Friday, 13 April 2012

Pakistani Parliament Approves Proposals On US Ties

Pakistani Parliament Approves Proposals On US Ties

News:

Islamabad:  Pakistan's parliament has unanimously approved new guidelines for the country in its troubled relationship with the United States, a decision that could pave the way for the reopening of supply lines to NATO troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

The guidelines allow for the blockade on U.S. and NATO supplies to be lifted, but also call for an immediate end to American drone strikes against militants on Pakistani soil. However, the lawmakers on Thursday did not make a halt in the CIA-led missile attacks a prerequisite to reopening the supply lines, as some lawmakers had been demanding.

The government and the army will use the recommendations as the basis for re-engaging with Washington.
Ties between the U.S. and Pakistan all but collapsed in November after US airstrikes inadvertently killed 24 Pakistani soldiers on the Afghan border, after which Islamabad blocked the supply lines in protest. Washington wants the relationship back on track.

The U.S. State Department expressed respect for the Pakistani parliament's decision.

"We respect the seriousness with which parliament's review of U.S.-Pakistan relations has been conducted," said State Department Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland. "We seek a relationship with Pakistan that is enduring, strategic, and more clearly defined. We look forward to discussing these policy recommendations with the Government of Pakistan and continuing to engage with it on our shared interests."

About 30 percent of supplies used by NATO and U.S. troops in landlocked Afghanistan are transported through Pakistan. Washington also needs Islamabad's cooperation to negotiate an end to the Afghan war because many insurgent leaders are based on Pakistani soil.

The drones are a source of popular outrage in the country and have fueled anti-US sentiment, although Pakistan's powerful army has tacitly aided the missile attacks in the past, weakening Islamabad's official stance that they are a violation of sovereignty. Washington has ignored previous entreaties by the parliament to end the strikes, and is seen as unlikely to change its policy now.

Despite calls by Islamists for a permanent supply line blockade, few inside the Pakistani government or the army believed this was desirable, given that Pakistan relies on the U.S. and other NATO countries for its economic survival and diplomatic and military support.

Soon after the deadly airstrikes on the border, the Pakistani government asked parliament to draw up new guidelines for Islamabad's relations with the U.S. The government's move was widely seen as a way to give it political cover for reopening the routes.

The national security committee presented a first set of proposals last month but opposition parties riding a wave of anti-American sentiment rejected them, seemingly unwilling to share any fallout ahead of elections this year or early next.

But on Thursday the opposition voted with government lawmakers to approve a revised set of guidelines, which differed little from the original ones. Opposition lawmakers didn't explain why they had dropped earlier objections, but they could have come under pressure from the army or extracted other, unrelated concessions from the government.

The guidelines call for NATO and the US to pay Pakistan more for the right to ship supplies across its soil and stipulate that no arms or ammunitions be transported. Western forces have only ever trucked fuel and other nonfatal supplies across Pakistan because of the risk they could fall into the hands of insurgents.

"We believe that the world has heard the voice of the people of Pakistan," Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani told parliament. "I would like to assure the house that our government will implement the recommendations that have been made in both letter and spirit."

Gilani did not say when the supply lines would reopen.

Western officials have said Pakistan would come under intense criticism if routes remained blocked during a NATO conference in Chicago on May 20-21 where more than 50 heads of state will discuss progress on ending the war.

Washington's public line has been that it is waiting for the parliament to finish its review before calling for Pakistan to reopen the routes. It has refused to apologize for the border incident in November, and last week put a $10 million bounty on the head of a militant leader believed close to Pakistan's security forces.

Behind the scenes, however, negotiations have been going on between the U.S. and Pakistan over the supply line issue and drone strikes. It was unclear whether there has been any new agreement on the strikes, which Washington believes are the key to keeping al-Qaida on its back foot. U.S. officials had said they had offered Pakistan notice about impending strikes and new limits on which militants are being targeted.

For most of the Afghan war, 90 percent of the supplies came through Pakistan, but NATO has increased its reliance on an alternate, so-called "northern" route, through Central Asia in recent years. Increased use of the northern route has removed some of the leverage Islamabad had over the West, but at a cost to the coalition. Pentagon officials now say it costs about $17,000 per container to go through the north, compared with about $7,000 per container to go through Pakistan.
Source:ndtv.com

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

PM Gilani Prods Provinces To Generate Electricity

PM Gilani Prods Provinces To Generate Electricity

News:

LAHORE: In his speech in the first session of the conference,Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani emphasised upon the provinces to play their due role in efforts for generating power to overcome the energy crisis.
He said the federal government was committed to energy security. "Our strategy is to ensure sustainable power supply at competitive prices to all sectors," he said, elaborating that the government strategy involves further exploitation of hydro power to reduce cost of inputs, developing coal reserves for power generation and to convert oil-powered plants to coal. He said Thar coal reserves of 175 billion tonnes alone can generate around 100,000MW annually.
Gilani said through effective steps, the present government has launched projects to add 3,400MW to the national grid over the last four years besides changing the energy mix and shifting towards hydel and coal. He said the government was also building Chashma III and IV and 747MW Guddu combined cycle power plant with the assistance of China, and was working on improvement of transmission and distribution system as well.
Source:PakTribune

US Military Experts To Assist Pakistan Avalanche Rescue Efforts

US Military Experts To Assist Pakistan Avalanche Rescue Efforts

News:

An avalanche that buried more than 120 soldiers in a Himalayan region close to India has put a spotlight on what critics say is one of world's most pointless military deployments: two poverty-wracked nations engaged in a costly standoff over an uninhabitable patch of mountain and ice.
Since Saturday morning when the massive wall of snow engulfed a Pakistani military complex close to the Siachen Glacier, rescue teams have been unable to dig up any survivors. There is now very little hope that even a small number of people will come out alive.
A team of U.S. military experts was expected to arrive at the site Monday to assist in the rescue efforts, according to an American official. The team flew in from Afghanistan after the Pakistani army asked for help, the official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.
The U.S. military helped Pakistan after the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and floods in 2010, ventures that Washington used to bolster efforts to strengthen its ties with Islamabad, vital in the fight against Al Qaeda. The current mission is far smaller, and comes amid a near-breakdown in relations between the two countries.

Switzerland and Germany are also sending small teams of experts to help, said the Pakistani army.
The missing soldiers are part of the Pakistani military deployment to the Siachen Glacier, which forms the northern part of Kashmir region, disputed between Islamabad and India and the main source of tension between the nuclear-armed rivals who have fought three wars since 1947.
The conflict over Siachen began in 1984 when India occupied the heights of the 49-mile long glacier, fearing Pakistan wanted to claim the territory. Islamabad also deployed its troops. A 2003 cease-fire largely ended skirmishes on the glacier, where troops have been deployed as high as 20,000 feet, but both armies remained camped out there.
Neither side releases information on troop numbers in the region, but they are believed to be in the hundreds or low thousands.
Of all the problems plaguing the two countries, Siachen is often described as one of the easiest to solve but it is hostage to general mistrust and hard-liners on both sides who don't want to give up their claim on territory, however strategically insignificant.
"This absolutely futile, useless fiasco has been going on since 1984," said Pakistan-India peace activist Tahira Abdullah. "It is a one-hour job to agree on a solution, but it is now an ego problem between the two armies. Both armies should pull back from the heights. Soldiers are dying and my heart bleeds for them, but it's for nothing."
Temperatures as low as -60 C (-76 F), vicious winds and altitude sickness — the region is just east of the world's second-highest peak, K-2 — have killed far more than the artillery fire.
Casualty figures are not released by either military, but hundreds are believed to have died there.
The avalanche plowed into the headquarters at Gayari sector, which is at the entrance to the glacier, and buried the complex under more than 20 meters (70 feet) of snow.
The military says at least 124 soldiers from the 6th Northern Light Infantry Battalion and 11 civilian contractors had been buried. Publicly, the army has held out hope of survivors.
"Miracles have been seen and trapped people were rescued after days ... so the nation shall pray for the trapped soldiers," army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas told a local television station late Sunday.
The frontier in Siachen has never been demarcated. When the Line of Control that divides Kashmir was set by the two countries after a 1971 war, it didn't extend to the northern glacier because it was considered uninhabitable.
On Sunday, President Asif Ali Zardari held talks with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in India, the first time the two leaders have met in three years. The issue of Siachen was raised in the 40-minute meeting, according to Indian Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai.
Analysts say resolving Siachen should be possible before the much more difficult dispute over Kashmir is attempted.
Because no one lives in the region and it is of no strategic value, a joint or even unilateral withdrawal from one side could break the logjam.
Source:foxnews.com

SC Issues Notice To Ali Musa Gilani

SC Issues Notice To Ali Musa Gilani

News:

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has issued a notice to the Prime Minister's son, Ali Musa Gilani in the chemical quota allotment case. A three member bench of the Supreme Court headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry heard the case.

During proceedings of the case, the ANF comprising of Brigadier Faheem investigating the case were presented before the court. The counsel for Brgadier Faheem informed the court that the ANF team working on the case had been changed.

SC Issues Notice To Ali Musa Gilani Picture:

SC Issues Notice To Ali Musa Gilani
The Chief Justice inquired as to why this had happened and remarked that maybe the reason was the involvement of some prominent person and further investigation was required.

Brigadier Faheem informed the court that the chemical quota was allotted by former health secretary Khusnod Lashari . The ANF has issued summons for Lashari and Ali Musa Gilani, and on the request of Lashari the ANF met him at the PM House.

Brigadier Faheem further informed the court that Ali Musa Gilani's father was upset over the notice and the law secretary along with entire state machinery were trying to save Khusnod Lashari and Ali Musa Gilani in this case.The court ordered Ali Musa Gilani and Khusnod Lashari to record their statements in ANF and the investigation team be reinstated. The hearing of the case will resume on April 20.
Source:Paktribune

Monday, 9 April 2012

Asif Ali Zardari's $1 Mn Donation Will Be For 'Noble Causes': Ajmer Dargah


Asif Ali Zardari's $1 mn donation will be for 'noble causes': Ajmer dargah

News: 

AJMER: The donation of $1 million offered by Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari during his visit to the dargah of Sufi saint Khwaja Moinuddin Chisti will be spent on education, health and other welfare activities in Ajmer, the shrine authorities said. "The donation will be put to use for noble causes including education, health, religious functions and financial help for widows among others," said Wahid Chisti, secretary of the Anjuman Syed Zadgan, a custodian body of the shrine.

He said the body would receive the donation from Zardari through Indian government channels. Accompanied by his son Bilawal, Zardari offered prayers at the revered shrine here Sunday.
The 21-member body, which holds the purse strings of the shrine, represents the khadims (caretakers) who claim to be relatives of Khwaja Moinuddin Chisti. "Anjuman spends a lot of money for the cause of education. The body runs one English medium higher secondary school and a seminary in Ajmer," Natiq Chisti, a khadim who helped Zardari and his son in the prayers Sunday, told IANS. "The media reported that the donation is for the dargah. The donation will be for Anjuman Syed Zadgan," a khadim told IANS on the condition of anonymity. "The Pakistan High Commission said the Pakistan government will offer the money for Anjuman Syed Zadgan," he clarified. Anjuman also runs a small hospital in the city. "Apart from this, we also send money to major shrines across the country and arrange for the langar (community kitchen) at these shrines," Natiq Chisty told IANS.
Source:The Economic Times

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