اسلام آباد...وزیر اعظم سید یوسف رضا گیلانی نے کہا ہے کہ عدلیہ کا بحران پارلیمنٹ کے ذریعے حل کریں گے ۔ وزیر اعظم نے یہ بات اسلام آباد میں ان سے ملنے آنے والے وفد سے ملاقات کرتے ہوئے کہی۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ ہم عدلیہ سمت تمام اداروں کومضبوط اور مستحکم دیکھنا چاہتے۔عوامی مسائل کھلی کچہریاں لگا کر حل کریں گے جبکہ متوازی فہرست کو ختم کیا جائیگا۔انہوں نے کہاکہ عوامی مسائل کو جلدازجلد حل کرنے کیلئے فوری اقدامات اٹھائے جائیں۔انہوں نے کہا کہ کنکرنٹ لسٹ کو بھی جلد ختم کردیا جائے گا۔
International News Agency in english/urdu News,Feature,Article,Editorial,Audio,Video&PhotoService from Rawalpindi/Islamabad,Pakistan. Editor-in-Chief M.Rafiq.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
عدلیہ کا بحران پارلیمنٹ کے ذریعے حل کریں گے،وزیر اعظم
اسلام آباد...وزیر اعظم سید یوسف رضا گیلانی نے کہا ہے کہ عدلیہ کا بحران پارلیمنٹ کے ذریعے حل کریں گے ۔ وزیر اعظم نے یہ بات اسلام آباد میں ان سے ملنے آنے والے وفد سے ملاقات کرتے ہوئے کہی۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ ہم عدلیہ سمت تمام اداروں کومضبوط اور مستحکم دیکھنا چاہتے۔عوامی مسائل کھلی کچہریاں لگا کر حل کریں گے جبکہ متوازی فہرست کو ختم کیا جائیگا۔انہوں نے کہاکہ عوامی مسائل کو جلدازجلد حل کرنے کیلئے فوری اقدامات اٹھائے جائیں۔انہوں نے کہا کہ کنکرنٹ لسٹ کو بھی جلد ختم کردیا جائے گا۔
International Peoples Tribunal formed in IHK to probe rights abuse
NEW DELHI : An international People’s Tribunal was constituted by a consortium of NGOs in occupied Kashmir to probe into rights abuse and seek international intervention for resolution of Kashmir issue.
Founder of the Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS) and convener of the tribunal, Pervez Imroz, said in Srinagar “the tribunal will initiate an international process that looks into complex, systematic and institutionalised repression in order to engage global civil society in investigating crimes against humanity in Kashmir.”
Zaheer-Ud-Din, Chief Editor of local Daily Etalat and JKCCS Vice President said the Tribunal will probe incidents of intense and regularised violence, including rape, disablement, killings, executions, enforced disappearances, interrogations, detentions, and devastations by landmines.”
Tribunal will investigate existing evidence and hear statements and testimonials through public processes that maintain transparency, media reports quoting Pervez Imroz said.
The Tribunal will also invite survivors, those seeking justice, local communities and groups, experts from India and the international community to participate in the process of investigation, he added.
Information minister condemns ‘stoning to death’ incident
ISLAMABAD :Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Sherry Rehman has expressed deep concern and condemned in strongest terms the reported incident of ‘stoning to death’ of a couple in Mohmand Agency recently.
Commenting on the news reports that a man and a woman were abducted from Nowshera (NWFP) and executed them by stoning to death in Mohmand Agency (FATA) at the order of so called Qazi belonging to a section of militants and their bodies were thrown in a jungle, the minister said “ I condemn in strongest terms the way the couple was put to death in barbaric, gruesome and uncivilized manner, as reported in the press”.
Sherry said, any person who violates and takes the law into his hands shall be punished in accordance with law and the government would not overlook any such unlawful act, says a press release received here on Sunday.
“The elected government gained a clear mandate from the people of Pakistan to create a civilized and humane society where the rights of the vulnerable sections of the society are protected”, she added.
She said that the government will take necessary action against the culprits so that they are punished according to the law at earliest.
“The law ministry has also taken note of this uncivilized incident and will take the required action. There is no room in Pakistan for people to take the law into their own hands. Taliban laws cannot be arbitrarily imposed and all citizens are entitled to justice under the law”, she added.
Iranian daily hails Musharraf for holding fair election
TEHRAN : A leading Iranian daily praised President Pervez Musharraf has been praised for holding free and fair elections in the country. Commenting editorially the daily described the February vote as “one of the most auspicious sociopolitical events of 2008 in Pakistan.”
The February vote, which by most accounts was fair and democratic, and the formation of a coalition government made up of the two biggest opposition parties in the country, has gone a long way in restoring the Pakistani political system’s reputation and ease fears about a melt down in that geopolitically crucial and nuclear-armed state, the daily added.
According to the daily, prior to the positive developments of the last couple of months, many analysts were predicting dire scenarios for Pakistan, moving towards civilian rule.
The daily congratulated the Pakistani nation, government and political system for a job well done.
Shahbaz Sharif constitute working groups
LAHORE - Punjab Chief Minister designate, Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif has constituted a number of working groups to look into various aspects of the functioning of the Punjab government while one such group headed by Punjab Assembly Speaker designate, Rana Iqbal Ahmad Khan MPA and convenor, Shafqat Mehmood (former senator), is busy reviewing the annual development programme of the province.
This was disclosed by a spokesman of the P&D Department in a handout issued by DGPR here on Sunday. He disclosed that although the Shahbaz Sharif led government was still to take over yet it was hard at work. He disclosed that the afore-mentioned working group comprised a number of Punjab Assembly Members including Ch,Muhammad Ayaz, Rawalpindi, Mrs. Shahzadi Umerzadi, Sargodha, Mrs.Nazia Raheel, T.T.Singh, Malik Fayyaz Ahmad Awan, Hafizabad, Haji Nasir Mehmood, Gujrat, Kh.Salman Rafique, Lahore, Khawaja Muhammad Aslam, Faisalabad, Farooq Yousaf Gurki, Lahore, M.Javed Bhatti, Sheikhupura, Mian Yawar Zaman, Okara, Nishat Ahmad Khan Daha, Khanewal, Malik Ghulam Habib Awan, Lahore and Sardar Dost Muhammad Khosa, DG Khan.
In addition to them Dr. Shahid Kardar, Dr.Rashid Amjad (Vice Chancellor PIDE) and Dr.Amjad Saquib are also the members of the working group.
The spokesman further disclosed that the working group held to marathon sessions in which the P&D Chairman and his team deliberated on various aspects of the last year’s ADP and the Medium Term Development Framework for the Punjab. Apart from this, special briefing sessions were also held on Irrigation, Health, Mega Projects such as Lahore ring Road, Sialkot-Lahore Motorway and the proposed Lahore Mass Transit Project. He pointed out that a particular focus was on foreign funded project and issued such as regional equity avoiding wastage and ostentation, and gender mainstreaming.
It is pertinent to mention here that the Chairman of the working group, Rana Iqbal keeping in view the austerity drive on the part of Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif, instead of having a lunch from the largess of the Punjab government, invited the participating members to the People House where a simple but sumptuous lunch was served to them. This was clearly a shadow of the things to come as Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif had taken hard decisions particularly converting the grand Chief Minister’s Secretariat into a women IT university.
The working group on annual development programme was directed by Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif to finish its work in one week and present its report to him, it added.
Bye-elections on about 30 NA,PA constituencies likely in mid of May
ISLAMABAD: Bye-elections on about 30 national and provincial assemblies constituencies to fall vacant after completion of oath-taking process of all the provincial assemblies are likely to be held by mid of May. This was stated by Secretary Election Commission, Kanwar Muhammad Dilshad while talking to APP here on Sunday.
He said that the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) would announce the exact date for bye-elections after oath taking process of the provincial assemblies is completed and it becomes clear that how many seats have fallen vacant and in which assembly.
To a question he said that the CEC has already issued instructions to the Provincial Election Commissioners for completing arrangements for bye-elections.
Raisani single candidate for CM’s post, Rind only opposition member in Balochistan
QUETTA :Nawab Muhammad Aslam Raisani of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) has appeared as single candidate for the post of chief minister in Balochistan after winning the support of independent candidates, MMA, BNP (A), PML-Q (Ham Khiyal Group) and ANP members for power sharing and forming a coalition government in the province.
Nawab Aslam Raisani will be the third PPP chief minister while 13th chief minister of Balochistan after assuming the charge of office the provincial executive head.
Ex-federal minister for frontier regions Sardar Yar Muhammad Rind of PML-Q will be as the only opposition member in Balochistan Assembly after 1977 when Dr Mir Haji Tareen was performing alone the responsibility of the opposition bench in the House.
The public mandate was divided and split in general elections on February 18 which gave way to a hectic political race in Balochistan between PML (Q) and PPP as they had obtained sizeable seats for forming coalition government in the province.
Out of total seats of 51 in the provincial assembly, PML (Q) had secured 16 seats the highest number, followed by PPP and MMA obtained seven seats each, BNP (A) five, ANP one while 10 independent candidates had come in the highest provincial House.
None of these parties had sufficient number of seats to form its government without making alliance to form a coalition government. The leaders of PML (Q) and PPP remained busy long to get convinced the smaller parties and independent candidates for forming their own government.
However, finally, PML (Q) was divided over nomination of leadership in the House when its special committee nominated Shaikh Jaffar Mandokhel as leader of the House. Even, the party’s high command including Chaudhry Shujaat and Mushahid Hussain Syed visited Quetta for developing consensus among the party members over the parliamentary leadership, but all in vain.
Later, 12 members of PML-Q (Ham Khiyal Group) led by ex-deputy speaker Muhammad Aslam Bhutani announced support to PPP for forming a coalition government at a press conference. Lastly, PML-Q nominee for parliamentary leaderShaikh Jaffar Mandokhel also announced his support to PPP for forming a coalition government in the province.
Now, the PPP has won the support of 61 members out of 65 (51 general seats and 14 reserved seats including three for minorities and 11 for women) in the assembly. Three seats are fallen vacant in the House. One seat PB-44 Lasbella-I has fallen vacant when Jam Muhammad Yousaf preferred to be member of National Assembly when his struggle and dream for regaining the slot of chief minister could not proved to be fruitful. The second vacant seat PB-9 Pishin fell vacant when winning candidate of the constituency Malik Sarwar Khan Kakar of PML-Q died due to cardiac arrest. The third seat PB-32 Jhal Magsi became vacant when Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi had been appointed as Governor Balochistan on February 27 last.
Profile of Nawab Aslam Raisani: Nawab Aslam Raisani is son of late-Nawab Ghaus Bakhsh Raisani who served as governor Balochistan and federal minister. Aslam Raisani was born on July 5, 1955. He got education from Quetta and he obtained MA degree in Political Science from University of Balochistan. He was appointed as DSP in police after completion of his education and later resigned from his job.
He became tribal head of his Raisani tribe after death of his father and became Chief of Sarawan. He is also member of supreme council of Baloch Qawmi Jirga. His father became provincial president of PPP in 1972 and he himself joined PPP in 1994.
He was elected as member of Balochistan Assembly in 1988, 1990, 1993 and 2002 and also remained as the provincial senior minister and provincial finance minister. It is for the fifth time he has been elected as member of the House. He has also been serving as president Balochistan Chamber of Agriculture for the last 12 years.
Nawab Aslam Raisani is diligent, sincere and seasoned politician. He has serious personality and has much awareness about the tribal traditions of the province. It is hoped that he would lead the coalition government with dedication and farsightedness. It is also hoped that he would resolve problems of the people sincerely in the province.
Nisar Khuhro and Shahla Raza elected Speaker and Dy. Speaker
KARACHI- Nisar Ahmed Khuhro and Shehla Raza of Pakistan People Party (PPP) were declared elected unopposed as Speaker and Deputy Speaker respectively of Sindh Assembly. They were declared elected unopposed by Speaker Syed Muzaffar Hussain Shah after scrutiny of their nomination papers by him.
After declaring them elected unopposed Speaker Muzaffar Hussain Shah extended felicitations to both.
On the occasion Muzaffar Shah wished them all well and hoped that they would fulfil their responsibilities as custodians of the House.
On the occasion Speaker-elect Nisar Ahmed Khuhro said that he would run the business of the House with all fairness.
Shehla Raza said that she would strive to get women their due rights.
Meanwhile Speaker Muzaffar Hussain Shah will administer the oath of office of Speaker Sindh Assembly to Nisar Ahmed Khuhro at a special session of the Assembly on Monday.
After assuming the office of Speaker, Nisar Ahmed Khuhro will administer the oath of office to Deputy Speaker Shahla Raza.
Judicial crisis to be sorted out in the parliament: PM
ASSOCIATED PRESS SERVICE
ISLAMABAD : Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani on Sunday said the judicial crisis will be sorted out in the parliament. Talking to a delegation of notables from different parts of the country, the prime minister said his government will take along all the political forces while making the important decisions.
“To every wrong there is a remedy. There is no problem in the world which does not have a solution. We will create bridges not walls,” he said.
Prime Minister Gilani reiterated that as promised earlier, the government would remove the concurrent list within a year and give provincial autonomy to all the federating units.
“As Shaheed Zulfiqar Bhutto said, the power lies with the people. We have come into power not for the sake of power.
“We will serve the people who have given us the mandate.”
Prime Minister Gilani said National Assembly was the supreme body of country to whom the prime minister, ministers and all the members were answerable.
He said he has directed all the federal ministers to fix a day to meet the general public and when they go to their respective constituencies hold ‘open kutcheries’ and remain available to the people.
The Prime Minister said people are pinning great hopes in the government and he will do his best to come upto their expectations.
“We will do everything in the greater national interest and come up to people’s expectations,” he added.
Prime Minister Gilani said in his first address to the National Assembly he talked of the people of Pakistan.
“We have restored the labour unions. We will strengthen the institutions,” he said.
He said he firmly believes that the government which has the popular backing is always successful.
“When there is people’s power behind our back, the institutions will not only work but also gain strength.”
Speaking about the economic crisis, he said the main cause was the power shortage on which the government was working to find a solution.
“I have great faith in my team who have the will to move forward,” he added.
The Prime Minister said as many people say, in the absence of a strong opposition, the press has the responsibility to point out their shortcomings.
This, he added, will help the government and its functionaries to rectify their faults and serve the people in a better way.
The Prime Minister strongly stressed the importance of maintaining law and order which he said leads to economic stability.
He said there is a strong need to create the middle class in Pakistan.
“The absence of middle class ultimately leads to revolution. We want that there should be a middle class in the country.”
On a suggestion from one of the delegates, the Prime Minister said there was a serious flaw in the image of Pakistan which needs to be corrected.
For this purpose, he said, a think tank will be created but stressed the need for bringing a change in the popular thinking.
“As a nation we are divided on the basis of region, religion or caste. We should feel proud as Pakistanis,” he said.
Replying to a question as to why several prime ministers in the past were murdered and their killers never traced, Prime Minister Gilani said it was due to the ailing and out-dated system which was the cause of many ills in Pakistan.
He said the present government will change this system for which it has the mandate of the people.
The delegation also included some of Prime Minister’s mates when he was in the jail.
He said not only he himself personally knows but those who had remained incarcerated have informed him of the pathetic conditions in the jails.
The present government, he added, is committed for jail reforms so that the inmates are treated in a humane way.
طاقتور قانون شکن ما فیا ۔۔۔۔۔۔۔۔۔۔۔۔۔ تحریر چودھری احسن پریمی
قیام پاکستان کے فورا بعد قائد اعظم کی وفات کے ساتھ ہی پاکستان یتیم ہوگیا۔اور اس کی باگ دوڑ ایسے لوگوں کے ہاتھ آ گئی جو انگریز کی باقیات تھے انھوں نے ہر وہ اقدام کیا جس سے اس ملک کے عوام کی ہر اس خواہش کا خون ہوتا رہے۔جن خواہشات کو پایہ تکمیل کرنے کے لئے یہ وطن حاصل کیا گیا تھا۔ساٹھ سال گزرنے کے باوجود ایک عام آدمی کو وہ بنیادی سہولتیں فراہم نہ ہو سکیں جن کی ضمانت ریاست دیتی ہے۔اور نہ ہی اس ملک میں اسلامی نظام کا نفاذ کیا گیا جس کے لئے یہ وطن حاصل کیا گیا۔ ملک میں موجود طاقتور مافیا نے ہر اس عزم کا اعادہ کیا ہوا ہے کہ ہر وہ اقدام اٹھایا جائے جس سے عوام ذہنی،جسمانی،اور معاشی طور پر معذور رہیںملک قومیت سے بنتے ہیں ا نصاف اور ا کنا مکس پہ قائم رہتے ہیں بد قسمتی سے تینوں سے ہم محروم ہیں۔ قانون شکن مافیا نے قانون کی شکل کو بگاڑ دے کر گدھا بنا دیا ہے۔اور اس گدھے پر ظاقت ور قانون شکن مافیا سواری کر کے اپنی مرضی سے اس کے کان مروڑ کرسمت کا تعین کر رہے ہیں جبکہ غریب عوام اس گدھے کے قریب آتے ہیں تو انہیں وہ دولتیاں مار رہا ہے۔نئی حکومت نے اقتدار میں آتے ہی کہا ہے کہ ملک معاشی بحران کا شکار ہے اور مہنگائی کا سدباب کرنے کی بجائے اس کا دفاع کرنا شروع کردیا ہے اور عوام کو کہانیاں سنانا شروع کردی ہیں کہ یہ تو چائنہ میں بھی ہے۔ اگر آپ نے عوام سے یہی بکواس کرنے تھے تو آپ لوگوں نے عوام کو کیوں بے وقوف بنایا اور ان سے جھوٹ بولا کہ اقتدار میں آکر ہر چیز کی قیمت آدھی کر دیں گے۔مشرف نے پہلے ق لیگ کو ٹشو پیپر کے طور پر استعمال کر کے پھینکا۔اور اب نئے حکمراں اتحاد کو مفاہمتی آرڈیننس کا جھا نسہ دے کر ساتھ ملا لیا ہے۔ اور ججز کی بحالی کے حوالے سے گیند ان کی کورٹ میں پھینک دی ہے کہ اگر ججز بحال ہوئے تو مفاہمتی آرڈیننس ختم ہونے سے آپ لوگ دوبارہ گرفت میں آسکتے ہیں۔اور اس ضمن میںبے دردی سے قومی خزانہ لوٹنے والے تما م سیاسی جماعتیں اور ان کے سربراہ اس بات پر اتفاق کرتے ہیں کہ ججز کو بھال نہ کیا جائے۔جبکہپاکستان مسلم لیگ کے صدر چوہدری شجاعت حسین اور سابق وزیر اعلیٰ پنجاب چوہدری پرویز الٰہی نے کہا ہے کہ صدر پرویز مشرف کے خلاف مواخذے کی تحریک آئے گی اور نہ ہی جج بحال ہونگے، یہ سب دل کو بہلانے والی باتیں ہیں ان لوگوں نے انتخابات کے موقع پر عوام سے جو وعدے کئے تھے اور جن وعدوں کی بنا پر ووٹ لئے اب وہ سارے وعدے بھول چکے ہیں۔ آٹا، گیس اور بجلی کی قیمتیں کم تو نہیں ہوئیں البتہ مزید بڑھی ہیں اور یہ مزید بڑھیں گی۔ عدلیہ اور ججوں کی بحالی پر آئین اور قانون کے مطابق جو فیصلہ آئے گا اسے سب کو قبول کرنا ہوگا۔ البتہ 30 دن میں کوئی بھی یہ کام نہیں کرسکتا ہے اور جو یہ کہتے ہیں وہ 30 دن گزرنے کے بعد بھی اسی تنخواہ پر کام کریں گے۔ یہ وہی لوگ ہیں جو کہتے تھے کہ صدر مشرف سے حلف نہ لیں گے لیکن بعد میں انہوں نے لیا۔ بہترین انفرا اسٹرکچر اور مستحکم پالیسیاں بنائی جائیں اور صنعتکاری کے ذریعے بیروزگاری کا خاتمہ کیا جائے بجلی کے بحران کی وجہ سے ملکی کارخانے بند پڑے ہیں۔بے روزگاری میں دن بدن اضافہ ہو رہا ہے۔ عوام میں ہر طرف مایوسی کا عالم ہے اور وہ بے بس نظر آتے ہیں۔ عوام کا خیال ہے کہ ایک دفعہ پھر ہم سے دھوکہ ہو گیا ہے۔ عوام کے جذبات سے کھیل کر اور ووٹ لیکر سیاسی لوگ پھر مشرف سے جا ملے ہیں۔یہ بھی کہا جا رہا ہے کہ موجودہ سیٹ اپ بھی اسٹیبلشمنٹ کے مارشل پلان کا حصہ تھا۔ اور اس پلان میں یہ طے تھا کہ گذشتہ آٹھ سالہ دور میں اقتدار میں رہنے والے چہرے جن کے جھوٹ سن سن کر عوام کے کان پک چکے ہیں ان کو منظرعام سے پس منظر میں کر دیا جائے۔اور حکمران اتحاد میں شامل برسر اقتدار آنے والی تمام پارٹیاں ایک ڈیل کا نتیجہ ہیں۔عوامی حلقوں میں جو قیاس آرائیاں کی جا رہی ہیں۔ان کے مطابق ایک سال پہلے طے ہو گیا تھا کہ مرکز میں وزیراعظم پی پی کا ہوگا۔ پنجاب مسلم لیگ اورسندھ پی پی اور ایم کیو ایم کے حوالے کیا جائے گا۔اور یہ سب کچھ جو عوام دیکھ رہے ہیں۔موجودہ حکمران اتحاد کھل کر مشرف کی حمایت اس لئے نہیں کر رہے۔عوام کو بے وقوف بنائے اور ان سے انٹی مشرف پالیسی پر ووٹ لئے کچھ زیادہ وقت نہیں گزرا۔ لوگوں نے حکمران اتحاد سے بہت سی توقعات وابستہ کررکھی ہیں۔ عوام کے دیئے ہوئے مینڈیٹ اور مری اعلامیہ سے انحراف کے نتیجے میں بڑے پیمانے پر مایوسی پیدا ہوگی لوگوں نے آصف علی زرداری کے حوالے سے غلط قیاس آرائیاں شروع کر دی ہیں اور انہیں یہ غلط ثابت کرنا ہونگی اگر نواز شریف نے اپنے آپ کو ججوں کی بحالی کے معاملے سے دور کرنے کے اشارے دیئے تو وہ بھی سیاسی طور پر مردہ ہوجائیں گے ۔ ُپاکستان کی حکمراں جماعت پاکستان پیپلزپارٹی کے شریک چیئرمین آصف زرداری نے کہا ہے کہ پاکستانی سرحدوں پر القاعدہ اور طالبان کے خلاف جنگ پاکستان کیلئے بھی اتنی ہی اہم ہے جتنی کہ کسی دوسرے کیلئے اہم ہوسکتی ہے تاہم انہوں نے کہا کہ وہ جنگجوو¿ں سے مذاکرات کے بھی خواہاں ہیں۔ آصف علی زرداری کی جانب سے دہشت گردی کے خلاف جنگ اور جنگجوو¿ں سے مذاکرات کے دہرے عمل پر امریکاہ کو تحفظات ہیں امریکی وزیر خارجہ کونڈولیزا رائس نے یاد دلایا ہے کہ صدر پرویز مشرف نے بھی عسکریت پسندوں کے ساتھ ایک غیر موثر معاہدہ کیا تھا۔یہ بھی کہا گیا ہے کہ سی آئی اے کے سربراہ مائیکل ہیڈن نے بڑی بے دردی سے اس تباہ کن ڈیل کو دہشت پسندوں کو کھلی چھوٹی دینے کا پروانہ قرار دیا۔ کہا گیا ہے کہ حالیہ انتخابات میں صدر پرویز مشرف کے حمایتیوں کی شکست نے صدر پرویز مشرف کے اقتدار کو دھچکا پہنچایا‘ ان کی امریکی حمایت پاکستان میں سخت نامقبول ہوئی مگر آصف زرداری کی جانب سے حکومت کے موقف میں تبدیلی اہم ہے۔ ایک غیر ملکی جریدے کی رپورٹ میں کہا گیا ہے کہ صوبہ سرحد کی نئی مخلوط حکومت نے ہیڈن کے بیان کی شدید مذمت کی ہے۔ اے این پی کے سربراہ اسفند یار ولی خان نے کہا ہے کہ ان کے بعض طالبان سے رابطے ہیں اور وہ مقامی عسکریت پسندوں سے مفاہمت پر یقین رکھتے ہیں‘ انہیں اس بات پر مسرت ہے کہ پاکستانی فوج نے متعدد دہشت گردی کے تربیتی کیمپ بند کرائے تھے۔ رپورٹ کے مطابق شمالی وزیرستان کے 25 سالہ رکن اسمبلی کامران خان کا کہنا ہے کہ جب تک افغانستان میں امریکی فوجی موجود ہیں‘ جنگ جاری رہے گی۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ امریکا کی جانب سے قبائلی علاقوں میں ترقیاتی کاموں کیلئے 750 ملین ڈالرز کی امداد کافی نہیں‘ ہمیں اربوں ڈالرز چاہئیں۔
Putin, Bush in tense swansong summit
SOCHI, Russia - Vladimir Putin and George W. Bush hold their final summit here Sunday trying to put an amicable face on tense US-Russia ties yet unable to bridge wide gaps on European security and other issues.
Bush arrived in this Russian Black Sea resort late Saturday and was given a tour by Putin of models of planned 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics sites before the two retired to Putin’s seaside residence for an informal, private dinner.
The ambiance at the dinner, also attended by Russian president-elect Dmitry Medvedev, was described afterwards by White House spokeswoman Dana Perino as “warm, very comfortable, easygoing.”
But Bush and Putin were to get down to more serious talks starting at 0600 GMT on Sunday that were expected to touch on their differences over US missile shield plans, NATO expansion, arms treaties and other contentious issues.
Officials from both countries have said that a “strategic framework” document, a joint statement aimed at defining a path forward in US-Russian relations, would be issued at the Sochi talks.
But even as Bush was on his way to Russia from Croatia, where he lauded that country’s accession to NATO after generations of Kremlin domination, the White House downplayed talk of a US-Russia breakthrough on the missile defence plan.
“We’re going to have to do more work after Sochi,” White House spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters aboard Bush’s plane.
“No one has said that everything would be finalised and everyone would be satisfied,” she added.
Putin leaves office next month with Bush doing the same eight months later and observers say both leaders would like their relationship to be remembered for more than just the US-Russian disputes that have risen during their terms.
Those disputes however show little sign of being resolved anytime soon, although there have been some indications of movement on the missile defence split that US officials have said they hope Russia will acknowledge at the Sochi talks.
The US missile plan foresees installing nine interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic to guard against missile attacks from “rogue states” like Iran.
Russia counters that Iran poses no missile threat to the United States and says it views the shield as a threat to its own security.
The United States says it has made “forward-leaning” concessions to assuage Russia’s concerns that include, for example, giving Russian liaison officers access to system sites in Poland and the Czech Republic.
“The Russians said that these were useful and important,” US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told reporters last week on the sideslines of the NATO summit in Bucharest.
“We hope that we can move beyond that to an understanding that we will all have an interest in cooperation on missile defence” during the Bush-Putin meeting in Sochi, she said.
Russia has also warned that NATO membership for ex-Soviet Ukraine and Georgia would be a “serious strategic mistake” that Moscow would take as a direct threat and that would undermine wider European security.
Bush arrived in this Russian Black Sea resort late Saturday and was given a tour by Putin of models of planned 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics sites before the two retired to Putin’s seaside residence for an informal, private dinner.
The ambiance at the dinner, also attended by Russian president-elect Dmitry Medvedev, was described afterwards by White House spokeswoman Dana Perino as “warm, very comfortable, easygoing.”
But Bush and Putin were to get down to more serious talks starting at 0600 GMT on Sunday that were expected to touch on their differences over US missile shield plans, NATO expansion, arms treaties and other contentious issues.
Officials from both countries have said that a “strategic framework” document, a joint statement aimed at defining a path forward in US-Russian relations, would be issued at the Sochi talks.
But even as Bush was on his way to Russia from Croatia, where he lauded that country’s accession to NATO after generations of Kremlin domination, the White House downplayed talk of a US-Russia breakthrough on the missile defence plan.
“We’re going to have to do more work after Sochi,” White House spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters aboard Bush’s plane.
“No one has said that everything would be finalised and everyone would be satisfied,” she added.
Putin leaves office next month with Bush doing the same eight months later and observers say both leaders would like their relationship to be remembered for more than just the US-Russian disputes that have risen during their terms.
Those disputes however show little sign of being resolved anytime soon, although there have been some indications of movement on the missile defence split that US officials have said they hope Russia will acknowledge at the Sochi talks.
The US missile plan foresees installing nine interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic to guard against missile attacks from “rogue states” like Iran.
Russia counters that Iran poses no missile threat to the United States and says it views the shield as a threat to its own security.
The United States says it has made “forward-leaning” concessions to assuage Russia’s concerns that include, for example, giving Russian liaison officers access to system sites in Poland and the Czech Republic.
“The Russians said that these were useful and important,” US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told reporters last week on the sideslines of the NATO summit in Bucharest.
“We hope that we can move beyond that to an understanding that we will all have an interest in cooperation on missile defence” during the Bush-Putin meeting in Sochi, she said.
Russia has also warned that NATO membership for ex-Soviet Ukraine and Georgia would be a “serious strategic mistake” that Moscow would take as a direct threat and that would undermine wider European security.
Zimbabwe ruling party, opposition locked in election battle
HARARE - Zimbabwe’s opposition and ruling party remained locked Sunday in a battle of wills over the presidential election with Robert Mugabe showing no sign of relinquishing his grip on power.
As Zimbabweans began a second week of waiting, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) sought to break the deadlock with a legal bid to force the electoral commission to declare a winner.
Their case was due to be heard at midday (1000 GMT) at the high court, but there was little expectation that it would help bring an end to the crisis facing the southern African nation.
Mugabe’s ruling ZANU-PF and the opposition have stepped up their battling rhetoric in recent days and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai on Saturday declared himself for the first time the outright victor of the March 29 poll.
The MDC has already gained control of parliament by a slim margin in the simultaneous legislative elections, but the ZANU-PF is contesting enough seats to reverse that result.
Mugabe chaired a meeting of the ZANU-PF’s politburo on Friday at which he was endorsed to run in a second round run-off if neither of the two main contenders wins more than 50 percent of the presidential vote.
A party spokesman said after the meeting that a run-off was ”definite” and that the 84-year-old Mugabe was still certain to win his sixth consecutive term as president.
Tsvangirai warned on Saturday that Mugabe’s ruling party would resort to violence to help the country’s only leader since independence in 1980 cling to power.
“In the run-off, violence will be a new weapon to reverse the people’s victory,” he said.
“ZANU-PF is preparing a war against the people of Zimbabwe such as we witnessed in 2000,” when Mugabe failed to win backing in a referendum for a broadening of his powers.
Hours after Tsvangirai spoke, state television reported that the president’s supporters had seized one of the country’s few remaining white-owned farms.
With tensions rising between the government and opposition, long-time mediator Thabo Mbeki, the president of neighbouring South Africa, has called for patience from all sides.
“I think there is time to wait, let’s see the outcome of the election results,” Mbeki told reporters in London on Saturday after meeting Gordon Brown, the prime minister of Zimbabwe’s former colonial ruler Britain.
Brown said his talks with Mbeki and other African leaders had reached agreement on the need for foreign observers to monitor any second round.
Meanwhile, lawyers for two foreign journalists arrested at a Harare guest house on Thursday for breaching the country’s strict media laws were hoping the courts would set a hearing date for their legal bid to have them released.
Mugabe, who has led the country since independence in 1980, has presided over its demise from regional model to economic basket case.
Inflation is officially running at around 100,000 percent but most experts believe the real figure is several times higher.
With an unemployment rate of some 80 percent, around three million of Zimbabwe’s 13 million population have left the country, both to find work and food as even basics such as bread and cooking oil are now hard to come by.
As Zimbabweans began a second week of waiting, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) sought to break the deadlock with a legal bid to force the electoral commission to declare a winner.
Their case was due to be heard at midday (1000 GMT) at the high court, but there was little expectation that it would help bring an end to the crisis facing the southern African nation.
Mugabe’s ruling ZANU-PF and the opposition have stepped up their battling rhetoric in recent days and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai on Saturday declared himself for the first time the outright victor of the March 29 poll.
The MDC has already gained control of parliament by a slim margin in the simultaneous legislative elections, but the ZANU-PF is contesting enough seats to reverse that result.
Mugabe chaired a meeting of the ZANU-PF’s politburo on Friday at which he was endorsed to run in a second round run-off if neither of the two main contenders wins more than 50 percent of the presidential vote.
A party spokesman said after the meeting that a run-off was ”definite” and that the 84-year-old Mugabe was still certain to win his sixth consecutive term as president.
Tsvangirai warned on Saturday that Mugabe’s ruling party would resort to violence to help the country’s only leader since independence in 1980 cling to power.
“In the run-off, violence will be a new weapon to reverse the people’s victory,” he said.
“ZANU-PF is preparing a war against the people of Zimbabwe such as we witnessed in 2000,” when Mugabe failed to win backing in a referendum for a broadening of his powers.
Hours after Tsvangirai spoke, state television reported that the president’s supporters had seized one of the country’s few remaining white-owned farms.
With tensions rising between the government and opposition, long-time mediator Thabo Mbeki, the president of neighbouring South Africa, has called for patience from all sides.
“I think there is time to wait, let’s see the outcome of the election results,” Mbeki told reporters in London on Saturday after meeting Gordon Brown, the prime minister of Zimbabwe’s former colonial ruler Britain.
Brown said his talks with Mbeki and other African leaders had reached agreement on the need for foreign observers to monitor any second round.
Meanwhile, lawyers for two foreign journalists arrested at a Harare guest house on Thursday for breaching the country’s strict media laws were hoping the courts would set a hearing date for their legal bid to have them released.
Mugabe, who has led the country since independence in 1980, has presided over its demise from regional model to economic basket case.
Inflation is officially running at around 100,000 percent but most experts believe the real figure is several times higher.
With an unemployment rate of some 80 percent, around three million of Zimbabwe’s 13 million population have left the country, both to find work and food as even basics such as bread and cooking oil are now hard to come by.
Rocket rolled out for Korean astronaut’s launch
BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan - The Soyuz rocket due to take South Korea’s first astronaut into space was rolled out of its hangar on Sunday as dawn broke over the steppes surrounding Russia’s Baikonur cosmodrome.
A locomotive dragged the 50-metre (160-foot) rocket bearing the South Korean and Russian flags to the same launch pad from which Soviet icon Yury Gagarin, the first man in space, blasted off on his historic mission in 1961.
Yi So-Yeon, 29, is to take off on Tuesday for her 12-day mission to the International Space Station along with Russian cosmonauts Sergei Volkov and Oleg Kononenko in a key step for South Korea’s nascent space programme.
A biosystems engineer, Yi is preparing to conduct a series of scientific experiments in space and has said she will be bringing with her Korean specialities, including the classic pickle dish kimchi.
She has also voiced hope that her flight could help reconcile the south and the north of the divided Korean peninsula, saying she would like people in North Korea to rejoice in her space mission.
South Korea is paying 27 million dollars (17 million euros) for her mission.
Russia built the Baikonur cosmodrome on the arid plains of Kazakhstan in Soviet times and has continued to use the site under a rental deal since Kazakhstan became independent after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
A locomotive dragged the 50-metre (160-foot) rocket bearing the South Korean and Russian flags to the same launch pad from which Soviet icon Yury Gagarin, the first man in space, blasted off on his historic mission in 1961.
Yi So-Yeon, 29, is to take off on Tuesday for her 12-day mission to the International Space Station along with Russian cosmonauts Sergei Volkov and Oleg Kononenko in a key step for South Korea’s nascent space programme.
A biosystems engineer, Yi is preparing to conduct a series of scientific experiments in space and has said she will be bringing with her Korean specialities, including the classic pickle dish kimchi.
She has also voiced hope that her flight could help reconcile the south and the north of the divided Korean peninsula, saying she would like people in North Korea to rejoice in her space mission.
South Korea is paying 27 million dollars (17 million euros) for her mission.
Russia built the Baikonur cosmodrome on the arid plains of Kazakhstan in Soviet times and has continued to use the site under a rental deal since Kazakhstan became independent after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Cuba giving land to private farmers
GUIRA DE MELENA, Cuba - In a country where almost everyone works for the communist state, dairy farmer Jesus Diaz is his own boss. He likes it that way and so does the government.
Living on a plot of land just big enough to graze four dairy cows, Diaz produces enough milk to sell about four 4 quarts (4 liters) a day to the state.
This is independent production on a tiny scale, but it has proved so efficient that Cuba has decided on a major expansion of its program to distribute underused and fallow farmland to private farmers and cooperatives.
It’s a way for the land to end up in the hands of those who want to produce. I see it as a very good thing,” said Diaz, 45. He received his land and cows from the state in 1996, and now hopes to get access to more property.
The government is preparing for a massive distribution of land,” Orlando Lugo, president of Cuba’s national farming association, said last week. Private farmers have begun receiving land for the cash crops of coffee and tobacco, and will soon be able to lease state land for other crops.
The idea is to revolutionize farming, one tiny plot at a time.
While attention has focused on President Raul Castro’s crowd-pleasing moves to allow any Cuban who can afford it to buy a cell phone or stay in a luxury hotel, farmland distribution has been less noticed and is potentially much more important for easing chronic food shortages.
The bet is that independent farmers will do better on their own than toiling for state-run agricultural enterprises, which suffer from red tape, bad planning and lack of funding.
The authorities, they leave you alone and let you produce,” said Aristides Ramon de Machado, who got permission to plant bananas, papaya and guava in a lot by his home in Boca Ciega, east of Havana.
De Machado only grows enough for his family to eat and is prohibited from selling any surplus. But he said entrusting larger private farmers with more land will encourage them to increase production.
Seeing the fruits of your own labor gives you pleasure in ways that working for someone else does not,” he said.
Fidel Castro’s revolutionaries seized all large farms for the state after toppling dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959, and officials insist the new liberalization isn’t a betrayal of revolutionary values.
Independent farmers still face rules about what and how much they can plant, and risk losing their land if they fail to meet government production quotas. They are also required by law to sell any surplus to farmers’ markets.
Increasing food production has been a top priority for 76-year-old Raul Castro, who succeeded his brother as president in February.
While distributing farmland to individuals has been tried before in Cuba, this time the government seems willing to give up more control to get better results.
For example, it has authorized state stores to sell supplies directly to farmers _ a key concession, since for decades, individuals had trouble legally obtaining so much as a shovel. The state also is providing free fertilizer and feed.
And this time, local farming associations are being empowered to oversee the land reallocation, a prerogative once reserved for the Agricultural Ministry in Havana, although Lugo added that the municipal delegations still must report to a new central control center” lest land distribution degenerate into chaos.”
Cuba spends $1.6 billion annually on food imports, about a third of it from the United States, which exempts food and farm exports from its embargo of the island.
Cuba even imports 82 percent of the $1 billion in rice, powdered milk and other staples it then rations to the public at subsidized prices _ an astoundingly high figure for such a fertile country.
At farmers’ markets, basics like cabbage and oranges are almost always available, but tomatoes and lettuce disappear during the rainy summer, and imported apples are considered a rare delicacy.
State-controlled cooperatives operate like modern mega-farms on huge swaths of land, often using heavy equipment and sophisticated irrigation systems. The cooperatives control all kinds of crops, including signature products like sugar, though the high-quality tobacco that goes into Cuba’s famous cigars is already mostly in private hands.
Many large cooperatives are losing money and failing to meet production quotas. Their workers have little incentive to improve things, since wages remain low no matter how well the farms do.
Meanwhile, many of the 250,000 private Cuban farmers must plant and pick their crops by hand, plowing with oxen and watering with buckets.
In Guira de Melena, 30 miles (48 kilometers) south of Havana, El Guateque is one of three supply stores islandwide that are now allowed to sell supplies directly to private farmers. It offers small items such as gloves, machetes, hoes and horse bridles.
Such tools may be humble and low-tech, but they help to produce 60 percent of Cuba’s total food output on just a third of its arable land.
In other moves to invigorate the industry, Cuba has settled outstanding debts to farmers and more than doubled what it pays milk and meat producers. Farmers say the government also is paying more for potatoes, coconuts, coffee and other products.
But if a farmland revolution is coming, it hasn’t brought big profits to farmers yet. Diaz gets 2.50 pesos per quart (liter) of milk, up from one peso. A peso is worth slightly less than a nickel.
Living on a plot of land just big enough to graze four dairy cows, Diaz produces enough milk to sell about four 4 quarts (4 liters) a day to the state.
This is independent production on a tiny scale, but it has proved so efficient that Cuba has decided on a major expansion of its program to distribute underused and fallow farmland to private farmers and cooperatives.
It’s a way for the land to end up in the hands of those who want to produce. I see it as a very good thing,” said Diaz, 45. He received his land and cows from the state in 1996, and now hopes to get access to more property.
The government is preparing for a massive distribution of land,” Orlando Lugo, president of Cuba’s national farming association, said last week. Private farmers have begun receiving land for the cash crops of coffee and tobacco, and will soon be able to lease state land for other crops.
The idea is to revolutionize farming, one tiny plot at a time.
While attention has focused on President Raul Castro’s crowd-pleasing moves to allow any Cuban who can afford it to buy a cell phone or stay in a luxury hotel, farmland distribution has been less noticed and is potentially much more important for easing chronic food shortages.
The bet is that independent farmers will do better on their own than toiling for state-run agricultural enterprises, which suffer from red tape, bad planning and lack of funding.
The authorities, they leave you alone and let you produce,” said Aristides Ramon de Machado, who got permission to plant bananas, papaya and guava in a lot by his home in Boca Ciega, east of Havana.
De Machado only grows enough for his family to eat and is prohibited from selling any surplus. But he said entrusting larger private farmers with more land will encourage them to increase production.
Seeing the fruits of your own labor gives you pleasure in ways that working for someone else does not,” he said.
Fidel Castro’s revolutionaries seized all large farms for the state after toppling dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959, and officials insist the new liberalization isn’t a betrayal of revolutionary values.
Independent farmers still face rules about what and how much they can plant, and risk losing their land if they fail to meet government production quotas. They are also required by law to sell any surplus to farmers’ markets.
Increasing food production has been a top priority for 76-year-old Raul Castro, who succeeded his brother as president in February.
While distributing farmland to individuals has been tried before in Cuba, this time the government seems willing to give up more control to get better results.
For example, it has authorized state stores to sell supplies directly to farmers _ a key concession, since for decades, individuals had trouble legally obtaining so much as a shovel. The state also is providing free fertilizer and feed.
And this time, local farming associations are being empowered to oversee the land reallocation, a prerogative once reserved for the Agricultural Ministry in Havana, although Lugo added that the municipal delegations still must report to a new central control center” lest land distribution degenerate into chaos.”
Cuba spends $1.6 billion annually on food imports, about a third of it from the United States, which exempts food and farm exports from its embargo of the island.
Cuba even imports 82 percent of the $1 billion in rice, powdered milk and other staples it then rations to the public at subsidized prices _ an astoundingly high figure for such a fertile country.
At farmers’ markets, basics like cabbage and oranges are almost always available, but tomatoes and lettuce disappear during the rainy summer, and imported apples are considered a rare delicacy.
State-controlled cooperatives operate like modern mega-farms on huge swaths of land, often using heavy equipment and sophisticated irrigation systems. The cooperatives control all kinds of crops, including signature products like sugar, though the high-quality tobacco that goes into Cuba’s famous cigars is already mostly in private hands.
Many large cooperatives are losing money and failing to meet production quotas. Their workers have little incentive to improve things, since wages remain low no matter how well the farms do.
Meanwhile, many of the 250,000 private Cuban farmers must plant and pick their crops by hand, plowing with oxen and watering with buckets.
In Guira de Melena, 30 miles (48 kilometers) south of Havana, El Guateque is one of three supply stores islandwide that are now allowed to sell supplies directly to private farmers. It offers small items such as gloves, machetes, hoes and horse bridles.
Such tools may be humble and low-tech, but they help to produce 60 percent of Cuba’s total food output on just a third of its arable land.
In other moves to invigorate the industry, Cuba has settled outstanding debts to farmers and more than doubled what it pays milk and meat producers. Farmers say the government also is paying more for potatoes, coconuts, coffee and other products.
But if a farmland revolution is coming, it hasn’t brought big profits to farmers yet. Diaz gets 2.50 pesos per quart (liter) of milk, up from one peso. A peso is worth slightly less than a nickel.
China keeps foreign media from Tibet
DANBA, China - It was just after nightfall when three journalists were stopped at a police checkpoint on a winding, rutted road in China’s western Sichuan province territory that had become out of bounds for the foreigners.
Police officers took them to a nearby town and locked them in a hotel overnight. They then escorted the journalists more than 400 kilometers (250 miles) back to the provincial capital, Chengdu, and left them with a warning.
If you come back, we will send you back again,” one official said.
The routine became drearily familiar over days of fruitless attempts to journey into Tibetan regions where the largest anti-government protests in almost 20 years erupted last month.
Dozens of such checkpoints have sealed off a chunk of western China twice the size of France, keeping out foreign journalists and other unwanted visitors as part of a campaign to squelch bad publicity ahead of the Beijing Olympics in August.
To avoid accusations of muzzling the media, officials deny the existence of a travel ban, saying only that reporters are recommended to keep away for their own safety.
The de-facto ban on news coverage in China’s Tibetan regions violates China’s revised rules that are supposed to allow foreign journalists freedom to report through the Olympics.
But in the sealed-off regions, officials wave those rules away, saying the current situation is a special” one.
Officials often try to sugarcoat the treatment with offers of tea and food, cigarettes, handshakes and a seeming concern for the journalists’ well-being.
Sorry for the inconvenience,” some say.
We warmly welcome you to come back another time,” say others.
When all of this calms down, you can come back and have much better reporting conditions,” said officials in Danba, where the three journalists were kept overnight.
But it hasn’t all been so polite. Policemen have waved guns in journalists’ faces, confiscated passports and forced photographers to delete photos of checkpoints and riot police.
Authorities say 22 people died in the March 14 riots in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, while other reports put the death toll in the protests and ensuing crackdown at up to 140.
New violence in Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan province along the border with Tibet has led to eight more deaths, the London-based Free Tibet Campaign said Friday.
Officials in the Tibetan areas of Sichuan, Gansu and Qinghai provinces all repeatedly warned of potential dangers to journalists from insurrectionist Tibetans, who live in the so-called Tibetan autonomous regions” but have little say in a power structure dominated by China’s majority ethnic Han Chinese.
When pressed for details of the dangers, officials in the areas where riots and protests were known to have happened all claimed no knowledge of any unrest.
The deputy head of the local government in the Aba prefecture in Sichuan province appeared to contradict himself Thursday when he told reporters that life was completely normal” in the area, but that it was still too dangerous for foreign media.
Some officials said they doubted the area would be open again until the Olympics are safely over.
Wait until September,” one foreign affairs official in Aba said cheerfully as his car carried two journalists away from a checkpoint late Monday night.
Travel to Tibet has always been tightly restricted, but such rules have now been extended to neighboring provinces. Bus stations have even been told not to sell foreigners tickets, and drivers face stiff punishments for picking up outsiders.
But worried about further damage to Tibet’s tourism industry, the regional tourism authority announced this week that Tibet will reopen to foreign tourist groups on May 1.
Even if a foreign journalist gets past a checkpoint, he or she is usually caught after checking in at a hotel, where registration with a passport is required.
In other cases, plainclothes policemen tail journalists, crimping their activities. On Thursday, a plainclothes tagged after a reporter as she walked Danba’s main street, quietly trying to interview local Tibetans. The policeman then stopped the Tibetans and asked them what the journalist had asked.
There is even interference far from the sealed-off areas.
At a university campus in Sichuan’s capital Chengdu, a journalist was barred from meeting with Tibetan professors by a woman who claimed herself to be a Tibetan professor. She then took photos of the journalist with her cell phone camera, claiming the blonde-haired woman looked like one of her sisters, and had her escorted off campus.
While officials seemed to feel little need to justify their actions, at least one fell back on what has become a major thrust of Chinese propaganda.
The foreign media twist the Tibetan story very much, so we need to completely forbid them from wandering around,” said one foreign affairs official.
Police officers took them to a nearby town and locked them in a hotel overnight. They then escorted the journalists more than 400 kilometers (250 miles) back to the provincial capital, Chengdu, and left them with a warning.
If you come back, we will send you back again,” one official said.
The routine became drearily familiar over days of fruitless attempts to journey into Tibetan regions where the largest anti-government protests in almost 20 years erupted last month.
Dozens of such checkpoints have sealed off a chunk of western China twice the size of France, keeping out foreign journalists and other unwanted visitors as part of a campaign to squelch bad publicity ahead of the Beijing Olympics in August.
To avoid accusations of muzzling the media, officials deny the existence of a travel ban, saying only that reporters are recommended to keep away for their own safety.
The de-facto ban on news coverage in China’s Tibetan regions violates China’s revised rules that are supposed to allow foreign journalists freedom to report through the Olympics.
But in the sealed-off regions, officials wave those rules away, saying the current situation is a special” one.
Officials often try to sugarcoat the treatment with offers of tea and food, cigarettes, handshakes and a seeming concern for the journalists’ well-being.
Sorry for the inconvenience,” some say.
We warmly welcome you to come back another time,” say others.
When all of this calms down, you can come back and have much better reporting conditions,” said officials in Danba, where the three journalists were kept overnight.
But it hasn’t all been so polite. Policemen have waved guns in journalists’ faces, confiscated passports and forced photographers to delete photos of checkpoints and riot police.
Authorities say 22 people died in the March 14 riots in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, while other reports put the death toll in the protests and ensuing crackdown at up to 140.
New violence in Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan province along the border with Tibet has led to eight more deaths, the London-based Free Tibet Campaign said Friday.
Officials in the Tibetan areas of Sichuan, Gansu and Qinghai provinces all repeatedly warned of potential dangers to journalists from insurrectionist Tibetans, who live in the so-called Tibetan autonomous regions” but have little say in a power structure dominated by China’s majority ethnic Han Chinese.
When pressed for details of the dangers, officials in the areas where riots and protests were known to have happened all claimed no knowledge of any unrest.
The deputy head of the local government in the Aba prefecture in Sichuan province appeared to contradict himself Thursday when he told reporters that life was completely normal” in the area, but that it was still too dangerous for foreign media.
Some officials said they doubted the area would be open again until the Olympics are safely over.
Wait until September,” one foreign affairs official in Aba said cheerfully as his car carried two journalists away from a checkpoint late Monday night.
Travel to Tibet has always been tightly restricted, but such rules have now been extended to neighboring provinces. Bus stations have even been told not to sell foreigners tickets, and drivers face stiff punishments for picking up outsiders.
But worried about further damage to Tibet’s tourism industry, the regional tourism authority announced this week that Tibet will reopen to foreign tourist groups on May 1.
Even if a foreign journalist gets past a checkpoint, he or she is usually caught after checking in at a hotel, where registration with a passport is required.
In other cases, plainclothes policemen tail journalists, crimping their activities. On Thursday, a plainclothes tagged after a reporter as she walked Danba’s main street, quietly trying to interview local Tibetans. The policeman then stopped the Tibetans and asked them what the journalist had asked.
There is even interference far from the sealed-off areas.
At a university campus in Sichuan’s capital Chengdu, a journalist was barred from meeting with Tibetan professors by a woman who claimed herself to be a Tibetan professor. She then took photos of the journalist with her cell phone camera, claiming the blonde-haired woman looked like one of her sisters, and had her escorted off campus.
While officials seemed to feel little need to justify their actions, at least one fell back on what has become a major thrust of Chinese propaganda.
The foreign media twist the Tibetan story very much, so we need to completely forbid them from wandering around,” said one foreign affairs official.
China vows to strengthen ’patriotic education’ campaign
BEIJING - China vowed to ramp up a campaign requiring Tibetan Buddhist monks to denounce the Dalai Lama and declare their loyalty to Beijing.
But resentment over patriotic education” has ignited protests that have left eight people dead in recent days in a southwestern province and could fuel future unrest despite a massive security presence aimed at quelling the demonstrations.
The Tibet Daily newspaper reported Saturday that the government pledged to strengthen education especially among young monks to help them become patriotic, religion-loving and law-abiding.”
The much-reviled practice _ enforced by China for more than a decade _ requires monks to do ritual denunciations of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and accept the Chinese-appointed Panchen Lama, the second-highest ranking Buddhist leader.
The campaign had exacerbated tensions in Tibet in the months before anti-government demonstrations exploded in mid-March in the region’s capital, Lhasa, and neighboring provinces.
The protests are the longest and most sustained challenge to China’s 57-year rule in the Himalayan region. China’s subsequent crackdown has drawn international scrutiny and criticism in the run-up to this summer’s Olympic Games.
Chinese authorities say 22 people died in anti-Beijing riots that broke out March 14 in Lhasa. The Tibetan government-in-exile says up to 140 were killed in the protests and ensuing crackdown.
Beijing has accused Dalai Lama supporters of orchestrating the violence, a charge the spiritual leader has repeatedly denied.
China imposed a military clampdown on a large swath of the western part of the country in an effort to rein in the anti-government demonstrations. But continuing unrest continued, partly ignited by the compulsory patriotic education.
We should strengthen patriotic education so as to guide the masses of monks to continuously display the patriotic tradition and uphold the banner of patriotism,” the Tibet Daily quoted Hao Peng, Tibet’s deputy Communist Party chief, as saying.
Overseas activists groups say eight people were killed in the latest round of deadly protests in the southwestern Sichuan province on Thursday. State media reported late Friday that one government official was seriously injured in what it described as a riot.
The incident was sparked when a team of government officials attempted to enforce patriotic education at the Tongkor monastery in the Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, according to the London-based Free Tibet Campaign and the International Campaign for Tibet.
But the monks refused to criticize the Dalai Lama, and thousands of paramilitary troops searched the monastery for pictures of the exiled Tibetan leader. Two monks were detained after his pictures were found in their quarters.
Troops opened fire on a crowd of several hundred Buddhist monks and several hundred more citizens who had marched on local government offices in Donggu town to demand the release of the monks, the activist groups said.
The U.S. government-funded Radio Free Asia said Saturday it had unconfirmed reports that up to 15 people were killed and dozens more injured in the violence.
The official Xinhua News Agency had no information on deaths or injuries but confirmed that a riot broke out near government offices in Donggu. An official was attacked and seriously wounded,” and police were forced to fire warning shots and put down the violence,” Xinhua said.
Calls to local police and hospitals in the area were unanswered Saturday or else officials said they had no information.
But resentment over patriotic education” has ignited protests that have left eight people dead in recent days in a southwestern province and could fuel future unrest despite a massive security presence aimed at quelling the demonstrations.
The Tibet Daily newspaper reported Saturday that the government pledged to strengthen education especially among young monks to help them become patriotic, religion-loving and law-abiding.”
The much-reviled practice _ enforced by China for more than a decade _ requires monks to do ritual denunciations of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and accept the Chinese-appointed Panchen Lama, the second-highest ranking Buddhist leader.
The campaign had exacerbated tensions in Tibet in the months before anti-government demonstrations exploded in mid-March in the region’s capital, Lhasa, and neighboring provinces.
The protests are the longest and most sustained challenge to China’s 57-year rule in the Himalayan region. China’s subsequent crackdown has drawn international scrutiny and criticism in the run-up to this summer’s Olympic Games.
Chinese authorities say 22 people died in anti-Beijing riots that broke out March 14 in Lhasa. The Tibetan government-in-exile says up to 140 were killed in the protests and ensuing crackdown.
Beijing has accused Dalai Lama supporters of orchestrating the violence, a charge the spiritual leader has repeatedly denied.
China imposed a military clampdown on a large swath of the western part of the country in an effort to rein in the anti-government demonstrations. But continuing unrest continued, partly ignited by the compulsory patriotic education.
We should strengthen patriotic education so as to guide the masses of monks to continuously display the patriotic tradition and uphold the banner of patriotism,” the Tibet Daily quoted Hao Peng, Tibet’s deputy Communist Party chief, as saying.
Overseas activists groups say eight people were killed in the latest round of deadly protests in the southwestern Sichuan province on Thursday. State media reported late Friday that one government official was seriously injured in what it described as a riot.
The incident was sparked when a team of government officials attempted to enforce patriotic education at the Tongkor monastery in the Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, according to the London-based Free Tibet Campaign and the International Campaign for Tibet.
But the monks refused to criticize the Dalai Lama, and thousands of paramilitary troops searched the monastery for pictures of the exiled Tibetan leader. Two monks were detained after his pictures were found in their quarters.
Troops opened fire on a crowd of several hundred Buddhist monks and several hundred more citizens who had marched on local government offices in Donggu town to demand the release of the monks, the activist groups said.
The U.S. government-funded Radio Free Asia said Saturday it had unconfirmed reports that up to 15 people were killed and dozens more injured in the violence.
The official Xinhua News Agency had no information on deaths or injuries but confirmed that a riot broke out near government offices in Donggu. An official was attacked and seriously wounded,” and police were forced to fire warning shots and put down the violence,” Xinhua said.
Calls to local police and hospitals in the area were unanswered Saturday or else officials said they had no information.
Looks like Jay-Z and Beyonce have tied the knot
NEW YORK - It appears that Jay-Z and Beyonce have finally tied the knot.
There was a swirl of activity Friday at the rap mogul’s Tribeca apartment. Delivery trucks funneled in and out of the building, dropping off silver candelabras and white flowers. A white tent was set up on the roof, and stars including Beyonce’s former Destiny’s Child bandmates, Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams, along with Gwyneth Paltrow, were spotted arriving.
A swarm of media camped outside the building was in a state of frenzy, snapping and shouting at any sport-utility vehicle that drove down the cobblestone street.
The Web sites of celebrity magazines People and Us Weekly reported the couple married and threw a lavish but small party at the apartment Friday, citing unnamed sources who are friends with the pair. The Web sites reported their families attended the party.
Rumors circulated all week about the event after a report that the couple had taken out a marriage license in Scarsdale, New York. Representatives for Beyonce Knowles and Jay-Z declined to comment on reports of the wedding. An e-mail sent by The Associated Press to Jay-Z’s representative on Saturday was not immediately returned.
The couple, who have apparently been dating for six years, have never publicly acknowledged they are together. Knowles, 26, and Jay-Z, 38, whose real name is Shawn Carter, have collaborated on the songs 03 Bonnie and Clyde” and Crazy In Love.”
It’s been a big week for the hip-hop mogul. On Thursday, concert promoter Live Nation Inc. said it was in talks with Jay-Z over a potential business deal. The Los Angeles-based company stopped short of confirming published reports that the deal would give Live Nation a stake in virtually every aspect of Jay-Z’s career and land him a potential windfall in excess of $100 million (Ð64 million).
A person familiar with the negotiations between Live Nation and Jay-Z told The Associated Press that the proposed 10-year deal was worth about $150 million (Ð95 million) and would cover three albums.
The person requested anonymity because of the confidential nature of the ongoing talks.
Live Nation is currently producing a tour with Jay-Z and Mary J. Blige.
There was a swirl of activity Friday at the rap mogul’s Tribeca apartment. Delivery trucks funneled in and out of the building, dropping off silver candelabras and white flowers. A white tent was set up on the roof, and stars including Beyonce’s former Destiny’s Child bandmates, Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams, along with Gwyneth Paltrow, were spotted arriving.
A swarm of media camped outside the building was in a state of frenzy, snapping and shouting at any sport-utility vehicle that drove down the cobblestone street.
The Web sites of celebrity magazines People and Us Weekly reported the couple married and threw a lavish but small party at the apartment Friday, citing unnamed sources who are friends with the pair. The Web sites reported their families attended the party.
Rumors circulated all week about the event after a report that the couple had taken out a marriage license in Scarsdale, New York. Representatives for Beyonce Knowles and Jay-Z declined to comment on reports of the wedding. An e-mail sent by The Associated Press to Jay-Z’s representative on Saturday was not immediately returned.
The couple, who have apparently been dating for six years, have never publicly acknowledged they are together. Knowles, 26, and Jay-Z, 38, whose real name is Shawn Carter, have collaborated on the songs 03 Bonnie and Clyde” and Crazy In Love.”
It’s been a big week for the hip-hop mogul. On Thursday, concert promoter Live Nation Inc. said it was in talks with Jay-Z over a potential business deal. The Los Angeles-based company stopped short of confirming published reports that the deal would give Live Nation a stake in virtually every aspect of Jay-Z’s career and land him a potential windfall in excess of $100 million (Ð64 million).
A person familiar with the negotiations between Live Nation and Jay-Z told The Associated Press that the proposed 10-year deal was worth about $150 million (Ð95 million) and would cover three albums.
The person requested anonymity because of the confidential nature of the ongoing talks.
Live Nation is currently producing a tour with Jay-Z and Mary J. Blige.
Hopes for change in Zimbabwe in limbo
HARARE, Zimbabwe - Zimbabweans ricocheted from euphoria to fear and finally to anger in the tumultuous week after presidential elections that longtime ruler Robert Mugabe almost certainly lost.
Hopes for change in the devastated southern African nation remained in limbo Saturday. Presidential election results were still not released seven days after the vote, security forces appeared poised to use violence to keep Mugabe in power and the opposition called on the president to end his 28-year rule for the good of the country.
Immediately after the vote _ seen as the best chance t journalists, with armed officers in full riot gear surrounding two hotels popular with visiting media.
Feared veterans of the guerrilla war for black majority rule _ used in the past to beat up opponents and spearhead the violent takeover of white farms _ marched in a silent and intimidating parade through downtown Harare on Friday.
Mugabe has started a crackdown,” warned Tendai Biti, secretary-general of the Movement for Democratic Change.
On hopes Mugabe would retire and his successor would fix the economy, the black market value of the Zimbabwe dollar fell from 44 million to the U.S. dollar to 36 million. The stock exchange in neighboring South Africa perked up _ a sign of how Zimbabwe affects regional stability.
With inflation raging at beyond 100,000 percent, the government introduced Friday a Zimbabwe $50 million note worth about US$1 on the black market. The new note could buy three loaves of bread Friday but only two Saturday, as Zimbabweans formed long queues outside bakeries. The U.S. and Zimbabwe dollars were on a par in 1980, when Mugabe’s guerrilla army helped oust a white minority government and bring independence.
Marwick Khumalo, head of the Pan-African Parliament observer mission, said Wednesday that leading members of Mugabe’s party viewed defeat with trepidation.
I was talking to some of the bigwigs in the ruling party and they also are concerned about the possibility of a change of guard,” Khumalo said. It is not easy for anyone within the sphere of the ruling party to accept that ’Maybe we might be defeated.”’
Officials in both camps reported secret talks to negotiate a graceful exit for the 84-year-old Mugabe, though aides to Mugabe and Tsvangirai denied it.
A businessman close to the state electoral commission said Mugabe had been told he had lost the presidential elections and an uprising was likely if he were declared the winner. Mugabe found the prospect of a runoff too humiliating, the businessman said.
Mugabe’s personal advisers and family were counseling him to accept defeat, news reports said, while party hard-liners and security chiefs who benefit from his patronage were urging a fight.
Tensions rose as the Electoral Commission, packed with current and former military officers, slowly released Senate results _ but no presidential ones _ delaying to give Mugabe and his party time to contemplate their options.
By Thursday, a decision appeared to have been made. Armani Countess, who observed the elections for the Washington-based TransAfrica Forum, said a senior ZANU-PF official made it very, very clear that if there was a run-off, that ZANU would use all the state organs at its disposal to ensure victory.”
Countess called the conversation frightening and very, very worrisome” given the violent tactics used in previous elections. Scores of opposition supporters and candidates were killed in 2002 and 2005 elections, which international observers said were marked by fraud, violence and intimidation.
On Friday, ZANU-PF held its first politburo meeting since the elections and endorsed Mugabe to contest a runoff. Having the first word of a runoff come from the party, not the electoral commission, indicated that ZANU-PF still considers itself the ruling authority in the country.
The Herald newspaper, a government and party mouthpiece, on Saturday hailed the massive show of unity and camaraderie” at the meeting, saying it put paid to claims the party was in disarray and that some top leaders had cold feet over the runoff.
We stumbled, we did not fall,” it quoted Didymus Mutasa, a powerful minister and party leader, as saying.
In response, Tsvangirai ratcheted up the rhetoric, charging that ZANU-PF is preparing a war against the people,” and appealing to Mugabe to step down without a runoff.
He cannot hold the country to ransom. He is the problem not the solution,” Tsvangirai told reporters Saturday. He appealed to southern African leaders, the African Union and the United Nations to move in to prevent chaos.”
Mugabe appears set to contest a runoff and use the emotional land issue as a rallying point.
Asked what outcome he sees, political scientist Eldred Masunungure of the University of Zimbabwe warned, We should distinguish wishful thinking from the reality on the ground. Mugabe still has many tricks up his sleeve.”
In 2000, Mugabe promised to rectify the injustice of 4,000 white farmers owning 80 percent of the best farmland in the country of about 13 million people. Instead, he gave fertile farms to relatives, friends and cronies who allowed fields to be taken over by weeds.
Mugabe and his party take every opportunity to accuse Tsvangirai’s party of planning to return the farms to whites. The opposition leader in fact has promised an equitable distribution of land to people who know how to farm.
The election results have reissued the land question and reissued it with venom and vengeance,” said an op-ed column in Saturday’s Herald, written under a pen name known to be used by chief presidential spokesman George Charamba.
Today even the most pragmatic member of ZANU-PF is agitated by the sheer awesomeness of what the current results could have done to the gains of the revolution,” the column said. This dynamic will be key in the runoff.”
War veterans’ leader Jabulani Sithole told reporters Friday that It now looks like these elections were a way to open Zimbabwe for re-invasion (by whites).”
Many Zimbabweans said they voted for ZANU-PF because traditional chiefs and other Mugabe loyalists threatened to take away the land of anyone voting for the opposition.
Zimbabwean civic, church and human rights groups say they fear a crackdown, with attackers targeting election districts where Mugabe lost.
It’s not clear how Zimbabwe’s security forces will react.
Tsvangirai tried to reassure generals who, before the elections, threatened not to serve anyone but Mugabe. But the generals called off a planned meeting, saying they had been ordered not to attend, according to a businessman close to Tsvangirai.
On Saturday, police prevented an opposition lawyer and others from entering the High Court to fight a petition to compel the electoral commission to publish presidential results.
But other officers abandoned patrol duties to sit and drink beer, in full uniform and armed, at the mainly white City Bowling Club. It was an unheard of and seemed to symbolize a refusal to participate in any crackdown, said a white veteran who fought for the minority white government in the war.
It seems they would rather drink with us now than shoot us,” he said.
Hopes for change in the devastated southern African nation remained in limbo Saturday. Presidential election results were still not released seven days after the vote, security forces appeared poised to use violence to keep Mugabe in power and the opposition called on the president to end his 28-year rule for the good of the country.
Immediately after the vote _ seen as the best chance t journalists, with armed officers in full riot gear surrounding two hotels popular with visiting media.
Feared veterans of the guerrilla war for black majority rule _ used in the past to beat up opponents and spearhead the violent takeover of white farms _ marched in a silent and intimidating parade through downtown Harare on Friday.
Mugabe has started a crackdown,” warned Tendai Biti, secretary-general of the Movement for Democratic Change.
On hopes Mugabe would retire and his successor would fix the economy, the black market value of the Zimbabwe dollar fell from 44 million to the U.S. dollar to 36 million. The stock exchange in neighboring South Africa perked up _ a sign of how Zimbabwe affects regional stability.
With inflation raging at beyond 100,000 percent, the government introduced Friday a Zimbabwe $50 million note worth about US$1 on the black market. The new note could buy three loaves of bread Friday but only two Saturday, as Zimbabweans formed long queues outside bakeries. The U.S. and Zimbabwe dollars were on a par in 1980, when Mugabe’s guerrilla army helped oust a white minority government and bring independence.
Marwick Khumalo, head of the Pan-African Parliament observer mission, said Wednesday that leading members of Mugabe’s party viewed defeat with trepidation.
I was talking to some of the bigwigs in the ruling party and they also are concerned about the possibility of a change of guard,” Khumalo said. It is not easy for anyone within the sphere of the ruling party to accept that ’Maybe we might be defeated.”’
Officials in both camps reported secret talks to negotiate a graceful exit for the 84-year-old Mugabe, though aides to Mugabe and Tsvangirai denied it.
A businessman close to the state electoral commission said Mugabe had been told he had lost the presidential elections and an uprising was likely if he were declared the winner. Mugabe found the prospect of a runoff too humiliating, the businessman said.
Mugabe’s personal advisers and family were counseling him to accept defeat, news reports said, while party hard-liners and security chiefs who benefit from his patronage were urging a fight.
Tensions rose as the Electoral Commission, packed with current and former military officers, slowly released Senate results _ but no presidential ones _ delaying to give Mugabe and his party time to contemplate their options.
By Thursday, a decision appeared to have been made. Armani Countess, who observed the elections for the Washington-based TransAfrica Forum, said a senior ZANU-PF official made it very, very clear that if there was a run-off, that ZANU would use all the state organs at its disposal to ensure victory.”
Countess called the conversation frightening and very, very worrisome” given the violent tactics used in previous elections. Scores of opposition supporters and candidates were killed in 2002 and 2005 elections, which international observers said were marked by fraud, violence and intimidation.
On Friday, ZANU-PF held its first politburo meeting since the elections and endorsed Mugabe to contest a runoff. Having the first word of a runoff come from the party, not the electoral commission, indicated that ZANU-PF still considers itself the ruling authority in the country.
The Herald newspaper, a government and party mouthpiece, on Saturday hailed the massive show of unity and camaraderie” at the meeting, saying it put paid to claims the party was in disarray and that some top leaders had cold feet over the runoff.
We stumbled, we did not fall,” it quoted Didymus Mutasa, a powerful minister and party leader, as saying.
In response, Tsvangirai ratcheted up the rhetoric, charging that ZANU-PF is preparing a war against the people,” and appealing to Mugabe to step down without a runoff.
He cannot hold the country to ransom. He is the problem not the solution,” Tsvangirai told reporters Saturday. He appealed to southern African leaders, the African Union and the United Nations to move in to prevent chaos.”
Mugabe appears set to contest a runoff and use the emotional land issue as a rallying point.
Asked what outcome he sees, political scientist Eldred Masunungure of the University of Zimbabwe warned, We should distinguish wishful thinking from the reality on the ground. Mugabe still has many tricks up his sleeve.”
In 2000, Mugabe promised to rectify the injustice of 4,000 white farmers owning 80 percent of the best farmland in the country of about 13 million people. Instead, he gave fertile farms to relatives, friends and cronies who allowed fields to be taken over by weeds.
Mugabe and his party take every opportunity to accuse Tsvangirai’s party of planning to return the farms to whites. The opposition leader in fact has promised an equitable distribution of land to people who know how to farm.
The election results have reissued the land question and reissued it with venom and vengeance,” said an op-ed column in Saturday’s Herald, written under a pen name known to be used by chief presidential spokesman George Charamba.
Today even the most pragmatic member of ZANU-PF is agitated by the sheer awesomeness of what the current results could have done to the gains of the revolution,” the column said. This dynamic will be key in the runoff.”
War veterans’ leader Jabulani Sithole told reporters Friday that It now looks like these elections were a way to open Zimbabwe for re-invasion (by whites).”
Many Zimbabweans said they voted for ZANU-PF because traditional chiefs and other Mugabe loyalists threatened to take away the land of anyone voting for the opposition.
Zimbabwean civic, church and human rights groups say they fear a crackdown, with attackers targeting election districts where Mugabe lost.
It’s not clear how Zimbabwe’s security forces will react.
Tsvangirai tried to reassure generals who, before the elections, threatened not to serve anyone but Mugabe. But the generals called off a planned meeting, saying they had been ordered not to attend, according to a businessman close to Tsvangirai.
On Saturday, police prevented an opposition lawyer and others from entering the High Court to fight a petition to compel the electoral commission to publish presidential results.
But other officers abandoned patrol duties to sit and drink beer, in full uniform and armed, at the mainly white City Bowling Club. It was an unheard of and seemed to symbolize a refusal to participate in any crackdown, said a white veteran who fought for the minority white government in the war.
It seems they would rather drink with us now than shoot us,” he said.
Ecuador says CIA controls part of its intelligence
QUITO - Ecuador’s president accused the CIA on Saturday of controlling many of his country’s spy agencies, in comments that could fray ties with Washington and drag it into Ecuador’s feud with neighboring Colombia.
President Rafael Correa has fired a top intelligence officer and plans to overhaul spy agencies for belatedly informing him about links between Colombian rebels and an Ecuadorean who died in Colombia’s raid inside Ecuador last month that sparked a regional crisis.
“Many of our intelligence agencies have been taken over by the CIA,” the leftist leader said during his weekly radio show. ”Through the CIA, information found here was passed to Colombia to improve their position” in the dispute.
Correa also charged the United States with financing some officers in the Ecuadorean spy agencies.
U.S. Embassy spokesman in Quito Arnaldo Arbesu declined to comment on the charges but said, “We are always willing to work with the Ecuadorean government in any type of issue.”
Correa, whose popularity has rebounded for his handling of the dispute and is an ally of U.S. foe Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, is a critic of U.S. foreign policy in Latin America.
He has called U.S. President George W. Bush worse than Satan, and once vowed to cut off his own arm before renewing a lease that allows U.S. troops to use a key anti-drug air base.
The March 1 raid, which killed a Colombian rebel leader and more than 20 other people, raised the threat of war after Ecuador and Venezuela briefly sent troops to their borders with Colombia. Nerves quickly calmed during a regional meeting a week later.
Correa said he hoped the diplomatic spat would be over soon, but warned of legal actions against Colombia for the killing of the Ecuadorean citizen who was in the rebel camp.
Correa added that Ecuador’s decision to sue Colombia in international court over Colombia’s anti-drug spraying along its border was in response to the raid.
The suit filed on Monday has once again strained relations between the neighbors who share a 400-mile (600-km) border often crossed by rebels fighting a four-decade war against the Colombian government.
15 killed, thousands left homeless in Brazil
SAO PAULO, Brazil - Flooding from torrential rains in Brazil’s normally arid northeast has killed 15 people and driven about 50,000 from their homes, civil defense officials said Saturday.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva signed an executive order Friday night releasing 614 million reals (US$360 million; Ð230 million) to help flood victims.
The 15 victims drowned in the state of Paraiba, where the Paraiba River overflowed its banks and the walls of a medium-size dam cracked, the Civil Defense Department said. It had no further details on the deaths.
Some 14,000 residents in the state abandoned their homes to escape floodwaters.
In nearby Piaui state, the floods drove about 19,000 people from their homes and destroyed corn and bean crops, officials said. About 30 cities and towns were isolated by washed-out roads.
Another 8,000 people were taken in by relatives or received temporary shelter in churches and public buildings in the state of Maranhao.
Meanwhile, 7,500 people fled homes in Pernambuco and Ceara states, officials said.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva signed an executive order Friday night releasing 614 million reals (US$360 million; Ð230 million) to help flood victims.
The 15 victims drowned in the state of Paraiba, where the Paraiba River overflowed its banks and the walls of a medium-size dam cracked, the Civil Defense Department said. It had no further details on the deaths.
Some 14,000 residents in the state abandoned their homes to escape floodwaters.
In nearby Piaui state, the floods drove about 19,000 people from their homes and destroyed corn and bean crops, officials said. About 30 cities and towns were isolated by washed-out roads.
Another 8,000 people were taken in by relatives or received temporary shelter in churches and public buildings in the state of Maranhao.
Meanwhile, 7,500 people fled homes in Pernambuco and Ceara states, officials said.
France to wait, until Betancourt is freed
SAN JOSE - France said Saturday its medical mission to help French-Colombian hostage Ingrid Betancourt, who is languishing after six years in the hands of FARC rebels, will stay put in Bogota until the guerrillas give a response.
“We had to do something. Now we’re waiting for news from FARC,” French Foreign Minister Bernard Koucher told France 2 television channel, in an interview rebroadcast by Colombian media.
A French Falcon 50 airplane was on standby at Catam military airport in Bogota since Thursday, waiting to carry an international medical team to treat Betancourt, 46, should her captors allow it. She is rumored to be seriusly ill and possibly near death.
The humanitarian mission, said Koucher, “will stay put where it is,” adding that the French government was “determined” to wait it out.
Oscar Lopez, Governor of Guaviare department, 400 kilometers (250 miles) south of Bogota, where Betancourt and other hostages are believe to be held somewhere in a rebel jungle camp, said the guerrillas “have given no sign” of an impending release.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia reiterated Thursday in a statement that any hostage release would come “if there is an exchange of prisoners.” FARC seeks to swap its most prominent hostages, including Betancourt, for 500 jailed comrades.
Bogota has agreed to suspend military operations against the FARC to allow the deployment of the humanitarian mission, and last week it even suggested it would release some jailed rebels if Betancourt and other hostages were freed.
Meanwhile, a solidarity march is planned for Sunday in Paris and other French cities to press for Betancourt’s release.
“We hope it will be the last demonstration prior to Ingrid’s release,” said Ingrid Betancourt Support Committee spokesman Herve Marro about the marches he said have been called by Betancourt’s children Melanie and Lorenzo Delloye.
“We had to do something. Now we’re waiting for news from FARC,” French Foreign Minister Bernard Koucher told France 2 television channel, in an interview rebroadcast by Colombian media.
A French Falcon 50 airplane was on standby at Catam military airport in Bogota since Thursday, waiting to carry an international medical team to treat Betancourt, 46, should her captors allow it. She is rumored to be seriusly ill and possibly near death.
The humanitarian mission, said Koucher, “will stay put where it is,” adding that the French government was “determined” to wait it out.
Oscar Lopez, Governor of Guaviare department, 400 kilometers (250 miles) south of Bogota, where Betancourt and other hostages are believe to be held somewhere in a rebel jungle camp, said the guerrillas “have given no sign” of an impending release.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia reiterated Thursday in a statement that any hostage release would come “if there is an exchange of prisoners.” FARC seeks to swap its most prominent hostages, including Betancourt, for 500 jailed comrades.
Bogota has agreed to suspend military operations against the FARC to allow the deployment of the humanitarian mission, and last week it even suggested it would release some jailed rebels if Betancourt and other hostages were freed.
Meanwhile, a solidarity march is planned for Sunday in Paris and other French cities to press for Betancourt’s release.
“We hope it will be the last demonstration prior to Ingrid’s release,” said Ingrid Betancourt Support Committee spokesman Herve Marro about the marches he said have been called by Betancourt’s children Melanie and Lorenzo Delloye.
New China system eases NKorea sanctions
TOKYO- China has begun a system which will allow companies and people from North Korea to open bank accounts in China to settle business transactions in yuan, Japan’s Nikkei business daily reported on Sunday.
The new system, which the Nikkei said marked an effective relaxation of sanctions enacted against the North after its October 2006 nuclear test, was jointly developed by the People’s Bank of China and the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, Beijing sources familiar with the matter were quoted as saying.
It is unprecedented for China to create such a system aimed at a specific country, the Nikkei said.
The report came just days before representatives of the United States and North Korea are set to meet in Singapore for talks that are part of a stalled effort to persuade Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear ambitions.
A 2005 accord under which North Korea agreed to abandon all its nuclear programmes in exchange for economic and diplomatic benefits has been bogged down by Pyongyang’s failure to produce a declaration of its nuclear programmes by the end of last year.
The so-called six-party agreement was hammered out among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States.
The new system, which the Nikkei said marked an effective relaxation of sanctions enacted against the North after its October 2006 nuclear test, was jointly developed by the People’s Bank of China and the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, Beijing sources familiar with the matter were quoted as saying.
It is unprecedented for China to create such a system aimed at a specific country, the Nikkei said.
The report came just days before representatives of the United States and North Korea are set to meet in Singapore for talks that are part of a stalled effort to persuade Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear ambitions.
A 2005 accord under which North Korea agreed to abandon all its nuclear programmes in exchange for economic and diplomatic benefits has been bogged down by Pyongyang’s failure to produce a declaration of its nuclear programmes by the end of last year.
The so-called six-party agreement was hammered out among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States.
"Poisoned in Russian attack", British Defector
LONDON - British detectives are investigating claims by a Russian former double agent of an assassination attempt against him, police told The Mail on Sunday newspaper.
Oleg Gordievsky, a high-profile Cold War defector, claims he was poisoned by another former Russian intelligence agent just weeks after he was highly decorated by Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II for his services to Britain’s security.
The former Soviet colonel claimed he was next on the hit list following the November 2006 radiation poisoning murder of Alexander Litvinenko, which plunged relations between Britain and Russia to a post-Cold War low.
Gordievsky, who was the London bureau chief of the KGB Soviet intelligence agency and defected in 1985, accused the British authorities of wanting to keep the episode covered up.
He claims he was visited by a Russian man at his safe-house in the county of Surrey, south-west of London.
The ex-spy was taken by ambulance from his home to a hospital in the town of Guildford.
“Surrey Police was called to an address in Surrey on November 2, 2007 at around 11:30 am following concerns for the safety of a man,” a spokeswoman said.
“The man, who was 69 at the time, was taken by ambulance to the Royal Surrey County Hospital for treatment.
“Surrey Police is continuing to investigate allegations made by this man and it would not be appropriate to comment further until our investigation is complete.”
He lay unconscious and “close to death” for 34 hours and spent two weeks recuperating. He was initially left partially paralysed and still has no feelings in his fingers, The Mail on Sunday reported.
Relations between Britain and Russia have plunged to a post-Cold War low since the murder of Gordievsky’s friend Litvinenko, a former Moscow agent and a fierce Kremlin critic.
“I’ve known for some time that I am on the assassination list drawn up by rogue elements in Moscow,” Gordievsky told the weekly tabloid.
“They murdered my friend Alexander Litvinenko. I have no doubt my sudden illness last November was a similar attempt on my life. It was obvious to me that I had been poisoned.
He said Moscow-authored poisonings were based on their difficulty to detect, citing the deaths of Litvinenko and others.
Oleg Gordievsky, a high-profile Cold War defector, claims he was poisoned by another former Russian intelligence agent just weeks after he was highly decorated by Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II for his services to Britain’s security.
The former Soviet colonel claimed he was next on the hit list following the November 2006 radiation poisoning murder of Alexander Litvinenko, which plunged relations between Britain and Russia to a post-Cold War low.
Gordievsky, who was the London bureau chief of the KGB Soviet intelligence agency and defected in 1985, accused the British authorities of wanting to keep the episode covered up.
He claims he was visited by a Russian man at his safe-house in the county of Surrey, south-west of London.
The ex-spy was taken by ambulance from his home to a hospital in the town of Guildford.
“Surrey Police was called to an address in Surrey on November 2, 2007 at around 11:30 am following concerns for the safety of a man,” a spokeswoman said.
“The man, who was 69 at the time, was taken by ambulance to the Royal Surrey County Hospital for treatment.
“Surrey Police is continuing to investigate allegations made by this man and it would not be appropriate to comment further until our investigation is complete.”
He lay unconscious and “close to death” for 34 hours and spent two weeks recuperating. He was initially left partially paralysed and still has no feelings in his fingers, The Mail on Sunday reported.
Relations between Britain and Russia have plunged to a post-Cold War low since the murder of Gordievsky’s friend Litvinenko, a former Moscow agent and a fierce Kremlin critic.
“I’ve known for some time that I am on the assassination list drawn up by rogue elements in Moscow,” Gordievsky told the weekly tabloid.
“They murdered my friend Alexander Litvinenko. I have no doubt my sudden illness last November was a similar attempt on my life. It was obvious to me that I had been poisoned.
He said Moscow-authored poisonings were based on their difficulty to detect, citing the deaths of Litvinenko and others.
SKorea conservatives set to win election
SEOUL - The conservative party of new South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak is poised to win Wednesday’s general election despite a barrage of threats from North Korea against his administration, analysts say.
The former CEO won a huge victory over his liberal rival in December’s presidential poll with his “Economy First!” pledge.
Lee now wants his ruling Grand National Party (GNP) to secure a parliamentary majority over the liberal United Democratic Party (UDP) so he can enact sweeping changes designed to revitalise the economy.
And even though North Korea last week labelled him a traitor, a US sycophant and a political charlatan, he is likely to get his wish.
North Korea announced Thursday it was suspending all dialogue with South Korea, the culmination of a week of growing cross-border tensions.
It has also expelled South Korean officials from a joint industrial complex, test-fired missiles and threatened to turn the South into “ashes” should Seoul launch any pre-emptive strike.
Pyongyang is furious at Lee’s tougher line linking economic aid to the North’s progress in nuclear disarmament, and at his declared readiness to raise the issue of human rights abuses.
Lee’s government “is driving North-South relations to confrontation and catastrophe,” North Korea said Thursday.
Analysts say the North may be testing Lee’s resolve and trying to sway people against the GNP.
“North Korea’s recent threats are causing concern and are certain to sway some voters. But unlike in the past, the impact is not so big this time,” said Park Myung-Ho, a Dongguk University political science professor.
“Our political culture is mature enough to digest such developments. North Korea is no longer a decisive factor in South Korean elections.”
Sungkyunkwan University political science professor Kim Il-Young agreed the recent threats would have no significant impact on the election.
Voters in fact don’t seem hugely interested in anything this time. The National Election Commission fears a record low turnout of around 52 percent—and is running campaigns to get out the vote.
“Low turnout is a long-term trend but political parties and politicians are also failing to rouse voters’ interest, especially in this parliamentary election,” said Kim.
“The parties put up candidates only about two weeks before the election, depriving many voters of chances to get acquainted with their background and policy planks.”
Park said public interest in politics has waned gradually since the presidential election, but both analysts forecast a GNP victory.
Feuds in both major parties over candidate selection have fuelled disenchantment.
The GNP’s hopes of winning two-thirds of the 299-seat National Assembly have faded due to a deep split between Lee’s supporters and followers of his party rival Park Geun-Hye.
Park has announced she will not campaign for party candidates in protest at the exclusion of many of her supporters from the nomination list. Many of these have bolted from the GNP to form a ”Pro-Park Alliance.”
The UDP says it hopes to win at least 100 parliamentary seats so it can stop any moves by the GNP to change the constitution. It appeals for a large opposition presence in parliament to keep the government in check.
“It goes without saying that the arrogant ruling party will push through government policies designed solely for the country’s privileged sector, should it win big in the elections,” UDP leader Sohn Hak-kyu said Thursday.
In February, before a series of breakaways by members, the GNP had 130 seats and the UDP had 135.
A poll last week predicted the GNP will win 144 of the 245 directly-elected seats compared to 71 for the UDP, with the rest shared among minor parties and independents.
The other 54 seats are allotted by proportional representation depending on each party’s share of the vote.
The former CEO won a huge victory over his liberal rival in December’s presidential poll with his “Economy First!” pledge.
Lee now wants his ruling Grand National Party (GNP) to secure a parliamentary majority over the liberal United Democratic Party (UDP) so he can enact sweeping changes designed to revitalise the economy.
And even though North Korea last week labelled him a traitor, a US sycophant and a political charlatan, he is likely to get his wish.
North Korea announced Thursday it was suspending all dialogue with South Korea, the culmination of a week of growing cross-border tensions.
It has also expelled South Korean officials from a joint industrial complex, test-fired missiles and threatened to turn the South into “ashes” should Seoul launch any pre-emptive strike.
Pyongyang is furious at Lee’s tougher line linking economic aid to the North’s progress in nuclear disarmament, and at his declared readiness to raise the issue of human rights abuses.
Lee’s government “is driving North-South relations to confrontation and catastrophe,” North Korea said Thursday.
Analysts say the North may be testing Lee’s resolve and trying to sway people against the GNP.
“North Korea’s recent threats are causing concern and are certain to sway some voters. But unlike in the past, the impact is not so big this time,” said Park Myung-Ho, a Dongguk University political science professor.
“Our political culture is mature enough to digest such developments. North Korea is no longer a decisive factor in South Korean elections.”
Sungkyunkwan University political science professor Kim Il-Young agreed the recent threats would have no significant impact on the election.
Voters in fact don’t seem hugely interested in anything this time. The National Election Commission fears a record low turnout of around 52 percent—and is running campaigns to get out the vote.
“Low turnout is a long-term trend but political parties and politicians are also failing to rouse voters’ interest, especially in this parliamentary election,” said Kim.
“The parties put up candidates only about two weeks before the election, depriving many voters of chances to get acquainted with their background and policy planks.”
Park said public interest in politics has waned gradually since the presidential election, but both analysts forecast a GNP victory.
Feuds in both major parties over candidate selection have fuelled disenchantment.
The GNP’s hopes of winning two-thirds of the 299-seat National Assembly have faded due to a deep split between Lee’s supporters and followers of his party rival Park Geun-Hye.
Park has announced she will not campaign for party candidates in protest at the exclusion of many of her supporters from the nomination list. Many of these have bolted from the GNP to form a ”Pro-Park Alliance.”
The UDP says it hopes to win at least 100 parliamentary seats so it can stop any moves by the GNP to change the constitution. It appeals for a large opposition presence in parliament to keep the government in check.
“It goes without saying that the arrogant ruling party will push through government policies designed solely for the country’s privileged sector, should it win big in the elections,” UDP leader Sohn Hak-kyu said Thursday.
In February, before a series of breakaways by members, the GNP had 130 seats and the UDP had 135.
A poll last week predicted the GNP will win 144 of the 245 directly-elected seats compared to 71 for the UDP, with the rest shared among minor parties and independents.
The other 54 seats are allotted by proportional representation depending on each party’s share of the vote.
Rich nations discuss poverty reduction in Africa
TOKYO- Ministers from the richest nations and the fastest growing economies started talks Sunday on developing specific measures to reduce poverty in Africa and other areas under a 2000 UN agreement.
The talks are the second day of meetings between development ministers from the Group of Eight industrialised nations and emerging donor nations—Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, South Korea and South Africa.
G8 nations are to issue a summary later Sunday on how to bolster their efforts in foreign development aid. African development is expected to be high on the agenda at the next G8 summit in July in northern Japan.
Late Saturday, the ministers agreed on “increasing the credibility and transparency of aid policy,” officials said.
The talks are the second day of meetings between development ministers from the Group of Eight industrialised nations and emerging donor nations—Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, South Korea and South Africa.
G8 nations are to issue a summary later Sunday on how to bolster their efforts in foreign development aid. African development is expected to be high on the agenda at the next G8 summit in July in northern Japan.
Late Saturday, the ministers agreed on “increasing the credibility and transparency of aid policy,” officials said.
Sri Lankan minister killed in blast
COLOMBO - Sri Lanka’s highways minister and at least nine other people were killed by an explosion in a town in the western district of Gampaha on Sunday, a security official said.
“Minister Jeyaraj Fernandopulle is dead from the explosion,” Laksman Hulugalla, director general of the media centre for national security, told Reuters.
The military said 10 people were killed and 25 injured in the explosion, which they blamed on the Tamil Tiger rebels, who are fighting to create an independent state in the north and east of the war-scarred island.
Minister of Highways Jeyaraj Fernandopulle had been attending a public function in the Gampaha district town.
“Minister Jeyaraj Fernandopulle is dead from the explosion,” Laksman Hulugalla, director general of the media centre for national security, told Reuters.
The military said 10 people were killed and 25 injured in the explosion, which they blamed on the Tamil Tiger rebels, who are fighting to create an independent state in the north and east of the war-scarred island.
Minister of Highways Jeyaraj Fernandopulle had been attending a public function in the Gampaha district town.
'PPP determined to reinstate judges'
KARACHI — Minister for Law and Justice Farooq H. Naek has reiterated that PPP was determined to reinstate deposed judges and also has constituted a committee comprising representatives of the coalition partners for the reinstatement of the judges through parliament.
"The Murree Declaration will be implemented and the deposed judges will be reinstated as well as the concurrent list to be removed from the constitution," he told newsmen in Sukkur. Naek said that the government would establish evening courts to provide speedy justice to the people and reduce the ratio of prisoners currently languishing in jails.
If the government went ahead with the setting up of evening courts it will certainly provide relief to the people in Pakistan, and specially prisoners who at times had to wait for years before their cases are heard.
"The Murree Declaration will be implemented and the deposed judges will be reinstated as well as the concurrent list to be removed from the constitution," he told newsmen in Sukkur. Naek said that the government would establish evening courts to provide speedy justice to the people and reduce the ratio of prisoners currently languishing in jails.
If the government went ahead with the setting up of evening courts it will certainly provide relief to the people in Pakistan, and specially prisoners who at times had to wait for years before their cases are heard.
President's nod needed to abolish NAB: Naik
ISLAMABAD — The PPP government would require President Musharraf's approval to abolish the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) as promised by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, law minister Farooq H. Naik told reporers here.
"The prior permission of the president has been made mandatory in the 17th Amendment for amending a set of laws that has been listed in the Schedule-six of the constitution," Naik said adding that the NAB law is included in the list.
The minister said the government would initially reorganise the NAB courts.
He said the law ministry was studying the options for amending the laws protected by the Schedule-six that require consent of the president.
The Local Government Ordinance and restriction on two-time prime ministers to seek the office for the third time also included in the schedule. Both the slain PPP chairperson Benazir Bhutto and PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif were specifically targeted to disqualify them from becoming prime ministers again.
Prime Minister Gilani in his first speech in the assembly pledged to abolish NAB which was used during past eight years to persecute opposition politicians on charges of corruption. Gilani himself spent five years in jail under NAB laws.
Naik said the PPP will repeal all black laws which have been made to suppress the common man and will dispel all special courts that have been excluded from the jurisdiction of the superior courts. According to the Schedule-six of the constitution, the following laws cannot be altered, repealed or amended without the previous sanction of the president: The National Accountability Bureau Ordinance 1999, Local Government Ordinance 2001, The Election Commission Order 2002, The Political Parties Order 2002, The Qualification to Hold Public Offices Order 2002 and The Police Order 2002.
A senior legal expert in the pro-Musharraf camp, Senator S. M. Zafar also endorsed Naik's view. He said that according to the present constitutional position, even parliament could not undertake any amendments to any clause that fell in the Schedule-six of the constitution.
"The prior permission of the president has been made mandatory in the 17th Amendment for amending a set of laws that has been listed in the Schedule-six of the constitution," Naik said adding that the NAB law is included in the list.
The minister said the government would initially reorganise the NAB courts.
He said the law ministry was studying the options for amending the laws protected by the Schedule-six that require consent of the president.
The Local Government Ordinance and restriction on two-time prime ministers to seek the office for the third time also included in the schedule. Both the slain PPP chairperson Benazir Bhutto and PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif were specifically targeted to disqualify them from becoming prime ministers again.
Prime Minister Gilani in his first speech in the assembly pledged to abolish NAB which was used during past eight years to persecute opposition politicians on charges of corruption. Gilani himself spent five years in jail under NAB laws.
Naik said the PPP will repeal all black laws which have been made to suppress the common man and will dispel all special courts that have been excluded from the jurisdiction of the superior courts. According to the Schedule-six of the constitution, the following laws cannot be altered, repealed or amended without the previous sanction of the president: The National Accountability Bureau Ordinance 1999, Local Government Ordinance 2001, The Election Commission Order 2002, The Political Parties Order 2002, The Qualification to Hold Public Offices Order 2002 and The Police Order 2002.
A senior legal expert in the pro-Musharraf camp, Senator S. M. Zafar also endorsed Naik's view. He said that according to the present constitutional position, even parliament could not undertake any amendments to any clause that fell in the Schedule-six of the constitution.
Foreign investment policy to be changed: Dar
LAHORE — Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has said that the government will change its foreign investment policy to discourage temporary investments meant to generate quick profits and take back investments.
Addressing a conference organised by the South Asia Federation of Accountants on Friday, he said new foreign investment policy would encourage long-term investment in agro-based and manufacturing industries to create jobs.
Dar said the government would have to take some painful measures to avoid any financial disaster in the future, adding that only the rich would feel the brunt of these measures.
"The coalition government will change monetary and fiscal policies to eradicate poverty," he added. He said the pro-rich policies implemented by the previous government had marginalised the poor and the food inflation had changed the basic poverty parameters.
He said 16 million more people had been pushed below the poverty line after 1999.
"The purchasing power of a dollar has declined drastically since then. Now one dollar is just enough to buy three kg of flour," he said, adding that genuine evaluation revealed that anybody earning less than $3 per day was living below the poverty line. "The previous government's claim that poverty has been reduced from 34 to 23.5 per cent is misleading because it used the parameter of one dollar per day," he said, adding that the previous government had spent lavishly on non-development projects. He said he would made public the balance sheet that he got on March 31 when he assumed the charge of his office.
About the new year’s budget, the finance minister said the government would review the defence budget but the security of the country borders would not be compromised. Top army officers were also ready to cooperate with the government in reviewing the defence budget, Dar said.
He said the coalition government was faced with the tough task of rebuilding the economy ruined by its predecessors. It would have to make a new beginning to resolve the serious economic crisis. The country was facing the twin trade and fiscal deficits.
Food inflation increased from 15 to 16 per cent making the goings hard for the common run of people.
International donors would be consulted over the economy and measures would be taken to resolve the economic crisis.
He said their predecessors had increased poverty and inflation due to their pro-rich, pro-elite and pro-feudal policies and wanted to make big gains without taxes. It also disturbed macro-economic stability by 'criminal’ spending in the past 11 months for influencing the election results.
He said his government faced the daunting task of restoring financial discipline and striking a balance between economic challenges and expectations of the people. He said he was reviewing the situation and would give a statement on the economy.
Addressing a conference organised by the South Asia Federation of Accountants on Friday, he said new foreign investment policy would encourage long-term investment in agro-based and manufacturing industries to create jobs.
Dar said the government would have to take some painful measures to avoid any financial disaster in the future, adding that only the rich would feel the brunt of these measures.
"The coalition government will change monetary and fiscal policies to eradicate poverty," he added. He said the pro-rich policies implemented by the previous government had marginalised the poor and the food inflation had changed the basic poverty parameters.
He said 16 million more people had been pushed below the poverty line after 1999.
"The purchasing power of a dollar has declined drastically since then. Now one dollar is just enough to buy three kg of flour," he said, adding that genuine evaluation revealed that anybody earning less than $3 per day was living below the poverty line. "The previous government's claim that poverty has been reduced from 34 to 23.5 per cent is misleading because it used the parameter of one dollar per day," he said, adding that the previous government had spent lavishly on non-development projects. He said he would made public the balance sheet that he got on March 31 when he assumed the charge of his office.
About the new year’s budget, the finance minister said the government would review the defence budget but the security of the country borders would not be compromised. Top army officers were also ready to cooperate with the government in reviewing the defence budget, Dar said.
He said the coalition government was faced with the tough task of rebuilding the economy ruined by its predecessors. It would have to make a new beginning to resolve the serious economic crisis. The country was facing the twin trade and fiscal deficits.
Food inflation increased from 15 to 16 per cent making the goings hard for the common run of people.
International donors would be consulted over the economy and measures would be taken to resolve the economic crisis.
He said their predecessors had increased poverty and inflation due to their pro-rich, pro-elite and pro-feudal policies and wanted to make big gains without taxes. It also disturbed macro-economic stability by 'criminal’ spending in the past 11 months for influencing the election results.
He said his government faced the daunting task of restoring financial discipline and striking a balance between economic challenges and expectations of the people. He said he was reviewing the situation and would give a statement on the economy.
Mukhtar denies having called Musharraf 'national asset'
ISLAMABAD — Defence minister Ahmed Mukhtar has refuted reports attributing remarks to him that President Gen. Pervez Musharraf is a "national asset" and that the PPP would work with him in the larger national interest.
A defence ministry statement said Ahmed Mukhtar had never made such statement that has evoked considerable controversy and alarmed coalition partners, in particular the PML-N that wants Musharraf to step down. Presidential spokesman Rashid Qureshi, however, welcomed the minister's remarks.
Qureshi told Dawn News that all political parties and politicians barring PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif were ready to work with President Musharraf. He said the PML-N's reaction to Mukhtar's statement had a "marginal" value because its representation in parliament was only 22 per cent.
He said that only those who were "insane" or "indifferent" to the national interest would disagree with Mukhtar's statement.
The spokesman also welcomed the briefing given by the army to the political leadership, saying that the latter had now been shown the "real" picture of the 'war on terror'. He said it was now up to the civilian leadership to decide the future course of the pressing issue.
Defence Minister Ahmad Mukhtar's recent statement that President Pervez Musharraf is a "national asset" negates the Charter of Democracy (CoD) and the Muree Declaration, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) spokesman Sadeequl Farooq said here adding that the party would seek explanation from the PPP.
Meanwhile, in a separate statement, Mukhtar said president's interference in the parliamentary affairs would be resisted. He said the war on terror would continue. However, if the president tried to interfere in the affairs of parliament, then the PPP would be forced to think about the future of the president.
By-elections schedule next week
ISLAMABAD — The Election Commission of Pakistan has prepared the schedule of by-elections which would be announced next week, a spokesman of the commission has said.
By-polls on 30 national and provincial assemblies seats will be held on same day. Polling would be held in the first week of June. Chief Election Commissioner Justice (Retd) Qazi Mohammed Farooq would announce the schedule of by-election next week at a news conference.
By-polls on 30 national and provincial assemblies seats will be held on same day. Polling would be held in the first week of June. Chief Election Commissioner Justice (Retd) Qazi Mohammed Farooq would announce the schedule of by-election next week at a news conference.
Sindh Assembly oath-taking marred by rowdy scenes
KARACHI — Amid slogans of "Jeay Bhutto" and "Bibi Zinda Hai" and acts of vandalism allegedly by Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) supporters, 161 members out of 168 of the newly-elected Sindh Assembly took oath yesterday administered by the provincial Speaker Syed Muzaffar Hussain Shah.
Hundreds of PPP supporters forced their entry into the Sindh Assembly Hall, despite strict security around the building. They smashed the windows and doors and torn portraits of two former Sindh chief ministers Dr Arbab Ghulam Rahim and Liaquat Ali Jatoti into pieces.
Dr Arbab Ghulam Rahim, who had returned from abroad just hours before the session, claimed that some political activists manhandled him inside the assembly building.
The session started late due to several factors including delay in issuance of passes.
All PPP legislators wore black armbands not as a protest, but to show their respect for the slain party chairperson Benazir Bhutto.
The PPP legislators, specially women, throughout the session kept banging their desks as well raising slogans and each member held portrait of Benazir while signing on register.
One aspect that surprised many people was that the members took oath in three different languages. Two Awami National Party (ANP) and one MQM member, Dr Mohammed Ali Shah took oath in English.
This is the first time that ANP won seats in Sindh Assembly. Majority of Sindhi members took oath in their mother tongue.
In a House of 168, Pakistan People's Party (PPP) is the largest single party and has simple majority in the House with 89 members, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) 51, PML-F nine, PML-Q eight, NPP and the ANP two each. The PS-30, PS-44 and PS-62 seats were lying vacant because of various reasons while court stayed PS-12, PS-15 and PS-97.
A decision about one minorities seat is still to be taken. Besides the Election Commission had declared three seats vacant.
PPP had already nominated Syed Qaim Ali Shah, Nisar Khuhro and Pir Mazharul Haq for the posts of Chief Minister, Speaker and Parliamentary Leader respectively in the House. Later MQM leader, Shoaib Bokhari, told newsmen that his party would put up candidates for Speaker and Deputy Speaker offices, a decision somewhat seen against the spirit of two parties' decision to bury the past and work together in the best interest of the country following discussions between Asif Ali Zardari and Altaf Hussain. The election of Speaker and Deputy Speaker and Chief Minister will be held tomorrow. Governor Dr Ishratul Ebad is expected to administer oath to the new chief minister on Tuesday.
Hundreds of PPP supporters forced their entry into the Sindh Assembly Hall, despite strict security around the building. They smashed the windows and doors and torn portraits of two former Sindh chief ministers Dr Arbab Ghulam Rahim and Liaquat Ali Jatoti into pieces.
Dr Arbab Ghulam Rahim, who had returned from abroad just hours before the session, claimed that some political activists manhandled him inside the assembly building.
The session started late due to several factors including delay in issuance of passes.
All PPP legislators wore black armbands not as a protest, but to show their respect for the slain party chairperson Benazir Bhutto.
The PPP legislators, specially women, throughout the session kept banging their desks as well raising slogans and each member held portrait of Benazir while signing on register.
One aspect that surprised many people was that the members took oath in three different languages. Two Awami National Party (ANP) and one MQM member, Dr Mohammed Ali Shah took oath in English.
This is the first time that ANP won seats in Sindh Assembly. Majority of Sindhi members took oath in their mother tongue.
In a House of 168, Pakistan People's Party (PPP) is the largest single party and has simple majority in the House with 89 members, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) 51, PML-F nine, PML-Q eight, NPP and the ANP two each. The PS-30, PS-44 and PS-62 seats were lying vacant because of various reasons while court stayed PS-12, PS-15 and PS-97.
A decision about one minorities seat is still to be taken. Besides the Election Commission had declared three seats vacant.
PPP had already nominated Syed Qaim Ali Shah, Nisar Khuhro and Pir Mazharul Haq for the posts of Chief Minister, Speaker and Parliamentary Leader respectively in the House. Later MQM leader, Shoaib Bokhari, told newsmen that his party would put up candidates for Speaker and Deputy Speaker offices, a decision somewhat seen against the spirit of two parties' decision to bury the past and work together in the best interest of the country following discussions between Asif Ali Zardari and Altaf Hussain. The election of Speaker and Deputy Speaker and Chief Minister will be held tomorrow. Governor Dr Ishratul Ebad is expected to administer oath to the new chief minister on Tuesday.
Actor Anwar Solangi dead
KARACHI — Well-known television and radio artist Anwar Solangi died on Friday at a local hospital. He leaves behind a wife, two daughters and a four-year-old son.
Solangi, 64, played variety of roles in over 500 plays in both Urdu and Sindhi languages as well as over a dozen films. He was twice awarded PTV awards for best actor and best supporting actor. His successful plays are Chhoti Si Duniya, Rani Jo Kahani, Junglee, Hawain, Dewarain and Marvi.
Solangi, 64, played variety of roles in over 500 plays in both Urdu and Sindhi languages as well as over a dozen films. He was twice awarded PTV awards for best actor and best supporting actor. His successful plays are Chhoti Si Duniya, Rani Jo Kahani, Junglee, Hawain, Dewarain and Marvi.
PCO judges have to go, says Wajih
LAHORE — Judges’ struggle will be deemed a failure if judges who took oath under the Provisional Constitution Order retain their positions even after the restoration of pre-November 3 judges, a former judge of the Supreme Court says.
Justice (Retd) Wajihuddin Ahmad said while addressing Faisalabad Bar Association there were rumours the government was planning to limit through legislation the tenure of the deposed chief justice of Pakistan to three years. He said the lawyers would not accept any such law. He claimed that deposed CJ Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry had been offered the governorship of Balochistan and top slot of the International Court of Justice for budging from his position for the restoration of the judiciary. Such offers would not lure Justice Iftikhar who would continue his struggle to achieve the goal, he said.
Justice (Retd) Wajihuddin Ahmad said while addressing Faisalabad Bar Association there were rumours the government was planning to limit through legislation the tenure of the deposed chief justice of Pakistan to three years. He said the lawyers would not accept any such law. He claimed that deposed CJ Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry had been offered the governorship of Balochistan and top slot of the International Court of Justice for budging from his position for the restoration of the judiciary. Such offers would not lure Justice Iftikhar who would continue his struggle to achieve the goal, he said.
Musharraf will be ousted soon, says Sharif
ISLAMABAD — The ruling coalition intends to bring legislation in parliament for removal of President Musharraf, former Prime Minister and PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif has said.
"Gen. (Retd) Pervez Musharraf will have to accept the verdict of the people given in the election and step down," Sharif said in an interview with Indian TV channel Aaj Tak to be telecast today, according to a PML-N Press release here.
"We intend to bring the legislation in parliament for President's removal," he said, adding "Musharraf is isolated and will have to go."
He denied having struck any deal with Musharraf. "I have not struck a deal with Musharraf nor have I gone soft on him. I think an autocrat has no role to play in a democratic set-up."
Asked whether he will ever contest election again, Sharif said: "I will surely contest election." He denied harbouring any personal grudge against Musharraf for toppling his government.
Sharif refuted India's claim that terrorist camps continue to operate in Pakistan. He advocated a visa-free regime as part of confidence-building measures to resolve the lingering Kashmir issue. Sharif said there was no substance in the Indian Home Ministry's report that the terrorist training camps were still operating in Pakistan.
''There are no such camps operating in Pakistan,'' he declared. He said the visa system must be abolished between the two countries to improve their bilateral ties and promote a free movement of people from across the border.
Sharif also asserted that Asif Zardari concurred with his views on a visa-free regime between the two countries. He said he even favoured that Pakistan should unilaterally abolish the mandatory visa requirement for Indians even if India reciprocates it or not. "I have spoken to Zardari Sahab about it and I think he also feels the same way.''
NNI adds: Nawaz Sharif said PPP and PML-N were committed to restore all deposed judges in line with their March 9 Murree Declaration. "Definitely, the deposed judges would be restored within 30 days," he said. He said the two parties had no reservations with regard to the judiciary issue and hopefully the accord would be implemented in its letter and spirit.
Sharif said legal experts were preparing a draft resolution on the issue for the parliament. To a question, he dispelled the impression that a constitutional amendment could be moved in the parliament under which a parliamentary committee would be formed to make a decision about restoration of November 2 judiciary.
Show some spunk while dealing with China, govt told
NEW DELHI — The government's Tibet policy came in for sharp criticism yesterday, with former diplomats and experts pulling up the government for compromising on principles in a bid to placate China over the issue.
"China has claimed Arunachal Pradesh as part of its territory and offended our sensibilities.
“We shouldn't give the impression that we are buckling under the Chinese pressure," former foreign secretary Kanwal Sibal said at a seminar on the situation in Tibet here.
"We should make it plain to the Chinese how our system works. Tibetans can hold peaceful demonstrations in India. The symbolism of the Olympic torch is incompatible with what is happening in Tibet," Sibal said.
"We must create space for ourselves. It's regrettable we are not thinking ahead," he said.
"We should have a more vigorous Tibet policy. It is at the core of our nationhood and our relations with China," Sibal underlined. G. Parthasarathy, a former Indian envoy to Pakistan, charged that the Indian government was "bending over backwards" to please China over the Tibetan issue. He strongly objected to the summoning of the Indian ambassador by Beijing past midnight to express concerns over Tibetan protests in India.
"Why should we keep blindly repeating that Tibet is part of China? As long as China claims Arunachal to be part of the Chinese territory, we should not concede Tibet is part of China," Parthasarathy asserted.
"India's ambassador is summoned at 2am in the morning and we don't protest," he said while alluding to New Delhi's diplomatic silence over Beijing's summoning of Indian ambassador Nirupama Rao by the Chinese foreign office recently.
"Stop being apologetic and work in the international community under international law," he advised the government asking it to show "spine" by speaking out on gross human rights violations in Tibet. "It's shocking that we have asked the Dalai Lama to resist from political activities. Let's not forget that the Dalai Lama fled from the Chinese persecution when he came to India in 1959.
“How can we expect him to keep his mouth shut?" he asked.
He was referring to a recent statement by External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee saying that while the Dalai Lama was an honoured guest in India, he and his followers should not indulge in anti-China activities or any other activity on Indian territory that can hurt India's ties with other countries.
Soli Sorabjee, a former attorney general, criticised the government's response to the crackdown on Tibetan protesters as a sign of capitulation to Beijing and asked Beijing to stop brutal repression in Tibet. India granted asylum to the Dalai Lama in 1959 in the northern hill town of Dharamsala.
"China has claimed Arunachal Pradesh as part of its territory and offended our sensibilities.
“We shouldn't give the impression that we are buckling under the Chinese pressure," former foreign secretary Kanwal Sibal said at a seminar on the situation in Tibet here.
"We should make it plain to the Chinese how our system works. Tibetans can hold peaceful demonstrations in India. The symbolism of the Olympic torch is incompatible with what is happening in Tibet," Sibal said.
"We must create space for ourselves. It's regrettable we are not thinking ahead," he said.
"We should have a more vigorous Tibet policy. It is at the core of our nationhood and our relations with China," Sibal underlined. G. Parthasarathy, a former Indian envoy to Pakistan, charged that the Indian government was "bending over backwards" to please China over the Tibetan issue. He strongly objected to the summoning of the Indian ambassador by Beijing past midnight to express concerns over Tibetan protests in India.
"Why should we keep blindly repeating that Tibet is part of China? As long as China claims Arunachal to be part of the Chinese territory, we should not concede Tibet is part of China," Parthasarathy asserted.
"India's ambassador is summoned at 2am in the morning and we don't protest," he said while alluding to New Delhi's diplomatic silence over Beijing's summoning of Indian ambassador Nirupama Rao by the Chinese foreign office recently.
"Stop being apologetic and work in the international community under international law," he advised the government asking it to show "spine" by speaking out on gross human rights violations in Tibet. "It's shocking that we have asked the Dalai Lama to resist from political activities. Let's not forget that the Dalai Lama fled from the Chinese persecution when he came to India in 1959.
“How can we expect him to keep his mouth shut?" he asked.
He was referring to a recent statement by External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee saying that while the Dalai Lama was an honoured guest in India, he and his followers should not indulge in anti-China activities or any other activity on Indian territory that can hurt India's ties with other countries.
Soli Sorabjee, a former attorney general, criticised the government's response to the crackdown on Tibetan protesters as a sign of capitulation to Beijing and asked Beijing to stop brutal repression in Tibet. India granted asylum to the Dalai Lama in 1959 in the northern hill town of Dharamsala.
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