Monday, January 31, 2005

Pak, Afghan troops exchange fire at Angoor Adda

Pak, Afghan troops exchange fire at Angoor Adda

By Sailab Mahsud

TANK: Pakistani and Afghan security forces exchanged fire for more than 15 minutes on their Durand Line border near the Angoor Adda, a border village in South Waziristan tribal agency, in the wee hours of Sunday.

Tribal sources in Angoor Adda, sited just inside Pakistani territory, said one Afghan soldier was killed and another injured in the firing at 3am on Sunday. They claimed the Pakistani border guards belonging to the paramilitary Frontier Corps did not suffer any casualties.

It is not known as to why the Afghan troops tried to enter Pakistani territory. Border clashes between Afghan and Pakistani troops have taken place in the past also. On most occasions, the poorly defined border has led to clashes. Not long ago, a Pakistani soldier from the Frontier Corps was killed and two of his colleagues were wounded when fired at by Afghan forces near the border in Saidgai village in North Waziristan.

The reality of the Karachi Stock Exchange

Share values running feverishly high -DAWN - Business; 31 January, 2005

FIRST THE INDEX: The composition of KSE index is such that just two of the 100 shares in the index account for 34 per cent weight age: Oil and Gas Development Corporation (OGDC) -22 per cent and Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited (PTCL)- 12 per cent.

All of that means that just a rupee rise in the value of those two stocks would add as many as 34 points to the index. A classic example of how much influence PTCL and OGDC exert on the index was witnessed this Thursday.

PTCL stock rose by Rs 4.60, which meant that it pushed the index up by 55 points. Overall the KSE-100 index closed 48 points higher. But that scarcely was a sign of the bullish onslaught, for the shares of most companies across the board had dropped like nine pins.

Were it not for the PTCL stock, the index would have closed 50 points down, instead of 48 points up. It can roughly be worked out that in the phenomenal rise of 1200 points in the KSE-100 index over the last three months, contribution of PTCL and OGDC accounted for 800 points and the other 400 points were added by the remaining 98 companies combined.

That is not really to suggest that the index is altogether misleading. It has been framed in a clear and transparent way and weightage of all 100 stocks fit their criteria.

But having said that, it also has to be seen if the index needs to be recomposed in a way that it encompasses aura of the broader market. An investor who looks up just at the rise and fall of index to make and investment decision is unintentionally misled.

Friday, January 28, 2005

whine whine whine...and then some

This is what you get for suporting jihadis.

Education by Fire
By Bilal Lakhani

Among citizens of other countries, most of them Muslim, all Pakistani males in the United States above the age of 16 are, courtesy a new law, now required to register with the American Imigration and Naturalisation Service (INS). The drill includes fingerprinting, oath-taking (I swear I am not a terrorist), and extensive interrogation.

The INS diktat is sweeping: it spares noone from the designated countries. Thus programmers, engineers and doctors alike are queuing up at INS offices closest to them. And while some have breezed through, there are enough horror stories - even just those culled from American newspapers - to indicate that for expats and visitors to the US, especially those of the Islamic variety, the honeymoon is over. And it's not just those physically present in the States that are affected. Pakistani students aspiring to higher education have also become victims of the post September 11, post-INS registration world order.

Pakistani students applying to American universities have found their visa applications stalled; instead of taking the standard two to three weeks to be processed, a new policy requiring each and every application to be sent to Washington D.C. for background checks has meant that many students have had to wait up to six months for their student visas, and have consequently been forced to defer admission.

Take 24-year-old Yasir Khwaja's case. A recent psychology graduate from George Washington University, Khwaja gained admission to Ivy-League Columbia University last fall for his Masters. While home in Pakistan over the summer, Khwaja applied for his visa almost immediately, in early June 2001. At last count, more than six months later, he still had not received his passport or visa. Having already missed his first semester of college, Yasir's routine now consists of calling the US consular office on a daily basis. He says that the hardest thing to deal with is the uncertainty.

After gaining admission in Oberlin College and receiving his 1-20, Rehan Jamil applied for a student visa in July to start school in September. Soon thereafter, his parents received a letter stating that visa regulations had changed, and that there was now a mandatory 30-day waiting period before the visa could be issued. Subsequently, they received another letter which stated this period was indefinitely extended. The letters were composed of the standard rhetoric - that regulations had changed, requiring each visa applicant to go through State Department checks etc. According to Rehan's parents, while the waiting period was difficult, the college was most obliging, deferring Rehan's admission till January. Thankfully Rehan received his visa in January, and has now joined college after having missed one semester.

There are endless others with similar stories. A large number of students, some of whom haven't been home for a while, have cancelled long-planned visits back for fear that the new laws may affect their valid student status. In fact, colleges across the United States have gone so far as to issue advisory warnings asking students not to return home if home is not a European country.

Meanwhile, for some students who managed to make it to college in the US unhindered, there are other problems.

One Pakistani student, in his first year of college in upstate New York, went to Canada for a weekend. Driving back he was stopped in Buffalo and extensively grilled. Finally, he was allowed to proceed but told to register with the INS office in Buffalo every 30 days. He asked to be allowed to do this in the office closest to his college since a monthly trip to Buffalo would be extremely difficult to manage. However, the officials refused to comply with his request.

For Pakistan and its beleaguered citizens, the new US policies which, given the indicators, seem to particularly target them, are a real smack in the face. After capitulating to US demands to assist them in annihilating the Taliban, forcing a reversal of their strategic depth policy, Pakistan cannot believe that it is finding itself included with the likes of Iran and Iraq, countries which only recently, were deigned part of the "axis of evil" by US President, George Bush. A former Pakistani retired army colonel indignantly remarked that, "It is humiliating to see nationals of a front-line state being arrested, disgraced, detained and deported on unproven charges," echoing the feelings of many Pakistanis both here and in the United States. Some particularly anxious Pakistanis with a dicey visa status are pre-emptively fleeing to the Canadian border in fear of being deported to the homeland. In an overwhelming majority of cases, these Pakistanis are in the US to build a better future for themselves and their children. It is a sad indictment of US policy that they are the ones who should have to suffer. The INS, for its part, has said that for those Pakistanis who are fully documented and legitimate, this new registration process is just a simple cautionary procedure, and so they should have nothing to fear. But with war against Iraq looming on the horizon, exacerbating already strained tensions with the Islamic world, most people spoken to believe that things are only going to get worse.


Even Egypt thinks Pakistan is a failed state

From the New York Times:


Also on Ms. Rice's agenda in Europe, administration officials said, was the discussion of democratic reforms in what is called the "broader" Middle East, including Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The next meeting on such reforms is to be held in Egypt in March, with Afghanistan and Pakistan excluded at Egypt's request. An Arab diplomat said Egypt regarded these countries as non-Arab countries and as "failed states" and did not want them included in discussions of reforms in the Arab world.

Wednesday, January 26, 2005

Woman gets raped, tribal council demands her execution to restore her tribe's honor

‘Jirga wants doctor killed’

PESHAWAR: A tribal jirga in Sindh has decided to kill a woman doctor who was allegedly gang raped in Sui to restore the “lost honour” of her tribe, a Pakistan Medical Association (PMA) official told a press conference on Wednesday. PMA President Dr Umer Ayub said the husband and in-laws of the doctor had told him of the jirga or local council’s decision in Gumbat Khairpur.

Top US defence contractors to land in Feb

Top US defence contractors to land in Feb

Visit follows up on Rumsfeld tour, to run into aero expo
SHISHIR GUPTA
NEW DELHI, JANuary 25 Barely two weeks after India flaunts its Russian acquistions—Su-30 MKI fighter and T-90 battle tanks—at Rajpath tomorrow, a team of top US defence contractors will touch down here in a bid to boost bilateral defence ties and erase any misgivings over the reliability of American defence equipment.

Organised by the US India

Business Council, the 15-member delegation is expected to land on February 7 and meet Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee and other senior ministry officials.

The message: Washington is ready to sell military hardware.

The delegation, following up on the December 9, 2004, visit of Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, will include top executives of mega companies such as Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Bell Helicopters, Boeing, Sikorsky helicopters and GE, apart from US defence officials.

The delegation will also meet Indian private company executives to explore tie-ups for future joint production.

The visit is seen as part of New Delhi’s fine-tuning of bilateral relations with the US, which is affected, at times, by the issue of military supplies to Pakistan. Defence cooperation is one core area in this exercise that Delhi is keen to focus on.

US defence contractors will also showcase their equipment in a big way during the Aero-India expo in Bangalore from February 9-13. Their interest in India’s military budget is evident from the fact that they have rented 1,200 sqm of space at the Bangalore expo this time, in comparison to a mere 400 sqm last year.

The US Department of Defence will showcase two F-15 Eagles, one KC-135 refueller, one P-3C Orion maritime surveillance aircraft and one extended Hercules 130-J.

Apart from the US defence companies mentioned above, United Technologies, ITT Industries, MOOG Incorporated and Spec Technologies will participate in the Bangalore event.

While Washington has offered Raytheon-made Patriot anti-missile system, Lockheed Martin-made F-16 fighters, P-3C Orion and Hercules to New Delhi, the Indian defence establishment still carries the baggage of USS Enterprise in 1971 and post-Pokhran military sanctions.

Monday, January 24, 2005

More on the balochi freedom struggle

The fifth Balochistan war —Rashed Rahman

The fifth Balochistan war has begun. In house to house search operations in Sui over the Eid holidays, at least 7,000 regular troops assisted by paramilitary Frontier Corps (FC) personnel, backed by tanks, armoured personnel carriers, artillery, helicopter gunships and reconnaissance drones started looking for the 37 persons named in an FIR regarding the attacks on the Sui gas plant between January 7 and 11. Fifteen people died in those clashes, most of them FC and Defence Security Guard (DSG) personnel. The persons named in the FIR include Nawab Akbar Bugti’s son Jamil Bugti and grandson Burhamdagh Bugti.

Another FIR against more people from the area is imminent, according to Humayun Marri, provincial president of the Jamhoori Watan Party. He says security was beefed up and the telephone lines to Sui and Dera Bugti disconnected before the launch of the operation. About 200 persons were arrested in the area over the Eid holidays. This brings to 300-plus the number of persons detained. Bulldozers have demolished the houses of those suspected of being involved in the attacks on the gas plant. The gas plant has now been restored to normal operation. That cannot of course do away with the knock-on effect on the economy of even a few days’ disruption of gas supplies.

Meanwhile the railway track at Sariab near Quetta was blown up on Saturday. A passenger train escaped narrowly. Three rockets landed in a residential area, Killi Shabo, in the provincial capital, Quetta. Four bombs were detonated outside government officials’ homes in Mach, Khuzdar (two), and Kalat. Fortunaely, none of these incidents resulted in loss of life. Though Sui itself saw no further clashes, this is because the guerrillas have moved away. Attacks are now dispersed widely over the province. This is a pattern likely to be sustained in the low intensity warfare now in its early stages in the province.

Sindhi nationalist parties had called for a strike on Monday in solidarity with the Baloch and to protest against the rape of the doctor in Sui by DSG personnel, which is in progress at the time of writing these lines.

One, the suspects of the ghastly rape incident should have been arrested and subjected to the full force of the law, irrespective of the fact that they are in uniform. If anything, had that been done instead of an attempted cover-up by the PPL management, things may not have come to such a pass. It has been reported that COAS General Musharraf has asked the Captain allegedly involved to take a DNA test to prove his guilt or innocence in the matter. It is amazing that it takes the commander-in-chief’s order to do even the most initial investigation of such a serious crime. Two, the Baloch nationalist leaders should have been approached to reverse their decision to withdraw from the deliberations of the Mushahid committee. According to Sardar Attaullah Mengal, they did the committee members a favour by withdrawing, thereby saving them the embarrassment of being exposed for being a powerless body. With the nationalists outraged over the rape incident and alienated by the perception that the government was only going through the motions of serious engagement with the long standing and long neglected problems of Balochistan, it seems unlikely that, even if the recommendations of the two committees are implemented, it will in the immediate future lead to a cessation of hostilities.

Despite advice from knowledgeable observers to address the problems of Balochistan with some urgency, General Musharraf’s regime has chosen to talk tough. Reportedly, there has been a tussle between hawks and doves at the highest level, with the former winning a half-victory in the shape of the deployment of the army in Sui and its operations against suspected insurgents. The doves, who seek a political approach, seem to have been overtaken by events on the ground. If this reading is correct, the Musharraf regime has opened up a third front against itself after Waziristan and the impending opposition movement.

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Jewel in the crowd: Azim Premji, chairman of Wipro

From the Guardian, UK.

Jewel in the crowd

Azim Premji, chairman of Wipro

Randeep Ramesh in Bangalore
Saturday January 22, 2005
The Guardian


Drive out of Bangalore on the road to Sarjapur and you cover more than the seven miles needed to reach the manicured lawns and brick orange headquarters of one of the country's biggest software companies, Wipro. Dodging bullocks, pushbikes and cratersized potholes, the journey is more time travel than car trip.

Once inside Wipro's futuristic campus, the digital divide between the civic disorder outside and the quiet electronic hum of progress inside is startling. Bangalore is India's richest seam of information technology talent, and Wipro is one of the brightest, shiniest diamonds.

With a customer list that includes Sony, Microsoft, Nokia and Dell, the company has seen profits triple to $230m (£115m) and sales double to more than $1.2bn during the last four years.

Its latest third-quarter results, published yesterday, show a jump of 60% in profit. Wipro's ability to insert itself into the world's corporate DNA has made it a name recognised in boardrooms from New York to Tokyo.

At the centre of all this action is India's richest man, Azim Premji. He owns 83% of Wipro, currently valuing his holding at $10bn. Not that any of this is visible. A modest and softly spoken man, Premji is known as a thrifty businessman who still drives a secondhand saloon car and takes commercial flights. His salary last year was $360,000.

A bit strange, perhaps, for a man who at the beginning of 2000, the height of technology mania, was worth £35bn, more than Oracle founder Larry Ellison and global investor Warren Buffett. "Why walk the talk? The wealth is all notional. I did not sell the shares then, so I don't have the money," says Premji.

Wipro's chairman appears uncomfortable in talking too much about anything else but business.

Answers tend to be short: for instance, ask about being a Muslim in India, let alone the richest person in the land, and you get a terse reply. "It is the strength of our culture that we can have Sonia Gandhi, who is Catholic, a Sikh prime minister and a Muslim president."

In conversation one soon realises this is not because Mr Premji does not hold views, but because he does.

Provoking him is difficult, although on Bangalore's potholed traffic-laden roads, he growls rather than speaks. "I can't have my employees sitting in traffic when they should be in the office. Spending two-and-half-hours in the car is a huge waste of productive time. The government needs to act to sort these things out."

Given this, Wipro's chairman makes no apology over the hot political issue of outsourcing, where white-collar jobs are draining away from the west to countries such as India. He says the issue has given the software industry in India exposure "a billion-dollar campaign could not buy".

It is possible to scoff at Premji's vision. At present he has 1,000 consultants, whereas Accenture has 56,000. In terms of revenue, consulting brings in just 5% of Wipro's revenue. But the naysayers have to deal with an endorsement from the computing world's top geek, Bill Gates, who remarked casually not long ago that "soon it will be common sense when a complex project is to be delivered to say 'how about we talk to Wipro about this?' "

Friday, January 21, 2005

Pakistani criminals in Norway

Two arrested after 'brutal' attack

Police in the Oslo suburb of Bærum arrested two men Thursday in connection with the beating and shooting of a man in broad daylight on Wednesday.

One of the men, who police already had identified and charged in the case, turned himself in with his lawyer in tow.

Police said Wednesday night that as many as five persons face charges of attempted murder after a 28-year-old man was badly beaten and shot at least four times outside an adult education center in Sandvika.


Both men are in their 20s and are ethnic Pakistanis. The victim of the shooting and beating, which shocked witnesses have described as "brutal," came to Norway from Afghanistan last year.

"The reason we are releasing the suspects' ethnicity it to dispel rumours that this was a conflict within the Afghan community," said Søreide.


Good..don't want Afghans getting a bad name because of Pakistanis doing what Pakistanis do best.

Baloch grievances

Govt pushing Baloch towards liberation

In an exclusive interview with Daily Times at his Khayaban-i-Sahar residence on Wednesday evening, 75-years-old Sardar Ataullah said the military government of late General Yahya Khan pushed the people of former East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) towards secession by carrying out a genocide in that impoverished province in 1971 and the present government of President General Pervez Musharraf was bent upon adopting a similar policy of the use of force in Balochistan.

Potential of Balochistan: He said Balochistan had huge deposits of natural resources like oil, gas, copper, gold, uranium and non-metallic resources and a vast coastline besides a strategic position that puts Pakistan on the world map. Without Balochistan and Sindh, Pakistan is merely a liability, he added.

He said Gwadar was located on the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz and it had great strategic value. He said the gas pipeline from Central Asia would pass from Gwadar and there was competition from many countries including Iran which was also offering facilities to Central Asian States from Chah Bahar. However, the United States was interested that the pipeline should pass from Gwadar, he said.

Sardar Ataullah Mengal, who is also a former Balochistan chief minister, said the federal government was encroaching the land and resources of Balochistan very aggressively since nationalists had demanded provincial autonomy.

He said after the Sui incident, the increasing numbers of the armed forces were being deployed in Balochistan despite the demand of all the political parties that the army should be withdrawn from the province. He said as many as 25,000 people had been forced to migrate from Sui to other places after the incident and only a small proportion of people had returned despite the army’s call that they should return.

Baloch nationalists and Gwadar: The nationalist leader said it was wrong to say that Baloch leaders were against development but if a city like Karachi cropped up in Gwadar due to internal migration, the Baloch nation would become a minority in its own land. The land in Gwadar, which was essentially state land, was being sold to outsiders at the rate of Rs 15 million per acre, he said. He added that outsiders would invest in Gwadar and all its earnings would be siphoned off by the federal government.

“There will be another Karachi. If Gwadar becomes a city of 15 million people, the Baloch will become a minority. The provincial government will not get a single penny,” he said. “In Hub, the provincial government had the right to only collect the toll tax and but this power was also withdrawn,” he said.

He said Gwadar had been sold and now land was being sold in Pasni and Ormara. He added that land in these areas was being sold through the connivance of smugglers, land mafia and intelligence agencies. The land in Gwadar has even been sold at Rs 10 million per acre, he added.

Most Indians say 'thumbs up' to second Bush term

Most Indians say 'thumbs up' to second Bush term

| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
In New York and Los Angeles, President Bush's inauguration Thursday may have been the occasion for mourning. Latin Americans may have fretted about "los yanquis," and Parisians may have muttered something about civilisation.

Indeed, a new poll found that, in 18 of 21 countries surveyed, more people considered the world to be less secure because of Mr. Bush's reelection.

But not in India. Here, Bush's fresh four years as president of the United States is given a firm thumbs up. And no, that doesn't mean something rude in Indian culture.

India's reasons for bucking the global distrust-America trend - a phenomenon that largely resulted from America's 2003 decision to launch a preemptive war in Iraq without UN approval, according to recent surveys - say much about how India sees itself in the post-cold war and post-Sept. 11, 2001, world. Based on a combination of business links, immigration trends, shared views on terrorism, and national self-interest, India's increasingly warm approach toward Washington is one of the reasons the US now regards India as a rising global and regional power, and a partner above most other nations in Asia.



Pakistani Islamic scholar says trading in opium is halal(i.e. kosher, legit etc)

Trading in opium, an Islamic right, says Pak scholar:
[World News]: Islamabad, Jan.21 : A renowned Islamic scholar based in Pakistan's remote Khyber Agency has declared that trading of opium is legitimate and an Islamic right.

Delivering a routine sermon on an unlicensed FM radio station, Mufti Munir Shakir, declared the cultivation and trade of opium legitimate on the grounds that it was mostly used in about 98 percent medication.

The Daily Times further quoted him as saying that the use of anything that had the potential of having a positive impact and benifit on human beings could not be declared illegitimate and prohibited in Islam.

The Mufti's sermon assumes significance in the light of the fact that poppy cultivation has increased several times in the tribal belt over last four years. Not only have the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan banned the business and cultivation of opium but almost all religious scholars in both the countries have declared the trade and cultivation of poppy prohibited in Islam.

Original Daily Times article:

Opium trade is halal in Islam: Bara scholar

Muslims homes being demolished without a trial

But you won't hear a peep from the muslim world. You see, it's not the Israelis doing it, it's the land of the pure aka Pakistan.

Troops bulldoze Sui houses

QUETTA: Security forces on Thursday demolished houses used by tribesmen to launch a bloody attack on gas installations in Balochistan.

Militiamen used bulldozers to raze the houses near Sui, residents said. “We are bulldozing those houses from where the rockets were fired,” Balochistan Home Minister Mir Shoaib Nusherwani told Reuters. “We are trying to secure the areas near the gas field.”

Residents of Sui, which is about 400 km east of Quetta, said security forces stepped up security before demolishing the houses. “The gas field has been sealed off and helicopters are hovering over it,” resident Niaz Bugti told Reuters.


Thursday, January 20, 2005

More on the oppressed people of Balochistan

An editorial in The Friday Times by Najam Sethi.

These people aren't Islamists. They're secular. They're basically sick of being rules by the Pakistani army.


FAQs about Balochistan and the state

Why has the situation in Balochistan in general and in Sui in particular suddenly flared up? Why are Bugti tribesmen attacking Sui gas installations and hurting the country’s national assets? What are the demands of the Baloch Liberation Army? Why is the BLA attacking military targets in Balochistan? Who is funding and arming the BLA? What is the role of the big Sardars in the political economy of Balochistan? Are the Sardars for or against development and progress? Why is there popular resentment in Balochistan against a national development project like Gwadar? Why don’t the Baloch want military cantonments in their province when the other provinces are awash with them? Why is there so much anti-army feeling in the province? How can the situation be controlled? How can genuine Baloch grievances be addressed? Consider.

Between the Bugtis and PPL have been rent asunder by the rape of a lady doctor allegedly by the hated paramilitary personnel which has given an excuse to tribal hardliners to exploit the situation. The second is more problematic. The breakdown of negotiations between the Bugtis and PPL comes in the wider context and background of a resurgent sub-nationalism in the province in which the mainstream secular nationalist parties have been edged out of political power by the state-government regime of General Pervez Musharraf in Islamabad and replaced by the mullahs and religious parties in the provincial government.

This is the point at which the Baloch Liberation Army enters the picture and clouds the issues. This is the point at which the Bugti local feud with PPL enters the simmering and underlying conflict between Baloch nationalists and Islamabad over the issue of effective stake-holding status in Balochistan. This is the point at which Sardar Ataullah Mengal and Nawab Khair Bux Marri, their offspring and nationalist middle class students join hands with Nawab Akbar Bugti and the Bugtis at Sui to voice their demands and vow to continue armed struggle till death. This is why anti-Islamabad Baloch leaders are not prepared to take responsibility for the actions of the BLA even as they secretly urge it to wage war against the external ‘occupying’ power.

In the 1970s, the Baloch secular nationalists were ousted from power by Z A Bhutto and they launched an armed struggle to reclaim power in the province. In the 1980s and 1990s, they were part of the democratic political landscape of the province. So they shared power and didn’t make trouble. But in the last five years they have been excluded from power in the province by General Musharraf, so they have launched an armed struggle to re-stake their claims.

But there are several major differences between the old and the new. First, in the 70s the Baloch insurgents were largely drawn from the Marri tribe and there was only a smattering of middle class urban elements among them. Now, there appears to be the formation of a tribal confederacy which includes the big Marri and Bugti tribes.

Second, a new generation of middle class Baloch nationalists has cropped up which is readily inclined to join the armed struggle against Islamabad. Third, there were no visible outposts or symbols of occupation in the 70s unlike today when the new port of Gwadar under federal jurisdiction has excluded locals from the fruits of its development.

Fourth, the insurgents were poorly equipped with arms and financially strapped in the 70s unlike today when they are flush with the latest weapons (bought from the Taliban and Afghans) and spilling over with donations collected from migrant Baloch workers in the Middle East. There is also a real possibility of estranged neighbouring states fishing in troubled Baloch waters.

Fifth, the army action in Balochistan in the 1970s was conducted by a largely popular and elected political leader and had a degree of acceptability in mainstream eyes, not least because the Baloch resistance could easily be dubbed as separatist since the Russians were thought to be coveting the “warm waters” of the Arabian sea. But no such conditions attach to the current situation.

Sixth, the regional environment is internally volatile for domestic reasons – as the unravelling of many countries for domestic compulsions demonstrates – but externally calm because there are no separatist-baiting superpowers in the neighbourhood.

Seventh, Musharraf’s military regime doesn’t enjoy the same legitimacy and popularity at home that Z A Bhutto’s government enjoyed in Pakistan at that time. Indeed, all mainstream and nationalist parties in the country are opposed to General Musharraf and even his erstwhile mullah friends are out to create trouble for him. Therefore if any repressive army action is undertaken in Balochistan, it is likely to face stiff opposition from all quarters, including elements of the governing coalitions that Musharraf has built for political survival.

Finally, it may be noted that the Pakistan army was fully focused on quelling the Baloch insurgency in the 70s while today it has its hands full dealing with the violent blowback from South Waziristan and Kashmir.

We are in the era of “internal upheavals”. The Soviet Union, Central, South and South East Asia, Eastern Europe and even the Middle East have fallen victim to this contemporary dialectic. Our own Pakistan’s current “internal upheaval” is very much the result of so-called “national security” policies followed in the decades since the 80s. The prosecution of jihad in Indian-held Kashmir and west in Afghanistan eroded the Pakistani state’s “monopoly of violence” by enabling private parties to acquire the means and rationale for violence. This has undermined the maintenance of the “internal sovereignty” of the country. Balochistan has especially suffered from this loss of sovereignty. Its internal polity has been shaped by an influx of Pakhtuns and Afghans following the war against the Russians in Afghanistan and lately by the influx of militant jihadis, Taliban and Al Qaeda elements. The 2002 elections conducted by General Musharraf in Pakistan solidified the situation by ousting the Baloch nationalists from the power equation and entrenching an alienated Pakhtun votebank.

There are additional external factors. Iran is no longer the friendly country that it was in the 1970s when the Shah was its ruler. Apart from a bitter conflict of interests with Pakistan over Afghanistan during the Taliban era, the Iran of today is suspicious of the Pakistan-US axis, especially in view of Washington’s hostility to Iran’s mullahs and its budding nuclear programme. Similarly, Kabul is still influenced by an anti-Pakistan, anti-Pakhtun component that the Taliban ousted in 1996. Finally, there is an entire underworld of jihad that has vowed to reverse Pakistan’s post-9/11 policy and has resorted to terrorism all over the country. In Balochistan this element is embedded with the Taliban who have been allowed by Islamabad to live comfortably in Quetta. This is the larger backdrop to the rise of the Balochistan Liberation Army.

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

62% of Indians think Bush's re-election has made the world safer

Funny how the BBC just brushes aside the opinion of 620 million Indians and focuses on what muslims think.

Global poll slams Bush leadership

More than half of people surveyed in a BBC World Service poll say the re-election of US President George W Bush has made the world more dangerous.

Only three countries - India, Poland and the Philippines - out of 21 polled believed the world was now safer.

Turkey topped the anti-Bush list, with 82% believing his re-election would be negative for global security.

The result is bad news for the president as Turkey is a US ally and the only Muslim member of Nato, says the BBC's Chris Morris in Brussels.

Other predominantly Muslim countries - Indonesia and Lebanon - were also high up the list.

Another surprise was India's support for Mr Bush. The poll found 62% believed his administration was positive for global security.

PAF men members of the terrorist group Jaish-e-Mohammed

Three PAF men court-martialled

ISLAMABAD: Military courts have sentenced three PAF servicemen to prison for alleged links to Jaish-e-Muhammad, relatives of the men said on Tuesday. The trials were not announced, but relatives said they had taken place between October and December. Nasruminallah Khattak, 18, and Saeed Alam, 19, was sentenced to two years in prison. Munir Ahmed was given a nine-year sentence. ap

Monday, January 17, 2005

This one's a doozy, even by Pakistani standards

I've left out the standard Pakistani nonsense about Kashmir...

Resolve core issue for self-preservation


India, after 9/11, has been closely following US and Israel’s actions for herself which she emulated speedily in dealing with the people of that vastly Muslim State, as though everything through ‘Unilateralism’ was being done as part of the whole, to eliminate/ subjugate Muslims all over the world according to one single plan. Like Israel, India also erected wall on the LoC and speeded up Kashmiri Muslim’s genocide etc. Why did it not do so earlier if she considered it to be a right thing to do? Prior to that she kept her Armed Forces on International borders poised against Pakistan from Dec 2002 to Oct 2003. In addition to all that, she has been creating scenes after scenes with her acrobatics to malign Pakistan so that it is declared a terrorist State by the world community, under the influence of Israel and US.

After US unilateralism, the UNO has been reduced to a mere showpiece. It exists only as a non-entity. Every Ally of US can occupy any other UN member’s territory, at US/ Israel’s behest. Geographical boundaries of any member State are no longer inviolable. Might is right. And the internal matters of a UN member State or Internationalized to dominate any part of its territory which the US/ Israel need for their future actions against the next target. Why do the Red Indians and the real inhabitants of Australia are not given back their countries? Why do they remain still occupied slaves? No, Jews cannot take away Balochistan bonanza of Gwadar by abetting her own terrorists that she keeps or gathers through underground communications and other means, anywhere in the world, wherever needed, including the USA. The law of Jungle prevails. No one can lure Pakistan into a position of cooperation with India for joint defence. Such like thoughts are absurd. The USA sees the dispute of Jammu and Kashmir in a different light. It is for this reason that the UNSC resolutions of the 1948-49 have been faded into background. To ascertain the wishes of the people under UN aegis is the only fairer way. India should speed up the process to that end, otherwise, she too will be deprived of it, sooner than one might imagine. US is determined to occupy Indian sensitive region of Ladakh. With this, US believes that, she will be helping India to perpetuate status quo. India would not feel triumphant enough, if Ladakh is occupied by US, in lieu of Great Power Status for her, at this stage, when no one believes in the authority of the UN itself. Unilateralism has enslaved the UNO. Anyway, if India does not sincerely cooperate with Pakistan she will lose herself too. Ladakh will be occupied as a first step while India will remain mum. The domination of China is US priority No 1. It must be recalled that Israel was established by World Zionist Organization (WZO) after sustained effort of 50 long years. WZO controls the policy-making mechanism in US, The UK, Russia and other European countries. American foreign policy towards ME is controlled by the WZO. Sometimes, it appears that India policy too is designed and is strongly being controlled by the WZO.

Afghanistan is fully dominated by the WZO. Breaking up of India (for several important reasons), is a part of WZO’s scheme, which will be implemented before the US is broken up by the WZO. India should therefore not cut its own nose to spite Pakistan. A strong Pakistan now, infact, is in the wider interest of India. By the force of public media, WZO has been deceiving the Americans into thinking that their interests were the same as those of Israel. How could that be when WZO wants to break up US?


Statistics data supports the substance. (Federal Deficit, Debt, & Interest 1980-2000 in billions of dollars). One can hear the sad state of US deficit on various US TV Channels. Exponential increase in deficit seems alarming. There were 40,000 Jews in Afghanistan settled mainly in Herat, Kabul and Bulkh, in 1980. In Iran in 1980, there were 85,000. The key diplomats in India and Pakistan are Jews. The mentioned population of Jews must have multiplied by 3 4 times by now. All of them have come back. Mossad consists mainly of them(Mossad has jews! who'd think it). RAW works with Mossad hand in glove. Pak-Afghan border is studded with Indo-Israeli consulates. Each consulate trains terrorists in its camp. They may number 4 to 5 hundred in each camp. Balochistan is being plundered by these very rich terrorists from underground.

Jews have planned to privatize water in Pakistan. India and Israel are working on this scheme for many long years. The water resources of Pakistan are to be given to Private Companies. This was revealed by World Bank. This is the World Bank Plan, to have the entire fresh water of Pakistan in the hands of Multinationals. India must realize the gravity of the situation and imagine who possess the WB.

Kasmir can be taken from India because the people do not want to be under Indian tyrannical control. If both India and Pakistan cooperate with each other, atleast for self-preservation, no one can cause them any harm. Otherwise, they might be torn into bits and pieces. Their past strategies against each other, if continued, will prove fatal for their own very existence, in the present scenario. A strong Pakistan is India’s need and vice-versa.

Thursday, January 13, 2005

Balochistan's volcanic eruption

The Pakistani military is robbing the baloch people and raping their women.

The Friday Times(no direct link)

The crisis in Balochistan is enveloped in a curtain of official censorship, public ignorance, tribal honour and military arrogance. There are two aspects to it. First, there is the local conflict in Dera Bugti in which Sui gas installations continue to be rocketed by Bugti tribesmen and officials of the Defense Security Group (DSG) and Frontier Corps are being fatally targeted. Second, there is the “nationalist resistance” to central rule led by the shadowy Baloch Liberation Army in which military targets in Balochistan are under attack. Behind the scenes, negotiations are being conducted between Islamabad and representatives of the small Baloch nationalist parties and groups over the terms and conditions of local employment and compensation contracts by the gas companies as well as over the amount of royalties and federal development outlays and handouts for Balochistan province and their distribution between the provincial and local administrations.

A young lady doctor was gang-raped at Sui recently. At first, the PPL and DSG tried to destroy the evidence and denied the incident. Then the woman was spirited out to Karachi and told to shut up. At no stage was the local police allowed to meet and interrogate her. But when the police turned up sperm and blood evidence of rape at the scene of the crime, the PPL/DSG reluctantly allowed an FIR against “unknown assailants” However, Nawab Bugti insisted that one of the rapists was Captain Hammad of the DSG. But the military flatly rejected the allegation. Indeed, the local and national media was advised not to print Nawab Bugti’s allegations. Outraged, the Bugtis joined ranks and vowed resistance. The local military commanders now want to “sort them out”. But that may be easier said than done. If the Bugtis are not calmed down and military action is precipitated, the gas compression and precipitation plants at Sui could be attacked and destroyed with disastrous consequences.

Baglihar dam, an issue of life and death for Pakistan

That's right, it's an issue of life and death - And the Indians have the Pakistanis by the balls.

Baglihar dam, an issue of life and death for Pakistan: Kasuri - PakTribune

ISLAMABAD, January 14 (Online): Foreign Minister Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri has said that Baglihar dam is issue of life and death for Pakistanis. He said that composite dialogue process is underway with India. "We are trying to differentiate between this dialogue process and Baglihar dam issue", he added.

Foreign Minister Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri made these remarks while talking to a private T.V Channel here Thursday.

He went on to say that both are separate issues. Dam issue is part of Sindh water treaty, which is mutual accord between two countries. Responding to a question he said that Pakistan is sincere in its stance on resolution of Baglihar dam dispute. " We have made it clear that no unilateral flexibility will be shown on any issue", he added.

Baglihar issue is a vital issue and an issue of life and death for the people, he stated. " We are keen to sort out this issue with India bilaterally", he added.

It's the Kashmiris who want the Bahlihar hydropower project

Now if Pakistan really cares about the rights of the Kashmiris, it shouldn't mind India building a hydro-power project on the Chenab(Not that India cares about what Pakistan thinks)

Indus Water Treaty unfair to J&K: Minister

Thursday, 13 January , 2005, 09:23
New Delhi: Amid the Indo-Pak row over Baglihar hydro-power project, the Jammu and Kashmir government on Thursday said the Indus Water Treaty between the two countries was "extremely unfair" to the state and asked Islamabad to "show flexibility" on the issue to prove its claim of being a "friend" of Kashmiris.

The PDP-led government said the state should be compensated by the Centre for the disadvantage to it because of the treaty which governs the right over six common rivers between India and Pakistan -- Indus, Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas and Sutlej.

"The treaty is extremely unfair to the people of Jammu and Kashmir. Our state is faced with acute power shortage but the water of our rivers is going to Pakistan," state�s Finance Minister Muzaffar Hussain Baig said.

Pointing out that Pakistan had been claiming to be "friend" and "well wisher" of the people of Jammu and Kashmir, he said it should prove it by allowing construction of Baglihar hydro-project on the Chenab river in Doda district.

"Instead of raising technical objections over the project, Pakistan should demonstrate that it really cares for the people of the state. It should show flexibility on an issue which is humanitarian in nature," Baig said, pointing out that the project would help the electricity-starved state meet some its power needs.

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Balochi freedom fighters on the march

The implication is obvious: The baloch doctor was gang-raped by members of the Pakistani military.

‘Baloch nation’ cannot be eliminated, says Bugti

By Muhammad Ejaz Khan

QUETTA: Jamhoori Watan Party (JWP) Chief Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti on Wednesday said President Pervez Musharraf could hit a few Baloch leaders but "cannot eliminate the Baloch nation".

The JWP’s chief told newsmen in his hometown Dera Bugti that President Musharraf said the nationalists would be hit in a way that they would not be able to know, who hit them, adding: "Baloch nation can neither be hit nor eliminated."

Nawab Bugti said that recent incidents in Sui Tehsil were stated to be a backlash of the alleged gang rape case of Dr Shazia Khalid. "The recent incidents in Sui is a reaction to the apathy shown by the government and the protection provided by it to the rapists involved in the case. It has become clear to every one that the lady doctor had been gang-raped and the PPL administration and the DSG officials attempted to cover up the case."

He regretted that the authorities had failed to take action against those involved in the crime despite the passage of 10 days. "Had any civilian been found involved in the rape case, he would have been awarded exemplary punishment so far, he observed.

China’s trade with South Asia soars

Pakistan's exports to China: cotton, leather products and seafood.
China's exports to Pakistan: machinery equipment, chemicals, electronics and footware.

No wonder China has a trade surplus with it's mini-me.

China’s trade with South Asia soars

China’s trade with South Asia soars

BEIJING: China’s trade volume with Pakistan and other six South Asian nations has reached around $20 billion.

In the first 11 months last year, trade volume between China and the seven south Asian nations - Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives totalled $17.43 dollars, with $9.87 billion for exports and $7.56 billion for imports.

Currently, more than 70 percent of Pakistan’s exports to China are cotton yarn or cotton fabric. The rest are leather products, minerals and seafood. China’s main shipments to Pakistan include machinery equipment, chemicals, electronics and footware.

PAF terrorist escapes from the bathroom

How convenient...I'm sure the jihadi sympathizers had no role in his escape.

Musharraf attack fugitive was PAF man

From Our Correspondent
ISLAMABAD - A low ranking official of Pakistan Air Force, accused of playing a key role in President Musharraf’s assassination bid, is on the run after escaping from jail, the PAF spokesman confirmed here on Wednesday.
Mushtaq Ahmad, a junior rank official in PAF was arrested after a life attempt on President Musharraf in December 2003.
A military court convicted Mushtaq on November 21 and he escaped from a prison bathroom, the spokesman said but declined to give more details.

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Held Kashmir govt set to speed up work on Baglihar Dam

Quite the dilemma for the Pakistan. Can't claim to be for the rights of the Kashmiris AND deny them the right to build a dam on their river. Of course, most Indians know the Pakistanis only care for the land and not the people, land which they're not going to get anyway.

Held Kashmir govt set to speed up work on Baglihar Dam

"Azad" Kashmir

US should not be asked to mediate, says AJK president

AJK Prime Minister Sardar Skindar Hayat Khan said Pakistan should trust the Kashmiri leadership. “I cannot deliver a speech at any international forum until and unless somebody from the government has approved its content,” he said.

Monday, January 10, 2005

Malaysia Refuses to Employ Pakistanis Despite Accord

Malaysia Refuses to Employ Pakistanis Despite Accord

Huma Aamir Malik

Arab News

ISLAMABAD, 9 January 2005 — Malaysian Interior Ministry officials recently refused to meet a Pakistani government delegation that went there to hold negotiations on import of manpower from Pakistan.

The Senate Standing Committee on Labor, Manpower and Overseas Pakistanis was told that the Malaysian government was pursuing its trade interests and giving importance to workers from India instead of Pakistan.

The committee meeting was presided over by Naeem Chattha and attended by senators including Enwar Baig. The disclosure was made by top officials of Bureau of Immigration and Overseas Employment and Overseas Employment Corporation.

They said despite their best efforts, the Labor Ministry officials were not entertained by the Malaysian Interior Ministry. The committee members asked Labor Ministry officials to inform them about the much publicized MOU signed between Pakistan and Malaysia for hiring of Pakistani labor.

Reality is a female of the canine species

VIEW: Thinking in terms of ground realities —Nazir Naji

We are currently trying to sort out matters with two international powers. We have long regarded India as an enemy and are determined never to go soft on it. Till the war of 1965 we could look it in the eye. Our economy was getting stronger and we counted United States and its European allies among our friends. This was primarily because India — while it talked of non-alignment — always sided with the Soviet Union. The People’s Republic of China was so friendly it was willing even to fight India on our side. But our rulers’ blunders during and after the 1965 war reduced all talk of Pakistanis’ courage and daring to a joke. No foreign power could think ever after of risking war on our side.

An anecdote here: When a Pakistani delegation visited China to request for weapons and support in war against India, the Chinese leaders wanted to know whether we thought the armaments we had and those we were requesting for would be enough for a decisive war. Our representatives said they were enough for two to three weeks of fighting. “And then?” the Chinese hosts wanted to know. Our envoys said by then we expected the international community to intervene and call for an end to fighting. “Why do you want death and destruction for three weeks if in the end you are willing to negotiate? The option is already available.” This example of our planning for war is cited throughout the capitals around the world.

We went to war in 1965 to solve the Kashmir issue. We followed it up with an agreement in Tashkent not to fight again. We lost a war in 1971 and agreed to resolve the Kashmir dispute through bilateral negotiation thereby ousting the United Nations. Then we got the nuclear bomb and opened the Kargil front. As a consequence we had to sign the Washington declaration and subscribe to the sanctity of the Line of Control. After supporting armed struggle for independence for fifteen years we agreed also to disallow ‘cross-border terrorism’ and facilitated India in fencing the LOC.

In what way have the developments since Kargil helped strengthen Pakistan? The foreign exchange reserves do not frighten an enemy. What frightens enemies is a strong political system, national solidarity, circumstances conducive to industrial and social development, and a national objective emerging from a peaceful society for which the people, to the last child, are willing to fight till death. Do we have any of these?(Interesting question, the answer to which is HELL NO)

Sunday, January 09, 2005

Our friendly neighborhood terrorists doing what they do best

The Sunday Times goes through a great deal of pain to hide his nationality.

Briton accused of aiding most wanted terrorist

A BRITISH citizen is being held in Iraq on suspicion of funding and aiding Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian fugitive who heads Al-Qaeda in Iraq and is behind many of the bloodiest terrorist attacks in the country.

Mohamed Ali Abdul Razaq, 48, is accused of financing Zarqawi’s group, Al-Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers, which last week claimed responsibility for the assassination of Ali al-Haidari, the governor of Baghdad. The group, formerly known as Tawheed wal Jihad, also beheaded the British engineer Ken Bigley.

Following a knee injury, he moved to Peshawar in Pakistan and while living there his first wife had two children. Another two children were born in Britain. He returned to Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein and was living in Ghaziliyah, a surburb of Baghdad, with his second wife and six children.


Brass hats & mortar-boards-II : Cowasjee Corner; 09 January, 2005

Brass hats & mortar-boards-II


DAWN - Cowasjee Corner; 09 January, 2005


There is yet more depressing news. The Swiss-based World Economic Forum (WEF) has recently issued its Global Competitiveness Report for 2004-2005 evaluating and ranking 104 countries. It has been compiled by Michael Porter of Harvard University, Klaus Schwab of the WEF, Xavier Sala-i-Martin of Columbia University and Augusto Lapez-Claros of the WEF.

The report is broken up into various sections. Under the heading 'Technological readiness', India is listed at 26 with Korea and Luxembourg above it and Panama and Malaysia beneath. Pakistan comes in at 84 sandwiched between Gambia and Nigeria on top and Ukraine and Mali below.

'Firm-level technology absorption' has India at 18, with Norway and New Zealand above and Austria and the Slovak Republic below. Pakistan is listed at 44, under the Czech Republic and Bahrain and over Namibia and Jordan.

'Prevalence of foreign technology licensing' lists India at 8, with New Zealand and Japan above and the United Arab Emirates and Germany below. At 67, Pakistan lies between Tanzania and Nigeria and Costa Rica and Venezuela.

Under 'FDI and technology transfer' India lies at 20 below Kenya and the United Kingdom and above Luxembourg and South Africa. We are at 96, between Ecuador and Mali and Ukraine and Macedonia.

'Quality of scientific research readiness' has India at 17, below France and Norway, and above New Zealand and the Russian Federation. We lie at 94, below Bangladesh and Vietnam and above Peru and Ecuador.

Under 'Company spending on research and development', India is listed at 26, with South Africa and Ireland above and China and Indonesia below. We enter at 101, between Bolivia and Paraguay and Angola and Chad. The last listed under this heading is Ethiopia at 104.

India tops the list at No.1 under 'Availability of scientists and engineers' with Finland at 2 and Israel at 3, while Pakistan lies in the second half at 61 with Slovenia and Bangladesh above and Ghana and Croatia below.

Depressing also was a report in the press last week from Khalid Hasan in Washington on the subject of the annual 'index of economic freedom' exercise conducted by the conservative think tank Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal. Pakistan is included among 10 of the 155 countries surveyed whose performance 'worsened' during 2004. It is now bracketed with Ethiopia, Uganda, Haiti, Bangladesh, Morocco, Qatar, Cuba and Tunisia. Pakistan is listed at 133, and India at 118.

Are we destined forever to be just hovering above the bottom of the list?