children, local officials said.

It is not yet clear what caused the blast in Mian Channu district in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

Lahore, Punjab’s main city, has been the target of several deadly attacks in recent months.

"It appears that the blast was caused by some explosives placed inside the house," Kamran Khan, a local police chief, told Reuters news agency.

Pakistan’s military is currently in the middle of operations in its north-west to clear the Swat Valley and South Waziristan regions of Taliban fighters.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pakistan Facing New Censure

Commonwealth may suspend the country if emergency rule continues

LONDON – As Commonwealth foreign ministers debated whether to suspend
Pakistan from the grouping if it does not lift its state of emergency,
opposition leader Benazir Bhutto ruled out any more power-sharing talks
with President Pervez Musharraf and said her party may boycott the coming
elections if it’s held under emergency rule.

The Commonwealth Ministerial Action group met yesterday to consider the
suspension of Pakistan from the 53-nation group, as it did for five years
when Gen Musharraf seized power in a coup in 1999.

But its powers of persuasion are limited and suspension is the ultimate
sanction. Pakistan was restored to the group in 2004 after Gen Musharraf
promised to step down as military chief – something he has yet to do.

British officials said, however, that an immediate decision was unlikely,
with any action deferred to a meeting of Commonwealth heads of government
from Nov 23 to 25 in Kampala, Uganda.

Meanwhile, two-time former Premier Bhutto is set on collision course with
the military ruler. She had been in Western-backed negotiations with Gen
Musharraf before he declared a state of emergency on Nov 3, but said she
was changing tack.

“We are saying no to any more talks,” Ms Bhutto said. “We cannot work with
anyone who has suspended the Constitution, imposed emergency rule, and
oppressed the judiciary. That’s why we are holding the ‘long march’.”

She also said that “boycotting the election is an option” with her
Pakistan People’s Party.

It is the largest political group in the country and any boycott would
damage the credibility of the polls scheduled for January.

She promised to press ahead with a protest march from Lahore to the
capital Islamabad planned for today, despite warnings from officials that
they will not allow it.

“There will be no long march,” a senior government official in Punjab, the
province that includes Lahore, told AFP under cover of anonymity. “It will
not be permitted.”

“It’s a political decision,” Lahore police chief Malik Mohammad Iqbal
said, warning that the threat of militant attacks on the march was
“imminent and it is of the highest degree.” – AGENCIES