Sunday, December 30, 2007

Pak channel airs photos of two suspects

A Pakistani TV news channel today aired photographs of two men, which it said were involved in the assassination of former premier Benazir Bhutto after an election rally in Rawalpindi on Thursday.
One of the two grainy photos – which Dawn News channel said were clicked by an amateur photographer – showed a youth wearing sunglasses aiming a pistol at Bhutto’s back while she waved through the sun-roof of her bulletproof vehicle to her supporters.
The other picture, apparently taken before the shooting, showed the same youth standing next to another man, who had a white cloth wrapped around his face. Dawn News described the second man as the “suspected suicide bomber”

Sharif meets Zardari, pays tributes to Bhutto




Former Pakistan premier Nawaz Sharif today visited the grave of slain opposition leader Benazir Bhutto and offered condolences to her husband Asif Ali Zardari and son Bilawal.
Sharif, who was accompanied by a 40-member delegation of his PML-N party, laid a floral wreath at Bhutto’s grave at her family mausoleum in Garhi Khuda Baksh in the southern Sindh province.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Shaukat Aziz not to contest elections




Former Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said on Saturday that he would not contest next elections due on January 8.
“I will stay in politics as an ordinary member of the PML and serve the country,” Aziz told reporters. He said though he had received offers to contest from party leaders of eight constituencies, he opted to stay out of the fray.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Us says it has right to kidnap British citizens

The United States has told Britain that it has the right to “kidnap” British citizens if they are suspected of crimes in America – and this can be done without using formal extradition procedures.

A senior lawyer for the US Government has told the Court of Appeal in London that kidnapping foreign citizens is permissible under the US law as the country’s Supreme Court has sanctioned it, The Sunday Times reported.

“It’s acceptable under the American law to kidnap people if they’re wanted for offences in America. The US does have a view about procuring people to its own shores which is not shared….If you kidnap a person outside the United States and you bring him there, the court has no jurisdiction to refuse – it goes back to bounty hunting days in the 1860’s” Alun Jones told the UK court.

The statement came when one of the Court of Appeal judges asked Jones, representing the US government about its treatment of the nephew of Stanley Tollman, a former director of Chelsea football club.

Gavin Tollman became the subject of an attempted abduction during a visit to Canada in 2005. The Tollmans are wanted in America for bank fraud and tax evasion.

In 2005, Gavin Tollman, the head of Trafalgar Tours, a holiday company, had arrived in Toronto by plane when he was arrested by Canadian immigration authorities.

An American prosecutor, who had tried and failed to extradite him from Britain, persuaded the Canadian officials to detain him. Tollman was escorted in handcuffs from the aircraft in Toronto, taken to prison and held for 10 days.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Hand-picked SC clears Mush election

A supreme court hand-picked by General Pervez Musharraf swiftly dismissed legal challenges to his continued rule on Monday, paving the way for him to serve another five-year term – this time solely as a civilian president. Welcoming the ruling, a Musharraf aide said it kept the General on track to quit the army by the end of November.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Labour sweeps general election in Australia





Promising a major policy change on Iraq and climate issues, the Labour party today swept to power in Australia, beating the coalition led by conservative Prime Minister John Howard, which had ruled the country for 11 years.

“A few minutes ago I telephoned Rudd and congratulated him and the Australian Labour Party on a very emphatic victory,” Howard said in a nationally televised concession speech.

:”I accept full responsibility for the Liberal party campaign, and I therefore accept full responsibility for the coalition’s defeat in this election campaign the leader said.

Voters turned to Labour party leader Kevin Rudd’s pitch of fresh leadership and new ideas over Howard’s record of economic management and unprecedented years of growth under his government.

The historic victory has put Rudd into the company of Gough Whitlam and Bob Hawke as Labour’s only modern leaders to take government from opposition.

Exit polls has consistently put the Labour party ahead since Rudd took the reins from Kim Beazley last December.

US plan to restructure aid to Pak

The Bush administration is in the final stages of a plan to restructure assistance to Pakistan in the face of intense pressure from several quarters to cut aid to the country following imposition of emergency, officials said here.
The plan is also looking at ways in which the assistance to Pakistan is further controlled or made subject to additional oversight, without actually reducing the aid, media reports said. Ever since Musharraf clamped emergency, the administration has been saying that its aid package is under tight scrutiny but at the same time senor officials have been emphasizing on the importance of Islamabad and Musharraf in the US-led war on terror.

Friday, November 23, 2007

N-deal: China is supportive, Wen Jiabao tells Manmohan Singh






As AEC chairman Anil Kakodhar opened talks with IAEA chief Mohammed ElBradel in Vienna for an India-specific safeguards agreement to operationalise the nuclear deal, Chinese premier Wen Jiabao told Prime Minister Manmohan Singh that his country was “forthcoming and supportive” of international civil nuclear energy cooperation with India.


Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Imran Khan On Hunger Strike




Imran Khan began a hunger strike on Monday in the prison, where he was sent last week for protesting against emergency rule, said his spokesman. He said Khan, who now heads his own opposition party, wanted a restoration of the Constitution and reinstatement of judges sacked when President Pervez Musharraf imposed the emergency just over two years ago.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Cj’s daughter not allowed to take exam






The daughter of sacked Pakistan Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, currently under house arrest, was not allowed to step out of the house to take her A-level examinations. Policeman guarding the house of Chaudhary, who was detained shortly after the imposition of emergency by President Musharraf on November 3, did not allow his daughter Ifra Iftikhar to step out of the house to write her A-level tests her yesterday. When her pleas fell flat on the guards ears, she turned to the British Council for help.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Elections in Jan : Mush





President Pervez Musharraf on Sunday announced that the elections would be held in the first week of January, but declined to give date for ending emergency saying he needs it to combat terrorism.

He reiterated to reporters here that he would relinquish army post after the Supreme Court vacates embargo on the notification of the elections. He said a caretaker government would be installed on Nov 15 when the National Assembly’s five year term expires. The provisional assemblies would be dissolved on November 20, he added.

The four things were highlighted by Bush:

  1. Emergency required to tackle terrorism.
  2. Caretaker government on Nov 15.
  3. Provisional assemblies to be dissolved on Nov 20.
  4. Defends arrest of political leaders.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Bomb suspects flee Maldives for Pak, say police


Colombo
: Ten men whom police suspect of involvement in a bombing that wounded 12 foreign tourists in the Maldives fled to Pakistan before officers could arrest them, police said on Thursday. Officers managed to round up six of 16 local men suspected of involvement in the planning of the attack and assembling of the bomb, but the other 10 escaped to Pakistan, Maldives police said.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Bush cracks the whip




President George W Bush on Wednesday personally informed Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf that he must fulfill his promise to hold parliamentary elections and give up the post as army chief.

“You can’t be the President and the head of the military at the same time.” Bush said he told General Musharraf in a telephonic conversation. “I had a very frank discussion with him.”

The White House has come under fire for treating General Musharraf, an ally in the U.S.-led war on terror, with kid gloves Bush was asked by a reporter why he had come down hard on the military junta in Burma and had not yet given a pass to General Musharraf.

Addressing reporters along side French President Nicolas Sarkozy at George Washington’s Mount Vernon estate in Virginia’s, Bush said he had spoken to General Musharraf earlier in the day. “And my message was that we believe strongly in elections, and that you ought to have elections soon, and you need to take off your uniform,” he said.

Bush said his “objective is the same in Burma as it is in Pakistan, and that is to promote democracy.” But he added: “There is a difference, however. Pakistan has been on the path to democracy; Burma hadn’t been on the path to democracy. And it requires different tactics to achieve the common objective.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Far-reaching repercussions for world if Pak implodes: Bhutto





Former Pakistan Premier Benazir Bhutto has warned that if her country “implodes” it will have far-reaching repercussions for the world community.

“God forbid, if Pakistan implodes? It will have far-reaching repercussions not just on our region but the wider world community,” Bhutto said in an interview published in the last issue of Hello magazine.

Bhutto also spoke about her dream of eliminating militant groups to usher stability in crisis-ridden Pakistan and her desire to work with India and Pakistan.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

India more important than Pak, says US

The US has said broad-based partnerships between America and India are critical and more important as compared to Pakistan, as New Delhi is growing as a potential power with global influence.
“The US-India strategic potential is very, very profound,” deputy assistant secretary of defence for South and South-East Asia James Clad told online journalists and bloggers during a conference call from the Pentagon.
While India’s sometimes contentious neighbour, Pakistan, continues to search for Osama bin Laden and help wage the global war on terror on terrorism, Clad explained, the US-Indian relationship was more important in the long run.
“India simply must, as a long-term consideration. matter more for us than Pakistan,” Clad has been quoted as saying in the American Forces Press Services.
“India is seen as potentially a power with global reach,” Clad said.
“It’s been slow in coming – I think it would be slow in coming future – but it is steady. The trend lines are unmistakable,” he said.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

India, China not rivals: Sonia






Acknowledging that India and China have different prospectives on both bilateral and global issues, Congress president Sonia Gandhi today said “pragmatism and mutual interest” offer a sound basis for the future development of the relationship.

She also expressed confidence that outstanding issues between the two countries could be “sorted out” through dialogue.

In her address to the School of Public Policy and Management of Tsunghua University organized by the ruling Communist Party of China, Gandhi sought to dispel apprehension about India and China being rivals.

“The world is big enough to accommodate the growth and aspirations of both our countries. We can must work and prosper together”.

Gandhi, who is on a five-day visit to China, said both India and China seek an open and inclusive world order based on the principles of “Panchsheel” that were founded together by Zhou Enlai and Jawaharlal Nehru in 1954.

“Pragmatism and mutual self-interest offer a sound basis for the future development of our relationship,” she stressed.

Earlier this week, China had for the first time publicly said “mutual concessions and adjustments” were must to reach an early deal on the vexed boundary issue with India.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Photo of 2nd Bhutto bomb suspect released





Pakistan police released a photograph of the reconstructed to have been involved in a suicide attack on former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto that killed 139 people, police said on Friday. A photograph of the head of the first suspect was released a day after the attack on Bhutto's procession in Karachi on Oct 19, following her return from eight years of self imposed exile. Police are unsure whether there was one or two suicide bombers. Initially, they had thought the first blast was caused by a grenade. A week after the devastating main blast neither of the suspects have been identified from the photographs circulated.

Turkey, Iraq hold talks over Kurdish threat

Iraqi ministers hold crisis talks here on Friday seeking to persuade an increasingly impatient Turkey against launching military strikes against rebel Kurd bases in northern Iraq. The talks broke up after 90 minutes however and it was not immediately known if and when when they would resume.

Philippine's Estrada home to hero's welcome




Joseph Estrada, jailed former leader of the Philippines, came home to a hero's welcome on Friday as President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo faced criticism for pardoning the playboy movie star. Arroyo set aside her ousted predecessor's life sentence on Thursday, just six weeks after his conviction on corruption charges, raising suspicion that the clemency was designed to curry favor with the opposition amid mounting bribery scandals.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Bush Possible New Zealand terror target, says report






US president George W Bush was among the possible targets in threats recorded by New Zealand police who have arrested 17 people in an anti-terrorist sweep, a report said on Sunday.

New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark and opposition leader John Key were also discussed as potential targets, The Sunday Star-Times said quoting intelligence resources.

Washington said to have agreed to let New Zealand police handle the investigation, the report said.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Violence in Karachi : 14 Bhutto supporters injured





Atleast 14 people were injured as angry workers of Pakistan people’s party clashed with the police, blocked roads and forced closure of shops to protest against the attack on the convoy of their leader Benazir Bhutto that left atleast 140 people dead.

Manilla mall blast toll 9, police reviews footage



The Philippine police confirmed today that militarygrade explosives caused a powerful blast in an upscale Manila shopping mall and it was reviewing security camera footage to look for suspects.
The Glorietta mall blast at lunchtime yesterday killed nine people and wounded 120, although many of those wounded has been discharged after treatment, the police and the hospital sources said.
The explosive experts said the bomb was apparently was set off in the basement of Glorietta, a sprawling three-storey complex of departmental stores, high-end fashion boutiques, restaurants, other shops and cinemas in the heart of the Makati business district.
The bomb ripped all the way through to the roof of the structure, devastating shops and restaurants. The police have earlier believed the bomb was near a cell phone repair shop directly above the delivery bay.
Eight people were confirmed dead yesterday and a body of man was found early today in the debris, a police official said. Four people had been reported missing.
Manila police chief Geary Barias said the police had also started reviewing closed-circuit TV (CCTV) footage of the mall.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Iran’s atomic negotiator Larijani resigns


Ali Larijani, who has fronted Tehran’s efforts to defuse as atomic row with the west, has resigned as Iran’s chief nuclear negotiation.

Saeed Jalili, deputy foreign minister for European and American affairs, was expected to replace Larijani, the official IRNA news agency said.

Larijani was set to meet EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana in Rome on Tuesday for more discussions about Iran’s nuclear ambitions, which the west said were aimed at building atomic bombs despite Tehran’s denials. Government spokesman Gholamhossein Elham, said Larijani’s replacement was expected to meet Solana as planned.

Sharif corruption case : Hearing against family on Nov 8


The Accountability Court in Rawalpindi has set November 8 for hearing the Ittifaq Foundry, Hudyabia Paper Mills and Raiwind corruption cases against former premier Nawaz Sharif, his brother and former Punjab chief minister Shahbaz Sharif and their family has issued notices to the Sharifs to appear before it in person.

Judge Khalid Mehmood issued the directive following a claim by the prosecution that the amnesty given to PPP chairperson Benazir Bhutto under the newly promulgated National Reconciliation Order (NRO) does not cover the Sharifs because the cases against them were registered after the cut-off date of November,1 1999.

The judge directed the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) to produce the accused at the next hearing, stating that otherwise the cases would be put-off for an indefinite period. On Friday, NAB Deputy Prosecutor – General Zulfiqar Ahmed pleaded that the court should not adjourn the hearing sine die because the accused were expected to return to Pakistan early next month, as stated by Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) acting president Javed Hashmi.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

The Sarkozy Divorce and the fate of France!






A fifty-two year old man with a diminishing hairline divorces his 49-year wife. Quite regular one would say. But when the man entangled in the news is the French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the woman is the beautiful former model of France, Cécilia Sarkozy, we have to acknowledge that their decision will have far-reaching significance. As per the recent report by The Telegraph, the couple has already started taking part in the divorce proceedings. Cécilia had become somewhat role model in France, some even reckoning her beauty with the great Princess Diana. The French media had been rustling for sometime now about this bound to happen split. There is no doubt in people mind that she had been the decisive factor in the meteoric success of President Sarkozy, but it seems now that the President is bearing this breakup with his characteristic ‘don’t’ care what the media says’ attitude. He was recently in the controversy for holding a chit, which emerged to be a love-note to him from a woman fan. That resulted out to be a note given by a friend of his wife’s to him. Then he had been photographed yelling at a reporter while yachting. It looks that Sarkozy has to brace for more misfortune. But that is what the personal man is all about. What are the results for the public man and the State of France? After all, Sarkozy belongs to the public by his own choice to sit in office.

They have a son called Louis from this marriage and four children from their previous marriages. The divorce is surely too deep and full of sorrow for Loius especially.