Suicide attack near Pakistani capital kills 9

A suicide bomber blew up at a busy bus terminal near the Pakistani capital Monday, killing at least nine people and wounding 18 more, officials said.

The blast came as Pakistan’s leaders sought to end a political crisis that has raised doubts about their focus on fighting Islamist militants blamed for a string of similar bombings in Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan.

TV images from the city of Rawalpindi showed rescue workers helping the wounded to ambulances while gloved investigators picked debris from a darkened street among several badly damaged cars and minibuses.

City police official Nasir Durrani said rescue workers recovered 10 corpses from the scene, including remains believed to be those of the bomber.

Officials had warned of possible suicide attacks in Pakistani cities in the run-up to recent anti-government protests.

A final mass rally planned for the capital Islamabad on Monday was called off after the government agreed to demands to restore senior judges ousted from the Supreme Court.

Rehman Malik, the head of Pakistan’s Interior Ministry, said it was unclear if the bomber deliberately targeted the teeming bus terminal that was hit late Monday or if the explosives went off prematurely.

No group claimed responsibility and there was no indication of what other target the bomber may have been heading for.

Mossad/al Qaida Targets S. Koreans in Yemen

Yemen blames Al-Qaeda for bombing of SKorean tourists

Posted: 16 March 2009 2323 hrs

Photos 1 of 2


Map of Yemen locating the UNESCO world heritage site of Shibam, where 4 South Korean tourists were killed by an explosion

Related News
Yemen blast kills five, including Skorean tourists

SANAA: Yemeni state media blamed Al-Qaeda on Monday for a suicide bombing that killed four South Korean holidaymakers and their local guide in the historic eastern tourism city of Shibam.

An 18-year-old who had been “tricked by Al-Qaeda into wearing an explosives vest” carried out the attack in the ancestral homeland of the militant network’s fugitive leader Osama bin Laden, the official Saba news agency said.

On a visit to the city of Shibam in the eastern Hadramawt region, Vice President Abed Rabbo Mansur Hadi called for the eradication of the those behind it, as survivors, four of them wounded, were flown home.

The survivors took a flight to Seoul on Emirates Airlines via Dubai, an official said, as a South Korean inquiry team arrived in the Yemeni capital Sanaa.

The vice president, who chaired an emergency meeting of security chiefs, said Yemen was determined to “eradicate all dubious factions who sold their souls to the devil,” Saba said.

The Yemeni tourism ministry said a fifth South Korean tourist who was wounded in the bombing had remained in the country for medical treatment.

“The explosion happened as they were gathered on a hill called Khazzan that overlooks the city,” a security official told AFP on Sunday.

“They were on foot and taking pictures of the buildings in Shibam at the moment the sun went down,” he added.

The Hadramawt town is famous for its multi-storey mud-brick merchants’ houses, which date back to the 16th Century and have earned Shibam UNESCO world heritage listing and the nickname of the “Manhattan of the desert.”

The South Korean government ordered a team of foreign ministry and security officials to travel immediately to Yemen.

“The government expresses deep condolence to the victims and the bereaved families,” ministry spokesman Moon Tae-Young said in a statement.

The ministry designated the entire country as a “travel restriction” area and strongly advised its citizens to avoid it.

“When most tourists had got off the jeep and were enjoying the sunset and the surroundings, there was suddenly a bomb explosion. In a second, a hellish situation followed,” travel agent Ma Kyong-Chan, who organised the trip, told the Yonhap news agency.

In January 2008 two Belgian tourists were shot dead with their local guide and driver in Hadramawt.

Two months later the US embassy was the target of mortar fire that missed and hit an adjacent school, killing two people.

A car bomb attack in Marib, also east of Sanaa, in July 2007 killed eight Spanish holidaymakers and two Yemeni drivers.

That attack took place at the entrance to Mahram Bilqis, an ancient oval-shaped temple that legend says belonged to the Biblical Queen of Sheba.

In January, Al-Qaeda announced in a video message posted on the Internet the merging of the Saudi and Yemeni branches into “Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula,” led by a Yemeni called Nasser al-Wahaishi.

Al-Qaeda has carried out a string of attacks in Yemen – notably the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in the port of Aden that killed 17 sailors.

The US embassy in the capital was targeted last September by a double car bombing claimed by Al-Qaeda that killed 19 people, including seven attackers.

Some Western embassies are now concealed behind five-metre-high blast walls, and some diplomats have said they believe there is an influx of militants into Yemen.

Few tourists visit Yemen, which also has a history of abductions of Westerners by powerful tribes who then use them as bargaining chips with the authorities. Those kidnapped are generally freed unharmed.

Taliban spokesman denies that Mullah Omar gave the green light to talks “Such statements are baseless lies”

Taliban spokesman denies that Mullah Omar gave the green light to talks
“Such statements are baseless lies”

AFP

56mullah_omar.jpg

Amir-ul-Momineen Mullah Mohammad Omar Mujahid

Optimism over Taliban talks: negotiator

March 15, 2009

KABUL (AFP) — Taliban have shown optimism about holding talks with the Afghan government after calls from Washington to explore contacts with “moderate” militants, a negotiator said Sunday.

A Taliban spokesman nonetheless reiterated that the militant group would not enter negotiations unless international troops propping up the Kabul government pulled out of the country.

Abdul Qayoum Karzai, the elder brother of President Hamid Karzai, who leads efforts on behalf of Kabul to persuade Taliban militants into talks, said President Barack Obama’s recent statement had an “enormous effect”.

“It has created lots of optimism within the people of Afghanistan and also within the Taliban,” he told AFP. “No other way is left but talks,” Karzai added.

He would not give details about the talks due to the sensitivity of the process that according to him has been ongoing for the “past two and a half years.”

“The (former US president George W.) Bush administration’s focus was only on military means and no place was left for talks,” Karzai said.

But “the people of Afghanistan, including the Taliban, believe that war is no way out of this situation in Afghanistan and we must talk,” he said.

Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi told AFP by telephone however: “We’ll not talk to anybody unless the invading foreign forces leave Afghanistan.”

He had the same message in a round table discussion on private television late Saturday, in which he took part by phone, with two former members of the Taliban government also on the panel.

Ahmadi also rejected a media report that the Taliban’s elusive leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar, had given the green light to talks. “Such statements are baseless lies,” he said.

The extremist Taliban were in government between 1996 and 2001.

Their insurgency saw a record number of attacks last year with Kabul and its Western allies keen to break a stalemate in a dragging and deadly conflict, with consensus that victory does not lie in a military effort alone.

Kabul has for years said it was willing to talk to Afghan Taliban who were not linked to Al-Qaeda and agreed to lay down their weapons and accept the democratic constitution.

Washington said last week any move for talks would ultimately be up to the Afghan government but it has said it would not support reconciliation with Mullah Omar who is on a US “most wanted” list.

Copyright © 2009 AFP. All rights reserved.

Faustian pact

Faustian pact

NIRUPAMA SUBRAMANIAN

The pact with militants to set up Sharia courts in the Malakand division is seen by many as outright surrender to the Taliban.


AFTER 18 months of an on-again off-again war between the Taliban and the Pakistan Army, the guns fell silent in the once picturesque Swat valley in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) on February 16 when the militants declared a truce in exchange for a controversial agreement, called the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation (NAR) 2009, with the government to set up Sharia courts.

The people of Swat celebrated. They had been battered for too long. On the one hand were the Taliban, who had set up a parallel government in the district, disbursing summary justice in kangaroo courts and instilling in people a fear of committing any act that might be remotely interpreted as anti-Islamic. On the other was the constant fear of being hit in the crossfire between the Taliban and the security forces. When the militants declared the truce, people distributed sweets and markets and schools reopened.

But even as government spokesmen hailed the victory of negotiations over a military solution, many voices in the country and outside it questioned the long-term objectives and wisdom of the government in concluding the agreement, which has seemed more or less an outright surrender to the Taliban.

There is no hiding the fact that the provincial NWFP government, led by the secular Awami National Party (ANP), an ally of the federal government, was forced to make this agreement following the failure of the Pakistan Army to wrest back control of the district. In its defence, the military said an all-out anti-militant operation in Swat would have led to intolerably high collateral damage.

The government says it has not made a deal with the Taliban directly. But even that sounds like an acknowledgement of the reality of Taliban control in the district of 1.7 million people.

The NAR agreement is between the NWFP government and a militant group allied to the Swat Taliban, called the Tehreek-i-Nifasi-i-Sharia-Mohammadi (TNSM). Under it, the government must set up Sharia courts in the Malakand division of the NWFP, which covers seven districts in all, including Swat. What this actually means is clothed in ambiguity.

The government says the courts will administer “speedy justice” as demanded by the people, using a mixture of laws prevalent in other parts of Pakistan and rewaj, or customary laws – a popular form of Sharia – that was in force in the pre-1969 princely state of Malakand.

The TNSM chief, Sufi Mohammed, is a septuagenarian admirer of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. He even took a thousand militants with him to fight the Americans in 2001. They were so badly equipped that many of them were killed. Sufi Mohammed was arrested on his return and released only last year by the newly elected ANP-led government. His interpretation of the Sharia courts is likely to be different from the government’s, and this is evident from his first pronouncement after the deal, denouncing democracy as anti-Islamic.

The Friday Times put it: “There is bitter controversy over what is Islamic and what is not, what is vice and what is virtue, what punishments can be legitimately prescribed, the speed at which this ‘justice’ can be delivered without abandoning the whole notion of due process, and the process of appeal to constitutional higher authorities outside Malakand. Indeed, it is unclear whether the regulation is even constitutional or not.”

The first glimpses of the coming battles over interpretation are already surfacing, with Sufi Mohammed demanding that he should vet the appointments of qazis, or judges, to these courts. But the more immediate concern is the nature of the peace the government has bought in Swat through this agreement. Sufi Mohammed’s side of the deal was to convince the Swat Taliban, led by his son-in-law, Mullah Fazlullah, to allow the government to re-establish its writ in the district. In response to his appeal, Fazlullah called an “indefinite truce”.

But he gave the government no other guarantee. While the government has pledged not to initiate military operations, the Taliban has not made any similar pledge. They have said nothing about giving up weapons either. There is no indication that Fazlullah will abandon his daily broadcasts, which challenge the government, from an illegal FM station. He earned his nom de guerre Mullah Radio as a result of these broadcasts, in which he and his cohorts preach Talibanic Islam.

Fazlullah made no commitment about allowing girls’ education, which has effectively ended in Swat following a Taliban edict. It is obvious that the Taliban, which is responsible for the killing of hundreds of innocent people in Swat, the destruction and looting of property, and the displacement of over 300,000 people in the past few months, will not submit to the Sharia courts.

“[The Taliban] have won the freedom to operate freely, enlarge their network and to deal with the population as they wish, short of blood-letting,” observed I.A. Rehman, eminent political thinker and the director of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, a non-governmental organisation, writing in the daily Dawn. The people of Swat may welcome the deal now as it has silenced the guns, he wrote, but they may not understand the full implications of rule by the Taliban.

TARIQ MAHMOOD/AFP

Pakistani officials and political and religious leaders meet representatives of Sufi Mohammed, chief of the Tehreek-i-Nifasi-Sharia Mohammadi, in Peshawar on February 16.

Just days after the truce was declared, the Taliban kidnapped a government official who was on his way to Swat to take up his assignment, thus mocking at government notions of re-establishing the “writ of the state” in the district. Point proved, the Taliban released their hostage after a few hours in exchange for the release of two imprisoned militants.

Earlier, a Geo Television journalist, Musa Khankhel, was killed when he was covering Sufi Mohammed’s “peace caravan” through Swat in an effort to convince Fazlullah to accept the offer. Since then, the Swat Taliban have also kidnapped paramilitary personnel.

Even more disquieting, the senior-most government official in Malakand, the Divisional Commissioner, has signed a 17-point agreement with the TNSM, which is to come into force once the NAR is implemented. It includes a ban on music centres and “vulgar” CDs, a campaign against “obscenity and vulgarity”, the closure of markets at prayer times, and the creation of awareness about “social evils”.

Supporters of the deal say the peace it has brought to Swat cannot be underestimated. The popular wisdom is that given the choice between having a son or husband killed in crossfire and wearing a burqa, a woman would not mind wearing two burqas.

Political strategy

They also say that as a political strategy, an agreement to provide quick justice is the best way to marginalise Fazlullah and his radical Islam, as it may wean away the less doctrinaire of his followers to Sufi Mohammed’s side and make them as manageable as the TNSM leader. Or, it could even wean Fazlullah away from his super-boss, Baitullah Mehsud, the Taliban warlord in South Waziristan. The Swat Taliban owes allegiance to the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, which Mehsud heads.

The thinking is that if Fazlullah breaks the truce or acts against the government or continues with his parallel system of justice and governance, the people of Swat, who voted for a secular party and rejected religious forces in the February 2008 elections, will no more oppose an all-out military action against the Taliban even if the collateral costs are high. Hence, if the agreement was surrender, it was only a “tactical” move.

But critics of the deal point out that if the Army was not able to deal with the Taliban in the first instance, there is no guarantee that it would be able to take on a force that would be rested and rejuvenated after the ceasefire. In Pakistan, there is real concern that the Taliban will use its victory in Swat to spread its wings further into the “settled” districts of the NWFP.

The provincial capital, Peshawar, is already awash with militants. The blowing up of the shrine of Rahman Baba, a Sufi saint revered by Pashtuns and across Pakistan, is seen as a wake-up call. Militants blew up the shrine because women visited it in large numbers.

In Islamabad, which is located only a 100 kilometres from Swat, drawing room conversation has for days centred on fears that the Taliban will soon be knocking at the door of the capital. There is also concern that the agreement will embolden militants in other parts of the province, and the country, to resort to a similar strategy in order to have their way with the government.

“If the [government’s] idea is to use the period of this truce to improve security, strengthen, provide equipment and train security personnel, to prepare for the eventuality of taking on the Taliban, then it’s acceptable,” said Rehman. “But if that is not the idea, then we are done for.”

International worries about the deal have centred on the safe haven that Swat could become for the Taliban and allied militant groups, preparatory to a spring offensive in Afghanistan. Swat is not a tribal area in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and, as such, is not yet in the line of drone operations by U.S. forces. The district is also said to be awash with cadres of the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), a militant group based in Punjab and led by Maulana Masood Azhar.

Although the Pakistani establishment goes to great lengths to draw distinctions between the Taliban and the Punjab-based militants, who have traditionally targeted Kashmir and India, evidence suggests that the JeM has deep links with Baitullah Mehsud.

With more questions than answers about the Swat deal, the only thing is to hope, quite perversely, that this most flawed of pacts that the Pakistan government has made with militancy, fails. Already there are signs that it may.

Sufi Mohammed has set March 15 as the deadline for the government to set up the Sharia courts. The NWFP government has said it will do so as soon as President Asif Ali Zardari signs into existence an enabling law. Despite his declared support for it, Zardari has puzzlingly not put his stamp on this yet, perhaps under diplomatic pressure.

Towards theocracy?

Towards theocracy?

PERVEZ AMIRALI HOODBHOY

State and society in Pakistan today.

EMILIO MORENATTI/AP

Women in burqas and children from the Bajaur and Mohmand agency areas wait to be registered at a refugee camp near Peshawar in January. Today a full-scale war is being fought in FATA, Swat and other “wild” areas of Pakistan, with thousands dying and hundreds of thousands of displaced people streaming into cities and towns.

FOR 20 years or more, a few of us in Pakistan have been desperately sending out SOS messages, warning of terrible times to come. Nevertheless, none anticipated how quickly and accurately our dire predictions would come true. It is a small matter that the flames of terrorism set Mumbai on fire and, more recently, destroyed Pakistan’s cricketing future. A much more important and brutal fight lies ahead as Pakistan, a nation of 175 million, struggles for its very survival. The implications for the future of South Asia are enormous.

Today a full-scale war is being fought in FATA (Federally Administered Tribal Areas), Swat and other “wild” areas of Pakistan, with thousands dying and hundreds of thousands of IDPs (internally displaced people) streaming into cities and towns. In February 2009, with the writ of the Pakistani state in tatters, the government gave in to the demand of the TTP (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, the Pakistani Taliban Movement) to implement the Islamic Sharia in Malakand, a region of FATA. It also announced the suspension of a military offensive in Swat, which has been almost totally taken over by the TTP. But the respite that it brought was short-lived and started breaking down only hours later.

The fighting is now inexorably migrating towards Peshawar where, fearing the Taliban, video shop owners have shut shop, banners have been placed in bazaars declaring them closed for women, musicians are out of business, and kidnapping for ransom is the best business in town. Islamabad has already seen Lal Masjid and the Marriot bombing, and has had its police personnel repeatedly blown up by suicide bombers. Today, its barricaded streets give a picture of a city under siege. In Karachi, the Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), an ethnic but secular party well known for strong-arm tactics, has issued a call for arms to prevent the Taliban from making further inroads into the city. Lahore once appeared relatively safe and different but, after the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team, has rejoined Pakistan.

The suicide bomber and the masked abductor have crippled Pakistan’s urban life and shattered its national economy. Soldiers, policemen, factory and hospital workers, mourners at funerals, and ordinary people praying in mosques have been reduced to hideous masses of flesh and fragments of bones. The bearded ones, many operating out of madrassas, are hitting targets across the country. Although a substantial part of the Pakistani public insists upon lionising them as “standing up to the Americans”, they are neither seeking to evict a foreign occupier nor fighting for a homeland. They want nothing less than to seize power and to turn Pakistan into their version of the ideal Islamic state. In their incoherent, ill-formed vision, this would include restoring the caliphate as well as doing away with all forms of western influence and elements of modernity. The AK-47 and the Internet, of course, would stay.

But, perhaps paradoxically, in spite of the fact that the dead bodies and shattered lives are almost all Muslim ones, few Pakistanis speak out against these atrocities. Nor do they approve of military action against the cruel perpetrators, choosing to believe that they are fighting for Islam and against an imagined American occupation. Political leaders like Qazi Husain Ahmed and Imran Khan have no words of kindness for those who have suffered from Islamic extremists. Their tears are reserved for the victims of predator drones, whether innocent or otherwise. By definition, for them terrorism is an act that only Americans can commit.

Why the Denial?

To understand Pakistan’s collective masochism, one needs to study the drastic social and cultural transformations that have made this country so utterly different from what it was in earlier times. For three decades, deep tectonic forces have been silently tearing Pakistan away from the Indian subcontinent and driving it towards the Arabian peninsula.

This continental drift is not physical but cultural, driven by a belief that Pakistan must exchange its South Asian identity for an Arab-Muslim one. Grain by grain, the desert sands of Saudi Arabia are replacing the rich soil that had nurtured a rich Muslim culture in India for a thousand years. This culture produced Mughal architecture, the Taj Mahal, the poetry of Asadullah Ghalib, and much more. Now a stern, unyielding version of Islam – Wahabism – is replacing the kinder, gentler Islam of the sufis and saints who had walked on this land for hundreds of years.

This change is by design. Twenty-five years ago, under the approving gaze of Ronald Reagan’s America, the Pakistani state pushed Islam on to its people. Prayers in government departments were deemed compulsory, floggings were carried out publicly, punishments were meted out to those who did not fast in Ramadan, selection for university academic posts required that the candidate demonstrate knowledge of Islamic teachings, and jehad was declared essential for every Muslim.

Villages have changed drastically, driven in part by Pakistani workers returning from Arab countries. Many village mosques are now giant madrassas that propagate hard-line Salafi and Deobandi beliefs through oversized loudspeakers. They are bitterly opposed to Barelvis, Shias and other Muslims, who they do not consider to be proper Muslims. Punjabis, who were far more liberal towards women than Pashtuns, are now also beginning to take a line resembling the Taliban. Hanafi law has begun to prevail over tradition and civil law, as is evident from recent decisions in the Lahore High Court.

K.M. CHAUDHRY/AP

Pakistan’s Ministry of Education estimates that 1.5 million students are getting religious education in 13,000 madrassas. These figures could be quite off the mark. Commonly quoted figures range between 18,000 and 22,000 such schools. Here, students at the Jamia Manzoorul Islam, a madrassa in Lahore.

In the Pakistani lower-middle and middle-middle classes lurks a grim and humourless Saudi-inspired revivalist movement which frowns on every expression of joy and pleasurable pastime. Lacking any positive connection to history, culture and knowledge, it seeks to eliminate “corruption” by regulating cultural life and seizing control of the education system.

“Classical music is on its last legs in Pakistan; the sarangi and vichtarveena are completely dead,” laments Mohammad Shehzad, a music aficionado. Indeed, teaching music in public universities is violently opposed by students of the Islami Jamaat-e-Talaba at Punjab University. Religious fundamentalists consider music haram. Kathak dancing, once popular with the Muslim elite of India, has no teachers left. Pakistan produces no feature films of any consequence.

As a part of General Zia-ul-Haq’s cultural offensive, Hindi words were expunged from daily use and replaced with heavy-sounding Arabic ones. Persian, the language of Mughal India, had once been taught as a second or third language in many Pakistani schools. But, because of its association with Shiite Iran, it too was dropped and replaced with Arabic. The morphing of the traditional “khuda hafiz” (Persian for “God be with you”) into “allah hafiz” (Arabic for “God be with you”) took two decades to complete. The Arab import sounded odd and contrived, but ultimately the Arabic God won and the Persian God lost.

Genesis of Jehad

One can squarely place the genesis of religious militancy in Pakistan to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 and the subsequent efforts of the U.S.-Pakistan-Saudi grand alliance to create and support the Great Global Jehad of the 20th century. A toxic mix of imperial might, religious fundamentalism, and local interests ultimately defeated the Soviets. But the network of Islamic militant organisations did not disappear after it achieved success. By now the Pakistani Army establishment had realised the power of jehad as an instrument of foreign policy, and so the network grew from strength to strength.

The amazing success of the state is now turning out to be its own undoing. Today the Pakistan Army and establishment are under attack from religious militants, and rival Islamic groups battle each other with heavy weapons. Ironically, the same Army – whose men were recruited under the banner of jehad, and which saw itself as the fighting arm of Islam – today stands accused of betrayal and is almost daily targeted by Islamist suicide bombers. Over 1,800 soldiers have died as of February 2009 in encounters with religious militants, and many have been tortured before decapitation. Nevertheless, the Army is still ambivalent in its relationship with the jehadists and largely focusses upon India.


Education or Indoctrination? Similar sentiments exist in a large part of the Pakistani public media. The commonly expressed view is that Islamic radicalism is a problem only in FATA and that madrassas are the only jehad factories around. This could not be more wrong. Extremism is breeding at a ferocious rate in public and private schools within Pakistan’s towns and cities. Left unchallenged, this kind of education will produce a generation incapable of living together with any except strictly their own kind. Pakistan’s education system demands that Islam be understood as a complete code of life, and creates in the mind of the schoolchild a sense of siege and constant embattlement by stressing that Islam is under threat everywhere.

The government-approved curriculum, prepared by the Curriculum Wing of the Federal Ministry of Education, is the basic road map for transmitting values and knowledge to the young. By an Act of Parliament, passed in 1976, all government and private schools (except for O-level schools) are required to follow this curriculum. It is a blueprint for a religious fascist state.

The masthead of an illustrated primer for the Urdu alphabet states that it has been prepared by Iqra Publishers, Rawalpindi, along “Islamic lines”. Although not an officially approved textbook, it has been used for many years by some regular schools, as well as madrassas, associated with the Jamiat-ul-Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), an Islamic political party that had allied itself with General Pervez Musharraf.

The world of the Pakistani schoolchild was largely unchanged even after September 11, 2001, which led to Pakistan’s timely desertion of the Taliban and the slackening of the Kashmir jehad. Indeed, for all his hypocritical talk of “enlightened moderation”, Musharraf’s educational curriculum was far from enlightening. It was a slightly toned-down copy of that under Nawaz Sharif which, in turn, was identical to that under Benazir Bhutto, who inherited it from Zia-ul-Haq.

Fearful of taking on powerful religious forces, every incumbent government refused to take a position on the curriculum and thus quietly allowed young minds to be moulded by fanatics. What might happen a generation later has always been a secondary matter for a government challenged on so many sides.

The promotion of militarism in Pakistan’s so-called “secular” public schools, colleges and universities had a profound effect upon young minds. Militant jehad became part of the culture on college and university campuses. Armed groups flourished, invited students for jehad in Kashmir and Afghanistan, set up offices throughout the country, collected funds at Friday prayers, and declared a war without borders. Pre-9/11, my university was ablaze with posters inviting students to participate in the Kashmir jehad. After 2001, this slipped below the surface.



For all his hypocritical talk of “enlightened moderation”, General Pervez Musharraf’s educational curriculum was far from enlightening. It was a slightly toned-down copy of that under Nawaz Sharif which, in turn, was identical to that under Benazir Bhutto, who inherited it from Zia-ul-Haq. (From left) Zia-ul-Haq, Benazir Bhutto, Nawaz Sharif and Musharraf.

The madrassas The primary vehicle for Saudi-ising Pakistan’s education has been the madrassa. In earlier times, these had turned out the occasional Islamic scholar, using a curriculum that essentially dates from the 11th century with only minor subsequent revisions. But their principal function had been to produce imams and muezzins for mosques, and those who eked out an existence as “moulvi sahibs” teaching children to read the Quran.

The Afghan jehad changed everything. During the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, madrassas provided the U.S.-Saudi-Pakistani alliance the cannon fodder needed for fighting a holy war. The Americans and the Saudis, helped by a more-than-willing General Zia, funded new madrassas across the length and breadth of Pakistan.

A detailed picture of the current situation is not available. But, according to the national education census, which the Ministry of Education released in 2006, Punjab has 5,459 madrassas followed by the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) with 2,843; Sindh 1,935; Federally Administrated Northern Areas (FANA) 1,193; Balochistan 769; Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) 586; FATA 135; and Islamabad capital territory 77. The Ministry estimates that 1.5 million students are getting religious education in the 13,000 madrassas.

These figures could be quite off the mark. Commonly quoted figures range between 18,000 and 22,000 madrassas. The number of students could be correspondingly larger. The free room, board and supplies to students, form a key part of their appeal. But the desire of parents across the country is for children to be “disciplined” and to be given a thorough Islamic education. This is also a major contributing factor.

Madrassas have deeply impacted upon the urban environment. For example, until a few years ago, Islamabad was a quiet, orderly, modern city different from all others in Pakistan. Still earlier, it had been largely the abode of Pakistan’s hyper-elite and foreign diplomats. But the rapid transformation of its demography brought with it hundreds of mosques with multi-barrelled audio-cannons mounted on minarets, as well as scores of madrassas illegally constructed in what used to be public parks and green areas. Now, tens of thousands of their students with little prayer caps dutifully chant the Quran all day. In the evenings they swarm around the city, making bare-faced women increasingly nervous.

Women – the Lesser Species

Total separation of the sexes is a central goal of the Islamists. Two decades ago the fully veiled student was a rarity on Pakistani university and college campuses. The abaya was an unknown word in Urdu; it is a foreign import. But today, some shops in Islamabad specialise in abaya. At colleges and universities across Pakistan, female students are seeking the anonymity of the burqa. Such students outnumber their sisters who still dare show their faces.

While social conservatism does not necessarily lead to violent extremism, it does shorten the path. Those with beards and burqas are more easily convinced that Muslims are being demonised by the rest of the world. The real problem, they say, is the plight of the Palestinians, the decadent and discriminatory West, the Jews, the Christians, the Hindus, the Kashmir issue, the Bush doctrine, and so on. They vehemently deny that those committing terrorist acts are Muslims or, if faced by incontrovertible evidence, say it is a mere reaction to oppression. Faced with the embarrassment that 200 schools for girls were blown up in Swat by Fazlullah’s militants, they wriggle out by saying that some schools were housing the Pakistan Army, who should be targeted anyway.

ABDUL REHMAN/REUTERS

This high school at Qambar in the Swat valley was among the 200 schools for girls destroyed by the Swat Taliban led by Mullah Fazlullah.

The Prognosis The immediate future is not hopeful: increasing numbers of mullahs are creating cults around themselves and seizing control over the minds of worshippers. In the tribal areas, a string of new Islamist leaders have suddenly emerged: Sufi Mohammad, Baitullah Mehsud, Fazlullah, Mangal Bagh…. The enabling environment of poverty, deprivation, lack of justice, and extreme differences of wealth is perfect for these demagogues. Their gruesome acts of terror and public beheadings are still being perceived by large numbers of Pakistanis as part of the fight against imperialist America and, sometimes, India as well. This could not be more wrong.

The jehadists have longer-range goals. A couple of years ago, a Karachi-based monthly magazine ran a cover story on the terrorism in Kashmir. One fighter was asked what he would do if a political resolution were found for the disputed valley. Revealingly, he replied that he would not lay down his gun but turn it on the Pakistani leadership, with the aim of installing an Islamic government there.

Over the next year or two, we are likely to see more short-lived “peace accords”, as in Malakand, Swat and, earlier on, in Shakai. In my opinion, these are exercises in futility. Until the Pakistan Army finally realises that Mr. Frankenstein needs to be eliminated rather than be engaged in negotiations, it will continue to soft-pedal on counter-insurgency. It will also continue to develop and demand from the U.S. high-tech weapons that are not the slightest use against insurgents. There are some indications that some realisation of the internal threat is dawning, but the speed is as yet glacial.

Even if Mumbai-II occurs, India’s options in dealing with nuclear Pakistan are severely limited. Cross-border strikes should be dismissed from the realm of possibilities. They could lead to escalations that neither government would have control over. I am convinced that India’s prosperity – and perhaps its physical survival – demands that Pakistan stays together. Pakistan could disintegrate into a hell, where different parts are run by different warlords. Paradoxically perhaps, India’s most effective defence could be the Pakistan Army, torn and fractured though it may be. To convert a former enemy army into a possible ally will require that India change tack.

To create a future working alliance with the struggling Pakistani state, and in deference to basic democratic principles, India must be seen as genuinely working towards some kind of resolution of the Kashmir issue. It must not deny that the majority of Kashmiri Muslims are deeply alienated from the Indian state and that they desperately seek balm for their wounds. Else the forces of cross-border jehad, and its hate-filled holy warriors, will continue to receive unnecessary succour.

I shall end this rather grim essay on an optimistic note: the forces of irrationality will surely cancel themselves out because they act in random directions, whereas reason pulls in only one. History leads us to believe that reason will triumph over unreason, and humans will continue their evolution towards a higher and better species. Ultimately, it will not matter whether we are Pakistanis, Indians, Kashmiris, or whatever. Using ways that we cannot currently anticipate, people will somehow overcome their primal impulses of territoriality, tribalism, religion and nationalism. But for now this must be just a hypothesis.

Pervez Amirali Hoodbhoy is Professor and Chairman of the Physics Department at Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad.

Four S. Korean tourists and Yemeni killed in Hadramout

See: Yemen says arrests militants with links to Israel

SANA’A, March 16 (Saba)- Four South Korean tourists, two men and two women, and their Yemeni guide were killed Sunday in an explosion at a mountainous area in the Yemeni province of Hadramout, Interior Ministry said Monday.

“The explosion occurred about 2:45 GMT (6:45 P.M. in Sana’a) while a number of South Korean tourists were paying a visit to a mountainous area in the historical city of Shibam, Hadramout”, a press release of the Ministry reported.

“Five other South Koreans, two men and three women, suffer light injuries due to the incident”.

Security sources said that another Yemeni was also injured in the explosion.

The sources added that the security services are investigating the incident to unearth more details and identify those behind it.

The ancient city of Shibam is a UNESCO World Heritage site. its towering 16th century mud brick buildings have given the city the nickname of “The Manhattan of the desert”.

Five killed in blast at Yemen tourist site

Five killed in blast at Yemen tourist site

SANAA: Four South Korean tourists and a Yemeni man were killed in an explosion at a tourist site in Yemen, a Yemeni security official said on Sunday. The official said authorities were investigating the incident in the city of Shibam, in the southern province of Hadramout, and trying to identify those behind it. The official said the explosion occurred when the tourists visited the city dubbed ‘the Manhattan of the Desert’, which boasts the world’s oldest skyscrapers dating back to the 16th century. Asked if the explosion was an attack, the official said: “Maybe it was a terrorist attack, but it could be remnants of dynamite from a mine going off.” Separately, authorities said they had arrested Abdullah al-Harbi, a Saudi man who was on a list of 85 suspected militants issued by Saudi Arabia in February. In January 2008, two Belgian tourists were killed in Yemen in an attack blamed on Al Qaeda-linked militants, who launched frequent attacks on government officials and westerners, including a US warship and a French supertanker. Yemen, one of the poorest outside Africa, is seen as a stronghold of Islamist militants. The Saudi list was issued after Al Qaeda’s wing in Yemen – Osama bin Laden’s ancestral home – issued a video on the Internet in which it changed its name to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, in an apparent attempt to revive the Islamic militant group in Saudi Arabia. The leader of the group, a Yemeni, appeared on the video and threatened to attack the westerners in the region. reuters

Three terrorism attempts foiled

Three terrorism attempts foiled

PESHAWAR/DI KHAN/ QUETTA: Law enforcement agencies on Sunday foiled three separate terrorism attempts, including two attempted bombings, in various parts of the country.

Peshawar police seized 10 kilogrammes of explosives packed with 400 ball bearings from a car on PAF Road and arrested two suspects. According to APP, the trigger mechanism was remote-controlled with a cell phone. Further investigation is underway to determine the intended target of the bombing.

Separately, Dera Ismail Khan city police defused a homemade 15kg bomb. The police, with the aid of the army and a bomb disposal squad, were responding to reports of a suspicious bag found near CRBC Chowk. DI Khan District Police Officer Iqbal Khan told Online the bomb was planted along the route of an army convoy.

Also on Sunday, Frontier Corps (FC) recovered a large quantity of arms and ammunition and arrested seven people in Rakhani. The FC, on a tip-off, raided a house in Rakhani and recovered seven rifles, four sub-machine guns, two pistols, and 545 rounds of ammunition, Online reported.

Separately, unidentified men fired four rockets in Sui, however no casualties were reported. In another incident, a bomb blast occurred near a security forces camp in Khuzdar. While no casualties were reported, security forces injured two people during retaliatory fire. agencies

Two Sunnis shot dead in DI Khan, Pushing Sectarian Conflict

Two Sunnis shot dead in DI Khan

PESHAWAR: Two Sunnis were shot dead on Sunday in the second apparent sectarian attack in Dera Ismail Khan in as many days, said a senior police official. Muhammad Shoaib and Asad Khan were killed one day after a Shia couple were shot dead by armed motorcyclists in the same area. The two men were coming out of a mosque when the gunmen opened fire, before escaping on a motorbike, police official Ehsanullah Khan told AFP. “It seems to be a sectarian killing,” he added. So far no one has been arrested in connection with either attack. afp

‘Sharia to be enforced in other areas after Swat’

‘Sharia to be enforced in other areas after Swat’

MINGORA: The government would soon appoint qazis in other areas after their appointment in Swat completes, NWFP Information Minister Iftikhar Hussain said on Sunday. He said the qazis’ appointments in other areas would fulfil the government’s promise of enforcing sharia in the region. Iftikhar said he had directed officials of the Swat Education Board to refund examination fees collected from students in Swat. He said the reconstruction of destroyed schools in the district would start soon, meanwhile the students in Swat were being taught in makeshift schools. staff report

Two Israeli policemen shot dead in West Bank

Two Israeli policemen shot dead in West Bank

JERUSALEM: Two Israeli policemen were shot dead in an attack on Sunday near a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. “Two policemen who were travelling in the Jordan Valley were shot dead. According to the initial investigation it is an attack,” he said. An anonymous caller claimed responsibility for the attack on behalf of the “Imad Mughniyeh Group” in a telephone call to AFP. It denied involvement. Police and the army sent reinforcements to the scene of the attack and a search has begun in a bid to track down the assailants, Rosenfeld said. Haaretz newspaper reported on its website that one policeman was killed on the spot and that the other died of his wounds shortly after emergency services arrived. afp

Police arrest Lahore attack suspect in eastern Pak.

Police arrest Lahore attack suspect

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: Police have arrested the alleged owner of a mobile SIM that was used in the recent terrorist attack on a visiting Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore, a private TV channel reported on Sunday.

The channel quoted police sources as saying that police arrested the suspect, Arshad Mehmoud, from Sadiqabad.

US missile attack kills 5 in Bannu

US missile attack kills 5 in Bannu

DERA ISMAIL KHAN: Intelligence officials said late on Sunday that two missiles fired by suspected United States drone planes killed five people in Bannu. The officials said the dead included two Arabs and three other people. They said the attacks occurred in Chota Janikhel village near Bannu district. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the media. Reuters reported that the missiles struck a house at around 10:30pm. Bannu lies at the gateway to the North Waziristan Agency, a known haven for Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters. agencies

Predator Attack in Bannu

Tribal areas map

A missile suspected to have been fired by a US drone has killed at least five people in north-western Pakistan, officials say.

The missile hit a house in Janikhel, in the Bannu district of North West Frontier Province, late on Sunday.

Correspondents say this is the sixth drone attack on Pakistani territory since Barack Obama became US president.

Pakistan is critical of the tactic because, it says, civilians are often killed, fuelling support for militants.

Separately, an attack on a terminal on the outskirts of Peshawar has destroyed supplies bound for Nato troops in Afghanistan, the second such attack in as many days.

Criticised

Local tribesmen in Janikhel said the house destroyed in the missile attack was frequented by the Taleban and foreign militants.

All the men killed were militants and they included two Arabs, the tribesmen said.

Local administration officials confirmed the missile attack but said the identity of the dead could not be confirmed.

Vodpod videos no longer available.

All the supplies on the trucks were destroyed in the Peshawar attack

This is the second attack in the region in the past five days.

Twenty-five people were killed in a missile strike on a Taleban compound in the tribal region of Kurrum on 12 March.

The attacks are believed to have been carried out by US drones, although this has never been formally acknowledged by the US authorities.

Pakistan’s government has strongly criticised the attacks, which have led to an increase in anti-Americanism in the country.

The attack on the Peshawar terminal took place at 0300 on Monday (2200GMT Sunday) when militants used rockets to strike lorries parked at the terminal.

At least eight trucks were destroyed and several others damaged as a blaze engulfed the terminal.

A policeman told the BBC that all the supplies loaded on the trucks had been destroyed.

This is the second such attack on Nato terminals in as many days.

Before dawn on Sunday, about 40 militants attacked the Pak-Afghan Container Terminal near Peshawar burning dozens of vehicles and containers.

The road from Peshawar to Afghanistan is a major supply route for US and Western forces battling the Taleban.

What is India trying to hide?

What is India trying to hide?
(Op/Ed)

Friday 13th of March 2009
Dr. Amarjit Singh, Khalistan Affairs Center

India MUST share DNA information about Mumbai attack -says INTERPOL Secretary General R. Noble

Washington D.C. – Our comment on last November’s ‘seaborne invasion’, (in the Khalistan Calling dated 31 december, 2008) that, “India’s (LINK) Chanakyan rulers are hiding something in their dezinformatsiya (official version of the Mumbai carnage they have broadcast to the world when they refused to share information with Interpol) has now been proved right. Obviously there is truth in the scuttlebutt that the Mumbai incident, orchestrated by Indian Military Intelligence to eliminate the MaharashtraAnti-Terrorist squad, went wrong.

Some of our esteemed readers, who were taken in by the Indian version (broadcast by rote) about the orchestrated Mumbai killings (and some dumb ‘confessional’ statements published in the Pakistan media) were uncomfortable with our commentaries which have ridiculed and exposed Indian official agencies for orchestrating terrorist acts inside India. like the ‘attack on the Indian parliament’; ‘bomb blasts in the Indo-Pak Samjhota express train; and the November 2008 ‘seaborne invasion of Mumbai by twelve ‘Pakistani terrorists’who were supposed to have sailed 500 miles through the roughArabian sea in a small fishing boat before landing in Mumbai in a plastic dinghy and then going on a 3-day long killing spree, under TV lights, in an armed confrontation with more than a thousand bumbling Indian army commandos and Mahrashtra state policemen.

The Interpol (an international organization whose primary crime area, among other things, is Public Safety and International Terrorism) has now, repeated last Sunday, its December demand, that India MUST cooperate with INTERPOL and provide details of DNA profiles they had obtained in their investigation into the Mumbai ‘terror attacks’. Pakistan had agreed last December to provide similar details to the global agency.

According to a report from its Islamabad corresponded, Nirupama Subramanian, India’s leading newspaper HINDU, the respectedAmerican secretary-general of INTERPOL, (LINK) Mr. Ronald K. Noble, (on his second visit to Pakistan since the Mumbai attacks) lavished praise on Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency’s investigation into the Mumbai ‘attack’and said it had set an example for police cooperation the world over. “He also showered praise on the Pakistani leadership for its ‘courage’ in carrying out the investigation and in admitting that the attacks may have been partially planned in Pakistan. Addressing a press conference in Islamabad last week, Mr. Noble said that, “Pakistan had agreed to share the DNA information it had obtained during its investigation. This DNA data would be compared with the Interpol global database of 83,000 DNA profiles. Information exchanged through the Interpol data could not only result in potential breakthroughs in the Pakistani and Indian investigations, but will also help other police forces protect their citizens from terrorist attacks. In order for these comparisons to be completed, India will be required to send Interpol the DNA profiles they have obtained in their investigations as well.”

According to another Islamabad-datelined report by the Press Trust of India news agency, headlined, ‘Interpol asks India to give DNA details,’published in the Hindustan Times of 9 March, 2009, the Interpol secretary general also said that his agency, “was working to uncover links to the Mumbai strike in seven countries including India, the others being in Europe and the Middle East but did not give details. The Interpol plea came even as Pakistan pressed India not to delay its reply to the 30 questions by Pakistan seeking more information on the Mumbai attacks so that it could successfully prosecute the Pakistani suspects saying that ‘only 13 days are left in the remand of four Pakistani suspects under arrest.’The Hindustan Times report went on to say that, “Information exchanged through the Interpol data could not only result in potential breakthroughs in the Pakistani investigation but will also help other police forces protect their citizens from terrorist attacks”. Mr. Noble also revealed in the press conference that, ‘India has failed to provide its Mumbai report to Interpol’. Readers may recollect that none other than the Russian ambassador to India had ridiculed the theory that Mumbai was invaded in a seaborne invasion by ten ‘Pakistani terrorists’ after traveling five hundred miles across the Arabian Sea, in a small fishing boat. The Russian diplomat suggested to the media, in November last year, that ‘elements of the Indian criminal mafia in Mumbai had organized the November Mumbai attacks’.

Interestingly the Daily Times of Lahore, whose correspondent attended Mr. Noble’s press conference in Islamabad (Pakistan), carried a report which said that, “Visiting Interpol General Secretary Richard K. Noble on Sunday called on India to take the lead in investigations into the Mumbai attacks, saying that Indian authorities had so far failed to provide any report to Interpol.” Mr. Noble was quoted as saying that, “For the first time, (LINK) we have detailed information on telephone numbers, bank accounts used in terrorist financing as well as internet addresses and the equipment and materials used to perpetrate these attacks.” The Interpol chief further said that his organization “has sent key leads and information received from Pakistan to all of Interpol’s 187 member countries so that they could better protect their citizens and provide valuable information to Pakistan. Mr. Noble also said that cooperation of the Pakistani authorities, following the Mumbai attacks, had been nothing short of extraordinary, adding that Islamabad had shown integrity by publicly admitting that the Mumbai attacks had been partly planned in the country.” According to the Daily Times, Interpol secretary general Noble told the press conference that seven countries, including India and some European states, were used for perpetrating the attacks.

INTERPOL, (correct full name is ‘The International Criminal Police Organization) as readers may know, was created in 1923. It facilitates cross-border police co-operation, and supports and assists all organizations, authorities and services whose mission is to prevent or combat international crime. It is the world’s largest police organization. INTERPOL’s mission is to assist law enforcement agencies in each of its 187 member countries (including India and Pakistan) to combat all forms of transnational crime including terrorism. Guided by four core functions, INTERPOL provides a high-tech infrastructure of technical and operational support to enable police forces around the world to meet the growing challenges of crime in the 21st century. The Interpol General Secretariat in Lyon, France, is operational 24 hours a day, seven days a week, providing a central contact point for the National Central Bureau (NCB) in every member country (187 members) for assistance or information on cross-border investigations. INTERPOL’s six priority crime areas are; Countering terrorism, which threatens public safety and world security; Tackling the growing problem of drug abuse and trafficking, often linked to other crimes; Financial and High-tech Crime; Tracing fugitives, who threaten public safety and undermine criminal justice systems; Trafficking in human beings; Fighting abuse and exploitation of people, which breach human rights and destroy lives; and lastly, working together towards a corruption-free world by promoting and defending integrity and justice.

Mr. Ronald K. Noble, an American citizen, was elected Secretary General by the 69th INTERPOL General Assembly in Rhodes, Greece, in 2000, and was unanimously re-elected to a second five-year term by the 74th INTERPOL General Assembly in Berlin, (LINK) Germany, in 2005. He is also is a tenured Professor of Law at New York University School of Law, on leave of absence while serving as INTERPOL’s Secretary General. Mr. Noble previously served as the United States Department of Treasury’s first Undersecretary for Enforcement (1993-1996), where he was in charge of some of the US’s then-largest law enforcement agencies, including the Secret Service, Customs Service, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Federal Law Enforcement Training Center, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and Office of Foreign Assets Control. Prior to that, he served as an Assistant US Attorney and Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the US Department of Justice (1984-1989). A former member of  INTERPOL’s Executive Committee, Mr. Noble was also President of the 26-nation Financial Action Task Force, the anti-money laundering organization established by the G7 in 1989. Mr. Noble served as a Law Clerk for Judge A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr., of the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, from 1982-1984, where he received the highest evaluation ever given to a Law Clerk by Judge Higginbotham. Under Mr. Noble’s leadership, INTERPOL has reorganized its activities around four core functions, transformed its technology and revitalized its databases and operational police support services. We repeat the question we asked in the Khalistan Calling of 31 December, 2008 about the Chanakyan rulers of India. Who is better qualified than Interpol Secretary General, Ronald
K. Noble, to investigate the socalled amphibian ‘invasion’of Mumbai on 26 November, 2008, by ten armed ‘terrorists’who India claims are Pakistanis? Were the ten ‘invaders’ all Pakistani or was it an Al Qaida attack in which nationals of many countries took part? Or did India (as a Daily Times of Lahore editorial on March 9 has suggested) stage manage the Mumbai attack, to put Pakistan under Western and American pressure?

Commenting on the attack, the other day, on the Sri Lankan Cricket team ambush in Lahore, Pakistan, (which Colombo now thinks had LITTE – Tamil – finger prints on it) India’s Foreign minister, Pranab Mukherjee, is reported in the media as having snorted that it clearly showed Pakistan’s lack of will or capability to tackle terrorism. This is some hypocrisy coming from a country which has been engaged in state terrorism for the past sixty years against its own minorities – like the Sikhs, Muslims and Christians – and acts of terror which target India’s smaller neighbors. It is indeed baffling that Mukherjee, and others of that ilk, among the Indian rulers, are least troubled by the apparently unending terrorism by Naxalites, who are hyper-active in a swath running across rural India in several states (from the Indo-Nepal border to the Andhra coast) where the writ of the Indian government does not exist in nearly 250 (yes 250) districts. Just this weekend, on two days running the armed Naxalites targeted two railway stations in Bihar, vandalising and burning them. Ironically, the second attack took place barely 15 minutes after five eastern states had started a bandh in protest against the first outrage. These two attacks may not be so dastardly as some other Naxalite crimes such as brazen slaughter of special police inside their camps in Chhattisgarh or the massacre of Andhra’s “greyhounds” (police commandos) sailing on Chilka lake on the way back home after completing a counter-terrorism mission in Orissa, but they cannot be dismissed lightly. They underscore that Naxal ‘terrorists’ or cadre are operating with impunity in rural India. No matter how brazenly heinous their crimes, none of them has even been arrested, leave alone being punished. This is so despite the thundering announcements of “massive manhunts” to bring the guilty to book. Many people other than the victims seem to be indulgent to these Maoists because their violence has socio-economic-caste overtones. Some Indians even see them as protectors of tribals who are usually exploited and oppressed by forest contractors and others enjoying official patronage. But, doesn’t this run counter to the fundamental doctrine, trumpeted by the Indian ruling elite, (like the ‘Deputy’ Prime minister and Foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee) when preaching about terrorism that no cause can be a justification for terror?

Commenting on the delaying tactics of New Delhi to reply to the thirty questions Pakistan is asking about the Mumbai attack, the India-friendly Daily Times newspaper of (LINK) Lahore, Pakistan, has yesterday, in an editorial, headlined, “India should make up its mind”, said that, “The time India is taking over the thirty questions is denting its credibility at the international level and causing suspicion to creep into the universal sympathy India had won after the Mumbai attacks. This suspicion will sooner rather than later cause reaction inside Pakistan too, resurrecting the charges made earlier about India stage-managing the attacks to put Pakistan under pressure. Who were the other eight (now dead) attackers? Were they from Pakistan or were they from India or came in from countries other than Pakistan to take part in the “operation”? More lethally, India’s refusal to share information will strengthen the hands of those who believe that Lahore’s March 3 ambush of the Sri Lankan cricketers too was orchestrated by India.”

Getting Started in the Garden – Techniques and Terms

Gardening is one of the most enjoyable and relaxing activities around. Siting a garden bed, choosing plants and making them thrive are techniques you can learn. Here are some fundamental concepts and ideas to get you growing in the right direction.
Gardening Basics – Getting Started in the Garden
Starting a garden should be a pleasure. But it does help to have a little knowledge of how to go about making a garden. Here’s a quic selection of articles to give you confidence in creating your won garden.

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Starting a New Garden
Starting your first garden shouldn’t be a daunting task. Probably the best piece of advice is – Start Small. If you’re frozen in your steps, wondering what to plant, where to plant it, how to not kill it…, here’s a bottom line Step-by-Step primer for you. Veteran gardeners, how many times have you been asked for help from frazzled first timers. Here are some tips to pass along.
Planning a Vegetable Garden
Fortunately, growing vegetables is pretty easy. Whether you are starting to plan your first vegetable garden or dreaming up your next, growing great tasting vegetables and staying ahead of problems does take a little knowledge and effort. The following lessons will get your vegetable garden up and running in no time.
Frugal Gardening
It’s easy to get carried away planting a garden. Even after you’ve bought all the necessary tools and supplies, there are always more plants to covet and new gadgets to try. But that doesn’t mean your garden has to turn into a sink hole for your money. Some of the best gardening tips don’t cost a cent and some will help you save money for years. Here are 10 no-pain ways to save money and reso…
Tips for a Better Garden
Great gardeners seem to know all the little secrets for making plants happy. Luckily, gardeners love to share almost as much as they love to talk about their gardens. Here’s a collection of quick gardening tips and ideas to make your garden better. Feel free to share you gardening quick tips too.
Top Plant Picks – Top 10 Lists of Garden Plants for Specific Needs
Need a clay buster? A rose for shade? What to try growing some of those heirloom vegetables you’ve heard about? Wish your annuals would self-seed? These lists will give you some top plant varieties, whatever your garden needs.
2 Minute Videos to Help Make You A Better Gardener
Gardening how-to video library. 2 Minute Videos to Help Make You A Better Gardener. Sometimes a picture really is worth a thousand words. The videos in this gallery will show you how to prune roses and shrubs, plant trees – even make your garden look larger than it is!
Seed Starting – How to Successfully Start Plants from Seed
Starting plants from seed isn’t rocket science, but there are several seed starting tips that will help your success rate with seed germination and give your seedlings a healthy start.
Deadheading, Pinching and Cutting Back
Flower gardens require constant maintenance to look their best. Common garden chores like pruning, pinching and deadheading are easy to master, as show here in this step-by-step photo tutorial.
Cuttings – How to Make More Plants with Cuttings
Increase the plants in your home and garden by taking cuttings from existing plants and rooting them to make more plants.
Weather Predicting: How To Make a Monthly Climate Data Calendar
The Midwestern Regional Climate Center is providing a free, online program where users can create calenders to tell them things like: average temperatures, heating and cooling degree days and precipitation. And it’s easy to use! Here’s a quick How-To from About’s Guide to Weather, Rachelle Oblack.
Gardening Terminology – Useful Terms to Know About Gardening
Gardening can sometimes sound like a foreign language, with hybrids, drupes and herbaceous plants. This garden glossary is meant to assist you in deciphering gardening terminology.
Gardening Quotes of the Month
A compilation of words of wisdom as quoted by fellow gardeners.

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Free Gardening Newsletter!

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WHERE’S WALDO? Hot Pursuit of the Tall Lanky Corpse

Where is Osama bin Laden? U.S. zeros in on Chitral, Pakistan in hunt for 9/11 mastermind

Updated Saturday, March 14th 2009, 6:00 PM

Raedle/Getty/Getty Images

A United States Army chinook helicopter flies over the snow capped Hindu Kush mountains. Recent drones support other intelligence that the mountains are Osama bin Laden’s hideout.

WASHINGTON – Where’s Osama? Try Chitral, once a trekkers’ paradise in Pakistan that has been sealed off to outsiders and is now regularly buzzed by American spy drones.

The U.S. won’t say it officially, but an exhaustive Daily News investigation finds the world’s biggest manhunt for the monster who murdered nearly 3,000 people on 9/11 has zeroed in on Chitral’s stunning peaks and deep valleys.

graf_pakistan-map1

Party mood as Pakistanis celebrate climbdown

Party mood as Pakistanis celebrate climbdown

Pakistani lawyers and opposition party activists celebrate after Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was reinstated outside his residence in Islamabad. — APP

Pakistani lawyers and opposition party activists celebrate after Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was reinstated outside his residence in Islamabad. — APP

GUJRANWALA: Dancing and weeping with joy, supporters of Pakistan’s main opposition leader Nawaz Sharif showered him with rose petals Monday after the government moved to defuse a raging crisis.

A day after running street battles with police, the mood turned to one of celebration outside the house in Punjab province where Sharif spent the night ahead of a planned mass protest march on the capital Islamabad.

The reason was a government climbdown as Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani announced it would reinstate the nation’s top judge, who was sacked in 2007, and end a crackdown on the opposition.

‘For me this day is as historic and grand as the day when our country won independence from the British,’ said 50-year-old Saeed Hasan, wearing a white shalway kameez, a traditional Pakistani dress.

Sharif, Pakistan’s most popular politician, quickly called off the protest march which the government had previously banned.

His car was stranded in a sea of well-wishers who coated its roof in pink rose petals and pressed against the vehicle, straining to catch a glimpse of their hero in the front seat talking to television stations.

Delighted lawyers, activists and political opponents danced to the beat of drums, waving party flags and punching the air in delight.

‘I am happier than when my children were born,’ said local businessman and 27-year-old father Shafqat Mehmood.

‘An independent judiciary means our country is now in safe hands.’ Activists and supporters chanted praise to Allah and hailed Sharif and the judiciary, flashing signs of V for victory.

The dispute over the reinstatement of deposed Supreme Court chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry and scores of other judges brought the nuclear-armed nation to the brink of chaos.

They were deposed by Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan’s then military ruler, in 2007, but were not reinstated by Asif Ali Zardari — despite his promises — when he took office as president last year.

In Islamabad, hundreds thronged outside Chaudhry’s residence, hugging each other, dancing and reciting revolutionary poetry.

A huge cheer roared through the compound when Gilani made his announcement.
‘Long live Chaudhry, long live the judiciary,’ they screamed.

‘It is a new beginning,’ said Mohammad Sharif, an activist who travelled to Islamabad from the southern port city of Karachi. ‘Pakistan has started giving birth to revolution.’ Sadia Azmat, a teacher from Lahore, capital of Sharif’s Punjab power base, was stunned to realise there were no more police stopping her from getting to Chaudhry’s home.

‘What a moment we have been witness to. I’ll never forget it in my life,’ she proclaimed.

As they celebrated, authorities began dismantling the barricades which had been erected to block lawyers and opposition supporters from marching on the capital.
Lawyers in the northwestern city of Peshawar gathered in courts where they danced and distributed sweets, witnesses said.

Mission Accomplished ! Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry to be restored as Chief Justice of Pakistan


ISLAMABAD, Mar 16: In a historic address to the nation, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani announced on Monday to restore the deposed Chief Justice of Pakistan, Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry.

The prime minister also pledged that the government would steer the country out of the numerous domestic and international challenges facing it. The prime minister said that after consultations with all political forces of the country and President Asif Ali Zardari, the government has decided to restore all deposed judges including Justice Iftikahr Muhammad Chaudhry as Chief Justice of Pakistan who will assume charge on March 21. The current Chef Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar retires on March 21.

“I announce today that Iftikhar Chaudhry and all other deposed judges will be reinstated from March 21,” he said in his televised address to the nation.

The current supreme court chief justice will retire on that date, allowing Chaudhry to take over, the premier said. He said that a notification for the reinstatement of the deposed chief justice would also be issued. The prime minister urged all the political forces and lawyers to work for the solidarity and welfare of the country.

Gilani said the country is standing at a critical moment. He said that no country could make progress without political tolerance and co-existence.

Speaking about the struggle for the independence of judiciary, the PM said that the lawyers and the PPP had been together for the cause of justice and democracy.

He said that Shaheed Mohtrama Benazir Bhutto actively participated in the lawyers struggle for the restoration of deposed judges. “Benazir Bhutto wanted free judiciary and supremacy of the constitution and she had promised for his restoration. PPP respects the educated segment of the society”, Gilani added.

Gilani said the federal government would file a review petition against the disqualification of the Sharif brothers. “I invite Sharif brothers to come forward to work together in the light of the Charter of democracy”.

Kissinger’s 1974 Plan for Food Control Genocide

On Dec. 10, 1974, the U.S. National Security Council under Henry Kissinger completed a classified 200-page study, “National Security Study Memorandum 200: Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S. Security and Overseas Interests.” The study falsely claimed that population growth in the so-called Lesser Developed Countries (LDCs) was a grave threat to U.S. national security. Adopted as official policy in November 1975 by President Gerald Ford, NSSM 200 outlined a covert plan to reduce population growth in those countries through birth control, and also, implicitly, war and famine. Brent Scowcroft, who had by then replaced Kissinger as national security adviser (the same post Scowcroft was to hold in the Bush administration), was put in charge of implementing the plan. CIA Director George Bush was ordered to assist Scowcroft, as were the secretaries of state, treasury, defense, and agriculture.

The bogus arguments that Kissinger advanced were not original. One of his major sources was the Royal Commission on Population, which King George VI had created in 1944 “to consider what measures should be taken in the national interest to influence the future trend of population.” The commission found that Britain was gravely threatened by population growth in its colonies, since “a populous country has decided advantages over a sparsely-populated one for industrial production.” The combined effects of increasing population and industrialization in its colonies, it warned, “might be decisive in its effects on the prestige and influence of the West,” especially effecting “military strength and security.”

NSSM 200 similarly concluded that the United States was threatened by population growth in the former colonial sector. It paid special attention to 13 “key countries” in which the United States had a “special political and strategic interest”: India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Turkey, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia. It claimed that population growth in those states was especially worrisome, since it would quickly increase their relative political, economic, and military strength.

For example, Nigeria: “Already the most populous country on the continent, with an estimated 55 million people in 1970, Nigeria’s population by the end of this century is projected to number 135 million. This suggests a growing political and strategic role for Nigeria, at least in Africa.” Or Brazil: “Brazil clearly dominated the continent demographically.” The study warned of a “growing power status for Brazil in Latin America and on the world scene over the next 25 years.”

Food as a weapon

There were several measures that Kissinger advocated to deal with this alleged threat, most prominently, birth control and related population-reduction programs. He also warned that “population growth rates are likely to increase appreciably before they begin to decline,” even if such measures were adopted.

A second measure was curtailing food supplies to targetted states, in part to force compliance with birth control policies: “There is also some established precedent for taking account of family planning performance in appraisal of assistance requirements by AID [U.S. Agency for International Development] and consultative groups. Since population growth is a major determinant of increases in food demand, allocation of scarce PL 480 resources should take account of what steps a country is taking in population control as well as food production. In these sensitive relations, however, it is important in style as well as substance to avoid the appearance of coercion.”

“Mandatory programs may be needed and we should be considering these possibilities now,” the document continued, adding, “Would food be considered an instrument of national power? … Is the U.S. prepared to accept food rationing to help people who can’t/won’t control their population growth?”

Kissinger also predicted a return of famines that could make exclusive reliance on birth control programs unnecessary. “Rapid population growth and lagging food production in developing countries, together with the sharp deterioration in the global food situation in 1972 and 1973, have raised serious concerns about the ability of the world to feed itself adequately over the next quarter of century and beyond,” he reported.

The cause of that coming food deficit was not natural, however, but was a result of western financial policy: “Capital investments for irrigation and infrastucture and the organization requirements for continuous improvements in agricultural yields may be beyond the financial and administrative capacity of many LDCs. For some of the areas under heaviest population pressure, there is little or no prospect for foreign exchange earnings to cover constantly increasingly imports of food.”

“It is questionable,” Kissinger gloated, “whether aid donor countries will be prepared to provide the sort of massive food aid called for by the import projections on a long-term continuing basis.” Consequently, “large-scale famine of a kind not experienced for several decades—a kind the world thought had been permanently banished,” was foreseeable—famine, which has indeed come to pass.

To read the entire NSSM 200 document, click here.

To read the full report from EIR Magazine, follow the link below:
Who Is Responsible for the World Food Shortage?

Related Pages:

Food For Peace Page

Survival Tips from “the Gates of Hell”

Survival Tips from “the  Gates of Hell”

Herbal Household Remedies

Country Living Skills

Mullen sketches out ‘US strike’ on Iran

Mullen sketches out ‘US strike’ on Iran

The Rebel Media Group

davari20090315221044843The top US military commander describes how Washington would engage Iran militarily amid simmering talks of war on the country.

In a weekend interview with Charlie Rose, Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said although he is concerned with the ‘consequences’ of a military action against Iran, the army could rely on a ‘very strong strategic reserve’.

“We have the capacity to do it but we are stretched. My ground forces are very stressed, very worn… On the other hand we’ve got a very strong strategic reserve in our Air Force and in our Navy and in fact that’s a part of the world, it’s a maritime part of the world, where the emphasis would certainly be on those two forces,” explained Adm. Mullen.

His remarks come as Israeli Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi is currently in the US to discuss “the Iranian threat” with the heads of the defense establishment and the US Secretary of State’s special adviser for the Persian Gulf and Southwest Asia, Dennis Ross, according to Israeli media.

The US and Israel accuse Iran, a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), of having military objectives in its pursuit of nuclear technology.

While Israel repeatedly threatens to launch aerial strikes against Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, the US — under the previous administration as well as the current one — warns that the use of military option remains on the table to retard the country’s nuclear program.

As Western doubts linger over the success of any Israeli military plan against Iran as well as Tehran’s retaliation warnings, the US is expected to be involved — voluntarily or forcibly — in a potential war against Iran.

Adm. Mullen argued that a war against Iran would set off “unintended” outcomes and endanger US interests in the oil-rich region.

“What I worry about in terms of an attack on Iran is in addition to the immediate effect, the effect of the attack, it’s the unintended consequences,” Mullen said. “So I worry about the responses and I worry about it escalating in ways that we couldn’t predict.”

“So that kind of option generates a much higher level of risk in terms of outcomes in the region and it really concerns me,” he added.

Earlier reports suggested that Israel’s Prime Minister-designate, Benjamin Netanyahu, anticipates being involved in a “major military confrontation in the next few months”.

Netanyahu is known as “Mr. Iran” in Israeli circles as he has long pledged to do “everything that is necessary” to stop the progress of Tehran’s nuclear program once and for all.

Iran contends that its only goal is to make use of the civilian applications of the nuclear technology and has warned that it would not hesitate to take all necessary measures to defend its national interests.

Meanwhile in the White House, President Barack Obama is believed to be drawing up plans to engage Iran in diplomacy over the disputed nuclear program.