A. Gill & Laura Wells
ISLAMABAD – Earlier this year, during his visit to New York, President Asif Ali Zardari stayed in a $6,000 per night Presidential Suite of the Roosevelt Hotel.
The 3,900 square feet suite has 4 bedrooms, a kitchen, formal living and dining areas, and a wrap-around terrace. In addition, he stayed at a $5,000 per night Willard Intercontinental Hotel in Washington DC. Even more money was wasted on the army of ministers and his son who accompanied him.
The question that is raised is why did a President of a country on war, with hundreds of thousands internally displaced refugees, and a country on the verge of defaulting, stay in a $6,000 per night suite? Why couldnÂ’t he stay in a $600 per night luxury suite available at the same hotel; or even better, why couldnÂ’t he stay in his vacant luxury apartment?
To this day, nobody knows the exact nature of Asif ZardariÂ’s assets. TheNation is in possession of over 60 copies of at least one such propertyÂ’s documents. The authentic copies of the legal property documents have Mr. ZardariÂ’s signature, bank information and other pertinent information available on them.
The property is situated in the posh Upper East Manhattan, New York. The 72nd street to be precise. ItÂ’s a luxury apartment on the 37th floor with a stunning view of the river and the city. It is a part of the Belaire Condominiums. These luxury full service condominiums include amenities like a fabulous health club and glass enclosed heated lap pool. Fit for a king or the President of Pakistan!
Posts Tagged ‘Mr Zardari’
Why hotels when you have Belaire, Mr. President?
Tajik summit to tackle security
Rayhan Demytrie
Central Asia correspondent, BBC News

Tajikistan is hosting a regional security summit amid fears the conflicts in Afghanistan and Pakistan may be spreading into Central Asia.
The presidents of Pakistan, Russia, Afghanistan and Tajikistan are to meet in the Tajik capital Dushanbe.
Clashes between militants and police have led to concerns that unrest in countries on Tajikistan’s southern border could be spreading there.
The Tajik government says the militants have links to the Taleban.
On the eve of Thursday’s summit, Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari said his country would stand together with Tajikistan to fight extremism.
"It threatens my brother’s country, it threatens my country, and it threatens the neighbourhood," said Mr Zardari, after meeting Tajikistan’s President Emomali Rakhmon in Dushanbe.
In recent weeks there have been a number of clashes between armed militants and Tajik security forces in the eastern Rasht Valley.

On Wednesday, Tajik officials said they had killed a senior militant who belonged to a Central Asian group called the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.
Rasht is a remote area close to the Afghan border, and observers have speculated that the violence in Tajikistan may be related to an intensified campaign by Pakistan’s military against the Taleban and its supporters in the Afghan-Pakistan border area.
Tajikistan’s President Emomali Rakhmon is hosting Mr Zardari, President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
The four are expected to discuss security issues as well as a future energy project that will link Afghanistan and Pakistan to a proposed hydroelectric power grid supplied by dams in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



