Saturday 19 March 2011

Tribes will take revenge for drone massacre from USZ and puppet Pakistani regime

Read on Pakistan Cyber Force Facebook Page

Tribal elders from North Waziristan Agency Friday declared to carry out suicide attacks on the Americans to avenge the massacre of their elders, who were killed in the USZ drone attack on a tribal Jirga in their area the other day.

“More than 40 tribal elders were killed and 50 injured in the drone attack. None of the deceased was a terrorist. All of them were our respectable elders”, Malik Jalal Khan, head of the North Waziristan Peace Committee said, while addressing a news conference. He said that there was NO safe haven of the originally non-existent Al-Qaeda fluke in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. Condemning the Thursday’s USZ drone attack at a peace Jirga of tribal elders in DattaKhel area of North Waziristan, Jalal announced that, “We will take revenge from Americans and its allies, as all the deceased were innocent tribesmen. There is mourning everywhere in Waziristan due to the deadliest attack. He also came down hard on Pakistan’s coalition with the US and questioned what would be the stance of Islamabad after the killing of innocent tribesmen in the recent drone attack.”


Flanked by other tribal elders including Malik Faridullah and Malik Niaz Daraz, he said that it was barbarism and complete injustice with the innocent patriotic tribesmen, and they would take revenge from Americans and corrupt rulers of Pakistan as well. The government of Pakistan didn’t take any action against the US incursion inside the country, he lamented. “We will never pardon our foes, and will take revenge even after lapse of 100 years.Jalal also urged media not to propagate negative USZ agenda against the tribesmen to appease America and its allies to earn dollars. He said that most of the civilians including women and children had been targeted in these drone attacks in Pakistani tribal areas, and informed that they have valid evidences that most of the innocent tribesmen including elders were killed in the attacks, he added. He maintained that there were no foreigners, or Taliban among dead.

He said the USZ-drone attack in Waziristan had proved that tribal people were the main target of USZ, saying neither foreigners nor the so called Al-Qaeda operatives were killed in the drone attack. We will not accept dollars’ on the heads of innocent civilians, as Pakistani corrupt rulers and family members of the deceased’s did in Raymond Davis case, he warned. He stressed the need for kicking out USZ-secret operatives from the country, otherwise he warned, they reserved the right to take action against them, saying they would not tolerate more USZ-hegemony and atrocity in the region.


18,000 dead or missing in Japan HAARP attack

Read on Pakistan Cyber Force Facebook Page

The death toll from the devastating HAARP attack on Japan & the resulting earthquake followed by tsunami has topped 18,000, making it Japan's worst disaster since World War II. The National Police Agency said in an updated toll that the number of dead or missing in Japan's worst national disaster in 88 years has soared above 18,000, AFP reported. Nearly 7,200 people are confirmed killed, lost to the HAARP caused tsunami or interred in the wreckage of buildings, according to the latest tallies. Earlier on Saturday another earthquake measuring 5.9 on the Richter scale jolted off the east coast of Honshu, about 535 km northeast of the Japanese capital, Tokyo. A record 262 aftershocks of magnitude 5 or greater were registered in the seven days following the magnitude 9.0 earthquake off northeastern Japan on March 11. Sources in Japan are still reporting HAARP caused auroral lights and disc clouds which are continuously appearing and disappearing in Japan's various western coastal areas. Meanwhile, Japanese engineers struggled anew on Saturday to cool down overheating reactors at the tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear power plant in a frantic move to stave off a deadly radiation that could potentially overshadow the Chernobyl disaster.

The National Police Agency said in an updated toll that the number of dead or missing in Japan's worst national disaster in 88 year has soared above 18,000.

Last week's quake and tsunami in Japan set off the nuclear problems by knocking out power to cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on the northeast coast. Since then, four of the troubled plant's six reactor units have seen fires, explosions or partial meltdowns. At the plant, a team of 180 emergency workers has been rotating out of the complex to minimize radiation exposure. The Japanese government has ordered the evacuation of about 200,000 people living in a 20-kilometer (12.4-mile) area around the plant, and told people living between 20 kilometers and 30 kilometers (18.6 miles) from the plant to remain indoors.

 

{EOP}We cannot trust on General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani Says CIA operative Bruce Riedel informs Mike Mullen:

The USZ, which blows hot and cold in its tempestuous relationship with Pakistan, is currently passing through a phase of denial and has acquired the services of Bob Woodward & Bruce Riedel to malign Pakistan. Bob Woodward, considered by some as an “investigative journalist”, in his latest book titled: “Obama’s wars”, has attacked Pakistan tooth and nail. As a propaganda prop, Mr. Woodward uses the notorious Pakistan basher, Bruce Riedel, a former CIA operative and one of the architects of America’s AF-Pak policy. According to Woodward, Bruce Riedel told Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of USZ Staff Admiral Mike Mullen recently not to trust the Pakistani Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani calling him a “liar”.


Pakistan Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani

Woodward contends that President Barack Obama’s aides think that General Kayani is stonewalling Washington’s call for decisive action against terrorists’ safe havens in the country’s turbulent tribal belt. He states that top Obama administration officials say that Kayani has refused to adhere to any of the four demands of the US conveyed to him during a trip made by top aides in May last year just after a failed bomb plot at Times Square in New York by Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad. 
Admiral Mullen, did not heed Bruce Riedel, and went ahead to build a person-to-person relationship and had faith in the commitment shown by the Pakistan army chief. At a White House meeting on March 11, attended by National Security Advisor General (Rtd) James Jones, Defence Secretary Robert Gates and Mullen, Riedel urged Mullen not to trust Kayani as he was a liar.

James Jones (left) / Robert Gates (right)

“I have known every head of ISI since the mid-1980s”, Riedel is quoted as saying.“Kayani is either not in control of his organization or he is not telling the truth. The USZ should see the obvious and connect the dots. The Pakistanis are lying”,he said. Addressing Mullen, he said, “you have met Kayani some dozen times, you know him better than anyone else. My impression is that he falls into the second category – liar”, the book says.

Woodward, who was given access to some of the classified documents as part of writing his book, wrote that Mullen did not disagree. The book also draws on crucial visits undertaken by CIA chief Leon Panetta and Jones to Islamabad to convey Obama’s warning that USZ would have no other option but to respond if Pakistan did not take decisive action against“terrorists” and their safe havens. The book says that after meeting Zardari, Panetta and Jones met Kayani to tell the Pakistani army chief that the clock was now starting on all the four requests made by Obama. But Kayani would not budge very much.

He had other concerns. “I’ll be the first to admit, I’m India centric”, he said, according to the book. Another jab has been taken by the New York Times which reports that a warning by General David H Petraeus, the Commander of USZ and NATO forces in Afghanistan, indicates USZ officials’ belief that the Pakistanis are unlikely to launch a military operations in North Waziristan, which is considered to be a haven for the fictitious “al-Qaeda” operatives. “Petraeus wants to turn up the heat on the safe havens”, a senior official was quoted as saying, and this was the reason that USZ forces had sharply stepped up drone strikes in the area. “He has pointed out to the Pakistanis that they could do more”, New York Times reports. As part of its covert war in the region, the CIA has launched 20 drone attacks in the last 24 days, killing more than 100 Taliban and foreign militants. The strikes have been mainly targeted to hit the Haqqani network, which the Americans believed is based in the area. The fact is that these propaganda operations only reveal the frustration of USZ Defence personnel over the failure of their war in Afghanistan. They are now looking for a scapegoat and if they think Pakistan fits the bill, they are sadly mistaken. Pakistan will not tolerate any attack on its sovereignty and any propaganda war against it is likely to fail.

Woodword rights on:
“The USZ was getting nowhere fast with these guys, talking with Zardari, who could deliver nothing. On the other hand, Kayani had the power to deliver, but he refused to do much. Nobody could tell him otherwise. The bottom line was depressing: This had been a charade. Jones said he was once again alarmed that success in Afghanistan was tied to what the Pakistanis would or would not do. The White House was almost right back to where it had started with Pakistan in 2009.”



“Kayani not trustworthy”, CIA operative Bruce Riedel informs Mike Mullen, James Jones & Robert Gates


The USZ, which blows hot and cold in its tempestuous relationship with Pakistan, is currently passing through a phase of denial and has acquired the services of Bob Woodward & Bruce Riedel to malign Pakistan. Bob Woodward, considered by some as an “investigative journalist”, in his latest book titled: “Obama’s wars”, has attacked Pakistan tooth and nail. As a propaganda prop, Mr. Woodward uses the notorious Pakistan basher, Bruce Riedel, a former CIA operative and one of the architects of America’s AF-Pak policy. According to Woodward, Bruce Riedel told Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of USZ Staff Admiral Mike Mullen recently not to trust the Pakistani Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani calling him a “liar”.

Pakistan Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani
Woodward contends that President Barack Obama’s aides think that General Kayani is stonewalling Washington’s call for decisive action against terrorists’ safe havens in the country’s turbulent tribal belt. He states that top Obama administration officials say that Kayani has refused to adhere to any of the four demands of the US conveyed to him during a trip made by top aides in May last year just after a failed bomb plot at Times Square in New York by Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad. Admiral Mullen, did not heed Bruce Riedel, and went ahead to build a person-to-person relationship and had faith in the commitment shown by the Pakistan army chief. At a White House meeting on March 11, attended by National Security Advisor General (Rtd) James Jones, Defence Secretary Robert Gates and Mullen, Riedel urged Mullen not to trust Kayani as he was a liar.

James Jones (left) / Robert Gates (right)
“I have known every head of ISI since the mid-1980s”, Riedel is quoted as saying. “Kayani is either not in control of his organization or he is not telling the truth. The USZ should see the obvious and connect the dots. The Pakistanis are lying”, he said. Addressing Mullen, he said, “you have met Kayani some dozen times, you know him better than anyone else. My impression is that he falls into the second category – liar”, the book says.

Woodward, who was given access to some of the classified documents as part of writing his book, wrote that Mullen did not disagree. The book also draws on crucial visits undertaken by CIA chief Leon Panetta and Jones to Islamabad to convey Obama’s warning that USZ would have no other option but to respond if Pakistan did not take decisive action against “terrorists” and their safe havens. The book says that after meeting Zardari, Panetta and Jones met Kayani to tell the Pakistani army chief that the clock was now starting on all the four requests made by Obama. But Kayani would not budge very much.

He had other concerns. “I’ll be the first to admit, I’m India centric”, he said, according to the book. Another jab has been taken by the New York Times which reports that a warning by General David H Petraeus, the Commander of USZ and NATO forces in Afghanistan, indicates USZ officials’ belief that the Pakistanis are unlikely to launch a military operations in North Waziristan, which is considered to be a haven for the fictitious “al-Qaeda” operatives. “Petraeus wants to turn up the heat on the safe havens”, a senior official was quoted as saying, and this was the reason that USZ forces had sharply stepped up drone strikes in the area. “He has pointed out to the Pakistanis that they could do more”, New York Times reports. As part of its covert war in the region, the CIA has launched 20 drone attacks in the last 24 days, killing more than 100 Taliban and foreign militants. The strikes have been mainly targeted to hit the Haqqani network, which the Americans believed is based in the area. The fact is that these propaganda operations only reveal the frustration of USZ Defence personnel over the failure of their war in Afghanistan. They are now looking for a scapegoat and if they think Pakistan fits the bill, they are sadly mistaken. Pakistan will not tolerate any attack on its sovereignty and any propaganda war against it is likely to fail.

Woodword rights on:
“The USZ was getting nowhere fast with these guys, talking with Zardari, who could deliver nothing. On the other hand, Kayani had the power to deliver, but he refused to do much. Nobody could tell him otherwise. The bottom line was depressing: This had been a charade. Jones said he was once again alarmed that success in Afghanistan was tied to what the Pakistanis would or would not do. The White House was almost right back to where it had started with Pakistan in 2009.”

{EOP}A Million March In Kashmir?




A ‘March of Million’ in Egypt’s Tahrir Square picked up the momentum of the people’s movement in Egypt, and finally led to the ouster of the dictator who had ruled Egypt with an iron fist for thirty years. Hosni Mubarak, the US backed Egyptian President, fled the country on 11th of February.
In Kashmir, 11th of February is an important day. It was on this day in 1984, that Maqbool Bhat, the founding member of the Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), a militant group that started the armed struggle for Independence of Kashmir, was hanged at Delhi’s Tihar Jail. He is remembered every year on his death anniversary, which has been a day of strike and protest since then. His remains still lie in the premises of Tihar jail in Delhi, and Kashmiris every year ask for their return. An empty grave in Srinagar’s Martyrs’ graveyard waits with Maqbool’s name on the plaque. For Kashmiris, the date of the flight of the modern Pharoah of Egypt, with Maqbool’s date of martyrdom brought a melancholic delight to this date.
The slogan ‘Khoon ka badla June mein!’ (We shall take revenge in June!) has been doing rounds in Kashmir. The badla (revenge) being in response to the killing of more than 111 civilians in the protests against Indian rule in Kashmir last summer. The government fears another uprising. And they are trying to take precautions. The Times of India in a recent report quoted a ‘top government source’ as saying, “Militancy we can handle. After 9/11 (we’ve seen) it backfires on its promoters. People here are sick of violence. But our greatest fear is 50,000 people landing up at Lal Chowk for a dharna. How do you handle that?”
The threat comes from a potential Tahrir-like uprising which might put the state on hold. However, the scenes of protest like those of Egypt have already been witnessed in Kashmir.
If the picture of Egyptians praying on Qasr al-Nil, braving water cannons, portrayed their firm resolve, Kashmiris prayed on the road to Muzaffarabad on August 11, 2008, during the Muzaffarabad Chalo march, in neat rows as the firing continued and on the streets of Srinagar’s downtown last summer, defying curfews. In addition to the early ’90s, Kashmiris had their ‘March of Million’ in 2008. On 18th of August 2008, more than half a million people assembled in Srinagar’s streets during the march to TRC grounds, near the United Nations Military Observers Group office, to submit a memorandum. Few days later on 22nd of August, the number shot up to more than a million, as people assembled to pray the Friday prayers at the historic Eidgah grounds. The prayers that Friday, were prayers of Freedom, in Freedom and for Freedom.
The Egyptians managed to make their President flee in 18 days. After being hostile to protestors initially, the Egyptian Army eventually stopped firing on its people. In Kashmir, the armed forces are from outside. The sense of ‘one’s own people’ doesn’t exist amongst the army as there is a clear dichotomy between ‘them’ and ‘us’.
In Kashmir, mass protests were allowed for just more than a week in 2008. Those days for many remain etched in memory as the ‘days of Azadi.’ Since the day of Eidgah march, not a single mass protest has been allowed till date. The authorities had initially hoped that allowing people to assemble will let the steam out, and the numbers will dwindle. However, more and more people kept coming out and people heeded call to a referendum of sorts, demanding Azadi.
Soon after, the Indian national security advisor MK Narayanan visited the Valley along with Intelligence Bureau Director P C Haldar, to review the situation and the state’s response to it. Since then, not a single mass rally has been allowed in Kashmir. Every time a call was given by the pro-freedom groups, curfew was stamped in the Valley. A million people on the streets of Kashmir, chanting in unison the slogans for Azadi, was a referendum in itself, a right denied to the Kashmiri people, and a scene of embarrassment for the Indian state.
The Valley erupted in protests again in 2009, in wake of the rape and murder of two women at Shopian. The south Kashmir town closed down for seven weeks at a stretch in protests. Valley wide strike continued for about 12 days. The investigation was later handed over to CBI which on December 13th 2009 concluded in its report that the women had died of drowning. No one in Kashmir, and many in India, refuse to buy this version considering the impossibility of death by drowning in water that is ankle deep.
Considering the structure of the militarised governance in Kashmir, a place that in 2008 was ironically listed in the Guinness book of World Records for being the highest militarized zone on earth, a protest is never far away as killings and human rights violations are a routine. And with the politico-legal structure which provides impunity to the offenders, resentment and anger always keeps simmering. A small trigger is all that is required for an uprising directed against the Indian rule.
Mission 2011
Last year, massive protests again emerged in summer. This was a build up of the killings that had started in January itself. On 8th of January, troops shot dead 16 year old Inayat Khan in Srinagar. On 31 of January, 13 year old Wamiq Farooq, succumbed to fatal injuries due to tear gas shelling. On 5th of February, Zahid Farooq, a 16 year old boy was shot by a BSF patrol in Brein area of Srinagar, while he was playing cricket along with his friends. On 30th of April, three men were killed in a fake encounter by the Indian Army at Nadihal, Rafiabad, in North Kashmir. Things ultimately started heating up on the street with the killing of Tufail Ahmad Mattoo, a 17 year old student, on 11th of June, who was hit by a tear gas shell on his head, spilling out his brains. The front page photograph of Tufail’s dead body in a local newspaper was enough to catapult people on to the streets.
The protests soon became widespread. In the ensuing months, 111 people were killed, most of them teenagers and men in their early twenties. The list of seriously injured, maimed lost count. A thousand were arrested during the summer. Many of them, including minors, booked under the controversial Public Safety Act, which allows the state to book anyone up to two years in jail, without a charge-sheet. The youngest one whose arrest was sought was a 7 year old from Srinagar’s Bemina locality and whose family was beaten; the child had to go underground. The oldest person to be slapped with PSA was 80. The youngest to die was an eight year old kid, Sameer Ahmad Rah, in Srinagar’s Batamaloo locality. The purple clogged blood, on the child’s body, showed the seams of CRPF bootmarks, by whom he was beaten as he ventured out of his home to go to a relative’s place. A 2 rupee coin in his pocket and a half chewed gum remained in his mouth.
Towards the onset of winter, and after the protests died down after more than four months, the slogan of ‘Khoon ka badla June mein (we shall take revenge in June)’ started doing the rounds. The state responded with a massive crackdown leading to large-scale arrests of young men, who could potentially contribute to the protests.
According to a report in Greater Kashmir on 9th February 2011, 118 persons were arrested in a span of one month, 10 of them under with PSA. The renewed crackdown, the report noted, was “driven by the sense that protests may resurface in the valley in the wake of international events taking place in Middle East countries. Police officials also maintain that the current raids were increased to stop “re-organisation” of protesters and thus pre-empt the “future protests,” if any, in 2011.”
Many of the arrested include minors. On 28 February, a 14 year-old 9th class student from South Kashmir’s Anantnag district, Faizan Rafiq Hakeem, was booked under PSA and sent to Kot Balwal jail in Jammu. 64 year-old Mohammad Abdullah Mir was recently arrested in Budgam district of Central Kashmir on charges of stone-pelting.
Stating that arrests were a normal issue, minister for law and parliamentary affairs, Ali Mohammad Sagar in an interaction with the media, on 3rd of March, said that till February 15 this year, 4030 persons were arrested across the valley and 195 were booked under the draconian Public Safety Act. “This is nothing new…” he said.
Many of the incriminated youth are booked under harsh laws like 302 Ranbir Penal Code (murder) and 307 RPC (attempt to murder). Other charges like 436 RPC and 13 Unlawful Activities Act have also been applied as well. Even after they are released the cases against the majority remain pending in the police stations, and they are called routinely to report to the police stations. Most suffer for years. Denied ‘clearance’, it becomes almost impossible to get documents like passports or government jobs.
Fear of Facebook
Repressive laws and their wanton usage are an old trick in Kashmir. The dreaded (J&K) Armed Forces Special Powers Act, for example, allows armed forces to shoot any person on mere basis of suspicion. The (J&K) Disturbed areas act prevents assembly. The structure of laws in place is aimed at preventing dissent, or at least stopping its expression in public domain subject to the direct state control.
On 17th of February, the police arrested Shakeel Bakshi, chairman of Islamic Students League and moved him into an undisclosed location. Though he was officially detained for an FIR registered against him in 2008-09 for conducting a seminar, there were suggestions that the leader could have been arrested for his ‘online activities’. Bakshi maintains a Facebook page on which he would daily write update on ‘today in history’ focusing primarily on the human rights violations and political happenings that have taken place on that day, particularly in Kashmir. Besides, he also maintains a blog – Kashmiri Prisoners – a compilation of stories pertaining to the condition of Kashmiri prisoners languishing in different jails.
The government is also worried about online activities where many popular groups like Aalaw (meaning ‘call’), Frontline Kashmir, etc., have emerged, with followers running into tens of thousands, which keep a tag on political events in Kashmir and often give calls for ‘revolutionary action’. The groups had become popular during last year’s protests, long before ‘We Are All Khaled Said’ or ‘6th of April Youth Movement’ came to limelight during Egyptian uprising. Some of them like Bekaar Jamaath (meaning ‘Idler’s Club’) were also hacked. Frontline Kashmir was hacked, and later restored.
Also, during last summer’s protests, when Mirwaiz of South Kashmir was arrested, one of the charges against him was incitement to violence on Facebook. In another case a warrant was issued against a user who had uploaded a video, which showed the scene of three boys after having being shot in a compound of the house at point blank range by the police, on 29th of June, in South Kashmir’s Anantnag district, contradicting official claims. One of them Ishfaq Ahmad was 15 years old, while other two Ishfaq Ahmad and Shujat-ul-Islam were 17 years old.
Remembering Jaleel Andrabi
On February 21st, a former Indian Army Major Avtar Singh, who is sought in the case of the murder of the prominent Kashmiri human rights lawyer Jaleel Andrabi in March 1996, apart from 10 other people, was recently located in California’s Selma city (after his wife lodged a complaint for domestic violence). Singh had an Interpol red-corner notice issued against him by the Chief Judicial Magistrate (CJM) in February 2010. The CJM had asked the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to get the warrants executed but the CBI didn’t take any step to arrest or extradite him.
Arrested on March 8th, while he was driving home along with his wife, by a battalion of 35th Rashtriya Rifles, led by Major Avtar Singh, the mutilated body of 42 year old Andrabi was found on the banks of Srinagar’s Jhelum river on the morning of March 27, 1996. He had been shot in the head and his eyes gouged out. An autopsy confirmed that he had been killed just days after his arrest. Just weeks before his arrest and eventual murder, Andrabi has spoken at an international seminar in New Delhi on the nationalities question, where he had talked about the ongoing human rights violations and the movement for self-determination in Kashmir.
A case under FIR no. 139/96 was lodged in Saddar Police Station, Srinagar and is pending in the CJM court ever since. Singh has been evading arrest. In 2005 he was traced in Canada. Later he again went into hiding and went to US. He is now living in Selma, Fresno County in California where he runs a trucking business. Kashmir Dispatch, an online Kashmiri news portal, quoted Lt. Christie Ediger, a Selma Police official saying that he was relieved from custody “…on bail and since then he is a free man”. No clear guidelines of his extradition have been given.
Andrabi is one of the most remembered sons of the soil in Kashmir, along with many others like Maqbool Bhat, whose memories evoke a lot of respect for their deeds, as well as anger at the fact that their killers roam free and the structure that backs them goes on boasting about its democratic credentials.
In Kashmir, people are killed as a matter of routine. People have developed coping mechanisms to deal with the phenomenon of death. Death, in Kashmir, is an event, no longer a tragedy. Memories, however, remain. And they haunt the survivors, as well as the murderers. June is never far away in Kashmir, neither is the March of Million.
Source: Kafila

{EOP}Nato Tankers Under Attack.


Four NATO Tankers Torched in Mastung




QUETTA:Four Nato oil tankers were torched and a cleaner was killed by unidentified militants in the Ganja Dohri area of Mastung District, some 50 kilometres southeast of the provincial capital.
According to officials, four oil tankers were returning from Afghanistan to Karachi after providing fuel to North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) troops stationed there, when a group of assailants on motorcycles opened fire on them, forcing the drivers to stop on the RCD highway near the Ganja Dohri area.
As a result, two helpers received serious bullet wounds in the attack. The assailants set the oil tankers on fire and fled the scene.
The police and other law enforcement agencies rushed to the spot after the incident and took the injured to a nearby state-run hospital in Mastung where one of the injured, identified as Zakir Mehmood, was pronounced dead on arrival.
Three empty oil tankers were completely gutted while one was partially damaged, a local police official told The Express Tribune.
The injured was identified as Gul Bagh who was shifted to Quetta for treatment. Both victims belonged to Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. No one claimed to have carried out the attack.
Balochistan is the second largest route for Nato supplies. The oil tankers and containers carrying military hardware and fuel for Isaf and Nato forces deployed in Afghanistan are regularly targeted in this region.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 17th, 2011.

{EOP}Europe’s Parliaments Are Impressed By Kashmiri Girl Aneesa

Her Ordeal Resonates In Europe; Invitations Pile Up


SPECIAL REPORT | Wednesday | 16 March 2011WWW.PAKNATIONALISTS.COM
GENEVA, Switzerland—Last Friday, Kashmiri girl Aneesa Nabi, 17, whose parents were killed by Indian soldiers, landed in Geneva to tell her story. Even Indian delegates were shocked and empathized as NGO activists rushed to console her; several embassies sent observers to witness her testimony, including US government’s permanent mission to Geneva which is traditionally averse to discussing the tragedy of Kashmiris.
[Read the original inspiring story of how United Nations in Geneva received Aneesa.Click here to read the full report.]
But now Aneesa’s story is gaining more attention. A senior UN official, whose name is withheld, has met Aneesa and offered to take up the case of her father, abducted by Indian Army in 1996 and ‘disappeared’ ever since.
But more interestingly, parliamentary standing committees in several European countries are emailing requests to Aneesa inviting her to speak in their coming hearings.
Human rights activists do not expect Indian diplomats to launch a counteroffensive to control damage from Aneesa’s revelations about Indian Army tactics in Kashmir. Many Indians rights activists are angry at the genocide conducted by Indian military in the internationally disputed territory.
Aneesa Nabi returned to Azad [Free] Kashmir this week, where she took refuge since escaping from Indian-occupied Kashmir in 2008.
Before her departure to Azad Kashmir, she gave a brief video statement to PakNationalists.com. Shagufta Ashraf, from KIIR, the Kashmiri NGO that helped her escape danger and come to Geneva, also shared her thoughts about how the two worked together to ensure Aneesa can handle the glare of media, NGOs and diplomats as they took interest in her ordeal. [Click here to see the video in Urdu, and click here for the video in English.  Click here for a clip of Aneesa’s first appearance in Geneva on 11 March.]
Another landmark event followed when this teenager became the youngest person ever to address country and NGO delegates at UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, established in 2006.
On 15 March, Aneesa Nabi entered the Council hall and addressed the president of the council and delegates.
“My name is Aneesa,” she told the meeting. “I am here in search of my father and punishment for those who killed my mother. I was only 4-year-old when my father was taken away by the Indian Security Forces on 24 July 1996 and did not return till date […] all others who were arrested were released after short interrogations and torture but my father did not return. For some time [Indian] army officers gave assurances that he will be released soon […] “Mr. President, I request you, all human rights defenders and decent nations to help me. I thank you, Mr. President.”
[Click here to read the full story ] of Aneesa’s amazing first appearance at UN Geneva on 11 March 2011].

{EOP}Did US Succeed In Buying Out Parts Of Pakistani Media?


A Pakistani newspaper bans a Pakistani columnist, telling her criticizing US government ‘is against editorial policy.’ One more sign of growing US government influence within Pakistani media.
SPECIAL REPORT with input from editorial director Gulpari Nazish Mehsud| Thursday | 17 March 2011WWW.PAKNATIONALISTS.COM
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—There are signs the United States has met some success in using the power of the dollar to create a pro-US lobby inside Pakistani media. In other words, after success in meddling in Pakistani politics after the 2006 Musharraf-Benazir-US-UK deal, which largely remains a secret, US government has moved a step forward to create a proxy lobby inside some Pakistani news organizations.
It is interesting to note that at least two former employees of US government – Farahnaz Isphahani and Murtaza Solangi, both former executives at Voice of America – today occupy senior media management posts in the federal Pakistani government; the former as media adviser to the President of Pakistan, and the latter as head of the Pakistan Broadcasting Corporation, the media arm of Pakistani government. Although both Ms. Isphahani and Mr. Solangi ceased all ties to their former employer, their case deserves a mention in the context of increasing foreign influence within Pakistani media.
The latest sign of this is how Pakistani English-language daily newspaper Express Tribune hired Dr. Shireen Mazari last month to write weekly columns only to renege when the renowned Pakistani defense expert started criticizing US policies in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
More astonishingly, the publisher of the newspaper admitted to Dr. Mazari that her opinions critical of US government contradicted the Pakistani newspaper’s policy, according to emails seen by PakNationalists.com.
This is ironic because former US ambassador Anne W. Patterson lobbied in 2009 to ban several Pakistani media commentators, among them Dr. Mazari, succeeding in stopping Dr. Marzari’s decade-old weekly column. The move was part of a media offensive inside Pakistan that included allocating at least $40 million according to US media reports to buy influence inside Pakistani media. Patterson, who was widely known in Islamabad as ‘bully ambassador’, was the main architect of this offensive. Former US ambassador to Pakistan Ryan C. Crocker is known to have criticized Ms. Patterson’s style saying he had resisted meddling in Pakistani affairs before being succeeded by Ms. Patterson. The Obama administration refused to extend her term in Pakistan and she left for home last year. Some reports suggest her role in worsening anti-American feelings in Pakistan was a key consideration in sending her packing despite recommendations to the contrary by senior officials in the pro-US Pakistani government who had developed a liking for her because of her support for the incumbent Pakistani government.
Pakistani media is vibrant and vast, with over 80 television channels and hundreds of newspapers, magazines and periodicals. The expansion in Pakistani media happened thanks to enterprising Pakistani entrepreneurs and a Pakistani military-led government that liberated laws governing the news media. Critics say the aim was to help the growth of Pakistani voices that could take Pakistan’s message to the world. Instead, they charge, what has happened is that foreign interests and programming are increasingly making their way into Pakistani homes. This unusual situation reached its zenith in 2008 when Mr. Solangi as chairman of PBC handed three of his organization’s strongest relay towers to VOA to broadcast American propaganda to Pakistani Pashtun regions in the tribal belt. Even today, Pakistan’s state-run radio and television stations are nonexistent in the tribal belt, with VOA and BBC and sometimes Indian stations being received with clarity.
Pakistan is probably one of the rare countries in the region that allow this type of breach. Other neighbors, such as China, India, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, closely protect their media space and consider media a first line of defense. Not so in Pakistan.
MAZARI’S EXCHANGEWITH EXPRESS TRIBUNE
The Express Tribune is the Pakistani affiliate of International Herald Tribune, which in turn is a joint venture of Washington Post and New York Times. The two newspapers have known links to US government and were cheerleaders in promoting fake information planted in the media weeks before US invasion of Iraq.
Instead of drawing on the extensive technical expertise of its American media partners, what has happened instead is that the Pakistani Express Tribune has apparently lost its own editorial judgment.
In the email exchange, parts of which are reproduced below, the publishers of the Pakistani newspaper clearly indicate that criticizing US government is ‘against the editorial policy’ of their newspaper. Our only comment is: if only the same could be said about mainstream US newspapers, which have led the demonization campaign against Pakistan between 2004 and 2009.
On 13 March, Dr. Mazari emailed Mr. Bilal Lakhani, the publisher of Express Tribune. Excerpt:
“I do know the US pressure that is being put on the media today – after all the previous US ambassador tried to stop my columns […] clearly because I support my arguments with facts which the other side finds uncomfortable! Be that as it may, it is sad to see such intolerance in a paper that purports to reach out to all Pakistanis. I am attaching a copy of the column that was censored as it will now be put on Internet of course. As you can see there is nothing offensive in it except for US apologists.”
On 14 March, Mr. Lakhani replied. Excerpt:
“Dear Dr Shireen Mazari, we published two of your pieces previously – pieces that ran counter to the editorial viewpoint of our newspaper. I think more than anything else what has happened here is that there has been some miscommunication between the Editors and our Opinion and Editorial Pages Editor. Instead of offering a weekly slot, I believe we had intended to offer a monthly slot to you. I fully apologize for this miscommunication which led you to believe we were censoring your work. Certainly not […] In my capacity as publisher, I can only reassure you that your pieces were not published because of censorship.”
Mazari replied, questioning there ever was a ‘miscommunication’ in offering her a weekly column. Excerpt:
“Dear Mr Lakhani , thank you for your response. I am glad to see you have admitted to censorship at the start of your last paragraph. I am sure your paper is doing well but it would be sad to see it become known as a reflector of only one point of view […] But that is your prerogative as owner and publisher. One last point I wish to bring to your notice yet again is that I did not ask for column space – it was [editorial page editor] who began persuading me since November … to write a weekly (not monthly) column your paper and it was not till February that I agreed on certain terms and conditions including a firm date of publication and no censorship of the views expressed. So there was enough time from November till February to rectify any misunderstanding that may have been created on the frequency of the columns. Anyhow, it is sad to see that so-called “liberals” are equally unable to tolerate dissent and differing viewpoints! With regards, Shireen Mazari.”
ANOTHER TRIBUNE CASE
Writers other than Dr. Mazari have made similar complaints against the Tribune.
Asked why this is happening, Ahmed Quraishi, a columnist, tried to explain why Pakistanis such as Dr. Mazari are being victimized in their own country. “US dollar is tottering on the brink of uncertainty in many places,” said Quraishi, adding “but in Pakistan the dollar can still beat Pakistani rupee any day. So loyalty to the state can easily be purchased. The release of foreign terrorist Raymond Davis is a good example. We have three million good reasons, or dollars, to explain it. That’s how it goes in Pakistan until a day comes when Pakistanis change it.”
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