Saturday, 19 February 2011

Fauzia Azab quits

Read on Pakistan Cyber Force Facebook Page

Fauzia Azab
Fazia Azab has resigned from the post of PPP central information secretary. She lost this position due to a statement given about the diplomatic immunity of Raymond Davis, an undercover secret American agent, who shot dead two Pakistanis in Lahore.
 
In this statement, Fauzia had falsely said that Davis had diplomatic immunity and then continued to blather her undignified speech in which she said that Pakistan's relations with USZ can't be compromised over one man.


Enticing Fury
Pakistan Cyber Force

Helicopters fire on Libyan protesters - more than 84 killed


Helicopters fired at demonstrators and sounds of gunfire rang out Saturday in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, a doctor who witnessed the incident told a foreign news agency. The doctor said dozens of injured people were hospitalized, most suffering from gunshot wounds. The Libyan government is using aerial fire to crack down on protesters as nationwide protests continue to shake the cruel monarch Muammar Gaddafi's regime. Medical sources have described the situation as critical.

Thousands of demonstrators gathered in the eastern Libyan cities of Benghazi, Baida, Ajdabiya, Zawiya, and Derna on February 18, 2011.

This as Human Rights Watch says at least 84 anti-government protesters have been killed by Libyan security forces during the past three days. Thirty-five fatalities have been reported by a hospital in Benghazi. Internet services have been shut down across the country. The protesters have been demanding the ouster of Libyan leader Gaddafi who has been in power for over 40 years.

{EOP}Hindu Extremist (BJP,VHP,RSS)Attack on Christian in India......

Some Hindu Extremist attack on Christian meeting in chattisgargh India, Is in India any one safe??????.

{EOP}Hakimullah in TTP(Indian Backed Terrorist Group) video of Colonel Imam’s killing....

The video of Colonel Imam’s killing also showed TTP chief Hakimullah Mehsud. — 
KARACHI: The Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Hakimullah Mehsud appeared in a video obtained by DawnNews of the killing of former ISI official Sultan Amir Tarar alias Colonel Imam.
Colonel Imam had gone missing on March 25 last year along with another former ISI official, Khalid Khwaja, and a British journalist of Pakistan origin, Asad Qureshi, while they were going from Kohat to North Waziristan.
Sultan Amir Tarar was believed to have a key role in the growth of the Taliban movement in Afghanistan.
Earlier, on April 30, 2010, Khalid Khwaja was found dead near a stream in Karam Kot, about seven kilometres south of North Waziristan’s main town of Mirali. A note attached to his body said he was with the CIA and the ISI.
The disappearance of the three men had created ripples in the official circles because the purpose of their visit was not clear.



{EOP}Official: US, NATO Now in Control of Narcotic Trade in Afghanistan

TEHRAN: A senior Iranian judiciary official blasted the West’s performance in fighting drugs in Afghanistan, and stressed that the western states, particularly the US, are now in control of the drug trade in the war-torn country.
“Today, Afghans have no special influence in the issue of narcotics but the NATO and western states control drug production and dealings and are busy in this fields,” First Deputy Head of the Judiciary Ebrahim Raeesi said at a conference of the anti-drug police chiefs here in Tehran on Tuesday.
“Today, the drug movements and networks are controlled by the Americans and the hegemonic system and Afghans are acting as their agents,” Raeesi noted.


He blamed the western countries for Afghanistan’s deteriorating drug problems, and added, “They can prevent drug plantation and production through their capabilities in the short run but we are witnessing no action by these countries and drug production has rather found a new form due to their presence.”
The official blasted the western countries for the aggravating drug problem in Afghanistan, and described the huge increase in the production of narcotics in the war-torn country as “a crime against humanity”.
Earlier, an Afghan lawmaker had disclosed that the foreign forces deployed in Afghanistan are involved in the production and trafficking of illicit drugs in the country, adding that the British troops have even trained a number of experts for opium cultivation.
“As long as foreign forces are present in Afghanistan, the cultivation, production and trafficking of drugs will continue in the country,” Nasimeh Niazi told FNA in April.
Heroin-production labs in Helmand, which did not exist before the US-led war in Afghanistan, are now plentiful and work overtly, she added.
Eastern Iran borders Afghanistan, which is the world’s number one opium and drug producer. Iran’s geographical position has made the country a favorite transit corridor for drug traffickers who intend to smuggle their cargoes from Afghanistan to drug dealers in Europe.
Iran spends billions of dollars and has lost thousands of its police troops in the war against traffickers. Owing to its rigid efforts, Iran makes 85 percent of the world’s total opium seizures and has turned into the leading country in drug campaign.

{EOP}Pakistan-China Relations: India’s abiding worry


The thought that Pakistan refuses to fall under its thumb seems to have caused India serious psychological problems. Imagine, its campaigning against Pakistan’s acquisition of peaceful nuclear assistance from China to help it tide over the crippling energy shortfall and promote civilian and humanitarian causes. At the same time, it is keen to relish the American favours granted to it, indisputably, against international law and against all canons of nuclear non-proliferation that the US, deceptively, preaches to the rest of the world.

There is little doubt about the US intention behind the so-called civil nuclear cooperation agreement with India, i.e. to prod New Delhi to divert its own resources to firm up its nuclear arsenal to be able to stand up against Beijing, the fast emerging bugbear of the Americans. Yet, India feels the compulsion to express its concern at the “lack of transparency” that China is showing while extending nuclear cooperation to Pakistan. Somehow, in its obsession of Pakistan, India fails to appreciate that not only has the Pak-China friendship any ulterior designs, unlike the US-India’s, but also it has stood unscathed by such squeamish attempts at causing dents in it for well over six decades.
India’s policies towards the neighbouring countries leave little room for doubt that it is desperate to wear the mantle of a regional hegemon. While others, cowed down by its bullying tactics or the mere sight of its rising might, have fallen in line, Pakistan, for all the troubles for which it is victim to its machinations, has continued to resist its hegemonic moves. The resource-rich, nuclear power of 170 million odd inhabitants has no inclination of succumbing to its pressure. Obviously, it is the feeling that comes with frustrated ambitions that is causing India sleepless nights, compelling it to think of ways to create more headaches for Pakistan. It must be said to the shame of the US and its allies that they have abandoned their core values and fallen prey to its guiles.
China and some other mainly friendly Muslim countries, however, stand out for sticking to principled position about their relations with Pakistan. One hears, though, New Delhi’s plaintive calls to Beijing not to adopt a separate visa system for the Kashmiris who are under its forcible occupation. India is also unhappy at the prospects of China voting against its permanent UNSC membership without understanding the logic of ineligibility of membership of that august body for a country that goes back on its own commitments contained in its resolutions that it has willingly voted for. On top of that, its forces are keeping under their bayonets a state where it pledged to hold a UN-sponsored plebiscite for its citizens to decide their future.

Qureshi blasts govt's plea for 3 weeks time on Davis case


Ex-Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has said that Foreign Ministry officials had already briefed him about immunity status of USZ national Raymond Davis, so govt’s plea in the court for an extra time of three weeks was beyond understanding. “When the Ministry officials have given me a clear-cut briefing on the issue, then what this time limit stands for? It leaves a question mark”, he said. In an interview with a private TV channel on Friday, Qureshi said that he was not interested in becoming a stakeholder in the case, “but I do know that there is a petition filed asking the court to make me a party, and if they (the court judges) asked me to appear, I’ll stand by the truth I know”.

Pakistan ex-Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi
Commenting on PPP’s Core Committee meeting in which Qureshi was not invited, he said that he had done nothing against the party policy rather he had stated party viewpoint. He ruled out the impression that Foreign Ministry mishandled the Raymond Davis case, rather, “I briefed my leadership about the case and put forth a fact based viewpoint in this regard”. To a query, he said that he had not come with a formula or solution in his meeting with US Senator John Kerry some days back. However, he emphasised that there should be a solution to the issue but it must be respected and according to the law.

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