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Fresh Pakistan protest over power

Protests against power outages in Pakistan

There have been fresh protests in Pakistan for the second day running over frequent power outages.

On Tuesday, protests across the country turned violent, causing damage to public and private property. There are more protests planned for Thursday.

Pakistan suffers an electricity shortfall of over 1,000 megawatts (MW) a day, officials say.

The government has not succeeded in reducing the supply gap despite repeated promises.

It has appealed for calm, claiming that a power station with an extra 3,000MW will be on-stream within months.

Sporadic protests over power outages have been the norm since 2007, but this is the first time simultaneous protests broke out across the country.

Fresh protests were reported from parts of Punjab and the North West Frontier Province on Wednesday.

The protesters took to the streets, chanting slogans against the government and the power authority.

On Tuesday a strike called by businessmen in Punjab province, which houses nearly 60% of the country’s population, turned violent when spontaneous protests broke out all over the province as well as in parts of the provinces of Sindh and NWFP.

Traders and industrialists say frequent power outages are causing daily losses that runs into millions of dollars.

Industrialists complain their production schedules have gone haywire due to outages that occur unexpectedly and not according to a predetermined schedule.

The Pakistani economy grew at an average of eight percent during 2002-07, boosting demand for electricity at domestic, trading and industrial levels.

Rampage

But no new power generation projects were commissioned, creating a serious power shortage by 2007.

In urban areas, authorities are cutting power supply by four to eight hours a day in each area to ensure even power distribution.

In rural areas, such power outages range from 12 to 16 hours.

On Tuesday, protesters blocked highways and city roads, staged sit-ins and damaged public and private property.

In Jhang, a mob went on the rampage, burning three cars of a train and damaging the local offices of the power authority and the police.

Protests were also reported from Karachi and Peshawar, where protestors blocked roads and laid siege to offices of the power authority.

These protests came a day after the weekend rains in the southern city of Karachi, a city of over 16 million.

The rains caused a 36-hour power breakdown in Karachi, sparking riots.

The central government on Tuesday night put the Karachi Electric Supply Corporation on notice to explain the power breakdown. </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.

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.

Three men killed after clam dredger capsizes

Marine accident investigation branch looking into incident in which vessel’s skipper, who was “very experienced”, died

An investigation has begun after three men died yesterday when their clam dredger capsized in good weather off the west coast of Scotland.

Only one of the four-man crew of the Aquila, from Maryport in Cumbria, was pulled from the seas alive after the vessel overturned off Ardnamurchan near Fort William.

The vessel’s skipper was named this morning as Tony Hayton, a “very experienced” and well-liked fisherman who knew the waters off western Scotland very well.

John McAllister, vice chairman of the Scallop Association, said: “It’s very much a terrible tragedy.

“At the moment it’s much too early to speculate what went wrong, but something went wrong very, very quickly.

“At the time I believe there was a two- to three-metre swell, wind force of maybe four to five out of the south-west, and relatively strong tidal currents in the area where it happened.”

The marine accident investigation branch has now opened an investigation into the incident.

Rescuers arrived at the scene very soon after a bystander on Ardnamurchan peninsula saw the upturned hull of the Aquila in the seas near Fascadale at around 5.10pm yesterday.

A nearby yacht, alerted by a mayday call from the coastguard, was able to find the surviving crewman, who is now in hospital after being transferred to an RNLI lifeboat from Mallaig. His condition is not life-threatening.

The bodies of Hayton and the other two crewmen were later recovered by the lifeboat and two rescue helicopters from the Royal Navy and coastguard.

John Hemse, the secretary of the Mallaig and North-West Fishermen’s Association, said Hayton’s death had shocked the community. “Tony was a very experienced skipper and knew the waters well,” he said.

“He worked up the west coast, he was one of the boys.

“We’re all numb with what has happened.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


100 Taliban militants killed in heavy fighting in NWFP

Islamabad, Jul 21 (PTI) In a major flare up, Pakistani forces have killed around 100 Taliban militants and lost three soldiers in two days of fighting in the restive Malakand division, which the army had claimed to have cleared of insurgents some time ago.
A “massive military operation” was launched yesterday in five villages in Maidan [...]

Tough task

By Sanjoy Majumder
BBC News, Delhi

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has arrived on a four-day visit to India, a country she knows well and where she is immensely popular.

But her visit comes at a sensitive time in relations between Washington and Delhi, a time when key geopolitical issues hang in the balance.

Mrs Clinton first visited India in 1995 as US first lady, a trip that helped break the ice between two countries on opposite sides of the Cold War fence.

It also paved the way for her husband’s immensely successful visit five years later.

She now returns as a representative of US President Barack Obama and will find that Indians are a bit apprehensive of her new leader.

While former President George W Bush is credited with transforming relations with India – the cornerstone of which was a landmark civilian nuclear agreement – Mr Obama’s regional focus has been entirely on Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Cashing in

But Washington knows it cannot afford to ignore India.

"The world has a lot riding on our co-operation"

Hillary Clinton

In a front-page article in the Times of India newspaper on Friday, Mrs Clinton wrote that close co-operation between India and the United States was vital to tackle global security threats, nuclear proliferation and climate change.

"I hope a new era of stronger co-operation between India and the United States will be one of the signature accomplishments of our new governments," she wrote. "The world has a lot riding on our co-operation."

Key to that close relationship is the economy.

The US is India’s largest trading partner, with investments of close to $10bn (£6bn). But India too is investing heavily in the US economy, its stake valued at some $3.7bn (£2.3bn) last year.

With the civilian nuclear trade agreement in place, the US is hoping to cash in.

During her visit, Mrs Clinton is expected to announce the location of two nuclear power plants that US companies will build.

A recent report by the Confederation of Indian Industry says that India intends to import 24 nuclear reactors in the next 10-15 years, creating "as many as 20,000 new jobs directly and indirectly in the US from nuclear trade".

Delhi is also in the market for some 125 new fighter aircraft to replace ageing Soviet-era planes, and the US is locked in competition with France, Britain and Russia to win the multi-million dollar deal.

Sharp differences

But the Obama administration also needs Delhi’s co-operation on three key global issues which are among its key policy objectives – nuclear non-proliferation, climate change, and a new world trade treaty.

US security officials outside the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai, July 17

India has sharp differences with Washington on all three areas.

Along with China, it has been a key dissenter on trade and climate change talks, refusing, for instance, to agree to emission caps.

India has also refused to sign the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, describing it as discriminatory since it does not press existing nuclear powers to give up their weapons.

Without India on board, the Obama administration knows they will make little headway on any of these issues.

And while President Obama’s new Afghanistan-Pakistan policy forms the cornerstone of his regional approach, Washington is only too aware that without India’s co-operation, any resolution of the situation in those two countries could come apart.

So if the US wants Pakistan to concentrate its efforts on the fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban along the Afghan border, it needs to ensure that there is peace between India and Pakistan so that troops from the east can be relocated to the battle in the north-west.

Regional wrangling

For the first time, a major US figure is visiting India without also travelling to Pakistan.

Many in India strongly believe that it was gentle pressure from Washington that persuaded Delhi to restart peace talks with Islamabad, on hold since last year’s Mumbai attacks.

And Pakistan has recently indicated that it may be willing to broker peace between the US and the Taliban, but in exchange wants India to reduce its engagement in Afghanistan.

After the fall of the Taliban in 2001, India quickly re-established diplomatic ties and now operates four missions in Afghanistan, two of them located in Kandahar and Jalalabad, uncomfortably close to the Pakistan border.

Islamabad accuses Delhi of using these missions to foment trouble in Baluchistan and the North West Frontier Province, a charge that India denies.

But there is some suggestion that the US is trying to press India to at least scale down its diplomatic presence, if not close down some of its posts.

Despite her popularity, Mrs Clinton will have her diplomatic skills tested to the fullest in India.</p


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

Swine flu may claim 65,000 lives in Britain

Medical experts have warned that swine flu could claim 65,000 lives in Britain unless the epidemic is stopped.
It would be the worst case scenario based on 30 per cent of the population catching the virus, The Mirror quoted Chief Medical Officer Sir Liam Donaldson, as saying.
Donaldson spoke as it was announced the number [...]

PML-N rules out any Sharif, Zardari meeting in near future

The Pakistan Muslim League–Nawaz (PML-N) is not optimistic about any talks between party president Nawaz Sharif and President Asif Ali Zardari in the near future.
Speculations about a thaw in the relationship between both leaders gained momentum when Zardari called Sharif recently.
In his telephonic conversation, Zardari reportedly thanked Sharif for his party’s unconditional support to the [...]

Pro-govt Taliban commander accuses Tank administration of helping Mehsud

A pro-government Taliban leader, Turkistan Bhittani, has accused the local administration of helping the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud establish his command in the North West Frontier Province’s Tank District.
Addressing a press conference, Bhittani, whom the government has been projecting as the leader of so-called ‘good Taliban’, claimed that the Tank administration is [...]

‘Taliban die’ in Pakistan clashes

A tanker carrying fuel for Nato forces in Afghanistan was attacked by militants in Pakistan on July 13, 2009.

At least 23 militants have been killed in fighting between pro-government tribesmen and Taliban insurgents in north-west Pakistan, officials say.

The clashes took place in Ambar village in the lawless Mohmand tribal region, bordering Afghanistan’s Kunar province.

Mohmand in North-West Frontier Province is said to be a hub for Taliban.

In the neighbouring Khyber tribal area, militants attacked a tanker carrying fuel for Nato forces in Afghanistan. Two people died in the attack.

‘On the run’

"According to reports received here, a lashkar (traditional tribal militia) killed 23 militants and several others were wounded," local administration official Asad Ali Khan was quoted by news agency AFP as saying.

Another official Mohammad Rasul Khan said three villagers were missing after the clashes between a 150-strong village force and militants, the agency reported.

"The lashkar has fought very well and militants are now on the run," he said, adding that villagers had gone into the mountains to take on the rebels.

In recent months, tribesmen in the north-west have taken up arms to fight the Taliban alongside Pakistani troops.

Pakistan’s government has encouraged the tribesmen and groups have been set up in several regions, but they face stiff Taliban resistance.

Meanwhile, in the neighbouring Khyber, militants ambushed a tanker carrying fuel for Nato forces in Afghanistan.

The attack took place near the town of Landi Kotal on the main highway which links Pakistan with Afghanistan.

"Militants first fired a mortar on the oil tanker and then set it on fire," local official Rehan Gul Khattak said.

"A gunfight broke out with paramilitary troops which left two civilians dead and three others wounded," Mr Khattak said.

The Taliban regularly carry out attacks on trucks laden with supplies for Nato personnel in Afghanistan in Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province.</p


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

Attack fears as Swat valley refugees head home

• Taliban routed after two months of fierce fighting, says Pakistan
• Aid agencies warn 1 million returning refugees still at risk

Two million people displaced by fighting in north-west Pakistan started returning home in military-protected convoys today, triggering warnings from international relief agencies that the reverse exodus was too fast and too soon.

Buses and trucks lined up outside crowded refugee camps to take the first batch of refugees back to their homes in the Swat valley, where the army says it has routed the Taliban after two months of sporadic combat.

Pakistan’s government is keen to reverse the mass migration, which is comparable to that triggered by the Rwandan genocide of 1994, because it has left limited resources severely strained.

At least 1 million people have been displaced from the main battle zone in the valley, with another million or so fleeing neighbouring Dir and Buner. About 300,000 are living in camps; the rest are sheltering with friends or family.

The government is providing the refugees with convoys of buses, military protection and cash payments to help them resettle. Officials say the process will take two weeks.

But some aid workers say the process has been poorly conceived and people are vulnerable to further attack.

“The Pakistani government is sending people home far too early,” said Kristèle Younès, of Refugees International. “Displaced people should be the ones to determine whether it is safe for them to return, and we fear the government is not providing them with clear and accurate information.”

“There are some suspicions that [the return] is not as free as you would like,” said Dorothy Blane of Concern. “They should not be forced back just so the government can say that normal life has returned, because if they have to come out again it will be a disaster.”

The return process got off to a slow and chaotic start. Residents trying to travel to Swat in private cars were turned back at the town of Sher Gur, on the edge of the conflict-affected area.

However, buses carrying people from Jalozai, an old Afghan refugee camp in Nowshera, were allowed through. Army helicopters circled overhead, offering protection from any attack.

Amir Haider Khan Hoti, the chief minister of North West Frontier province, told one group the Taliban would soon be finished. “I assure you that in this war of survival for Pakistan, we – and you – will win,” he said.

The Pakistani army claims to have killed more than 1,700 Taliban fighters in Swat and the neighbouring districts of Buner and Swat. The figure cannot be confirmed. The Taliban have been cleared from the main areas of Swat, including the main city, Mingora, which is believed to have suffered far less damage than had been feared.

But the army has failed to kill the Taliban leadership, igniting concerns that the militants could re-emerge under the cover of the civilian population. Last week the army said the Taliban leader, Maulana Fazlullah, had been badly injured.

In a reminder of how the militant threat is spreading, an explosion at a madrasa religious school in central Punjab province killed 13 people today. The cause was unclear but appeared to be an explosives cache.

Many refugees are also concerned that the government has made inadequate preparations for a return to normal life, according to Muhammad Niyaz, of Islamic Relief. “Crops have been destroyed and businesses damaged [during the fighting]. The majority say they will not go back until they are sure there is something for them on the ground,” he said.

To counter the threat of a Taliban resurgence the authorities are raising a local civilian militia, known as “community police”, to help flush out Taliban infiltrators.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds