Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Two Brothers Killed in Sialkot Pakistan , Details

Here are the photos of two brothers Hafiz Mughees Sajjad and Muneeb Sajjad killed by local people in really a very brutal way.

This event took place at 15th of August when both of the brothers were coming back to home after playing a cricket match. It is really a very tragic incident for us because they were not even killed but police was also involved in this incident. Much of videos are available on this incident online but I want to warn you to don't watch this video if you are faint hearted. Ok now come at real story.
Some sources say that they were killed only because of a fight during their cricket match while the killers have blammed that they were involved in murdering so they were killed in such a way.
One man have informed the following words. Both of brothers went out to play cricket match in a ground far beyond their home. During their match they fought with some people and injured four of them. When they were coming back they were killed before public and police blamming that both of them are murderers. But this thing is not even a bit confirmed at the moment. They were killed not by bullets but with sticks and much more things like that. They were killed in a very tragic manner and no one came to stop their brutality but even police allowed them to keep the brutality.

More news very soon

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Indo-US nexus to mount pressure on Pak after Eid

ISLAMABAD – Pressure will be mounted on Pakistan to open up a military front in North Waziristan Agency after coming Eid, once the floodwater subsides, it is learnt.
The floods played havoc in the most parts of the country and they have somehow provided Pakistan a respite from the ever-growing US pressure to wage military offensive in NWA.
However, this ‘blessing in disguise’ would not last for a long time, as the moves are underway on part of the powerful Indo-US nexus to push Pakistan militarily into NWA in the days ahead.
Discussion with informed circles indicate that Pakistan Army was under immense pressure to jump into NWA last month and there were strong reports suggesting that NWA operation was on the cards. The slow and gradual rise of aggressive statements from Washington against the presumed militants offshoots in Pakistan are seen as a forecast of the American pressure that would gain momentum in near future.
Well aware of the fact that it is not an appropriate time to exert pressure on Pakistan for NWA offensive in the wake of international community’s support and sympathies for Pakistan, the US now sponsors a ‘unique’ kind of concern regarding the spread of militancy in Pakistan. It is now worried about the ‘eruption’ of militancy in the country’s flood-hit areas. This newly found US’ obsession follows the United Nations’ statements about the chances of ‘outbreak’ of extremist elements in the same region.

Refrence

UAE steps up relief efforts in Pakistan

A fleet of Chinook helicopters had been deployed to evacuate people to shelters built by the Pakistani government.
Islamabad: The UAE Armed Forces will step up relief operations in Pakistan's flood-affected regions as per the directives of President His Highness Shaikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

The UAE Armed Forces is operating an air bridge between the flood-hit areas to deliver relief to the affected population.

The commander of the UAE Armed Force's Relief Team in Pakistan said a fleet of Chinook helicopters had been deployed to evacuate people to shelters built by the Pakistani government.

"The UAE Armed Forces team is assisting the Pakistani army to evacuate the distressed population to safe areas and airlift relief supplies to flood engulfed areas which could not be reached by land," he added.

UAE aircraft are also carrying relief assistance offered by friendly countries from main airports to locations of internally displaced persons (IDPs).

Relief operations will continue in an attempt to improve the living condition of the flood victims.

The commander added that his team had been among the first aid providers in Pakistan and intensified its humanitarian and relief works in various regions like Punjab.

Officials of Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority paid tribute to the UAE for standing and supporting the Pakistani people in this ordeal.

World Bank agrees to provide $900 million to Pakistan

The World Bank has agreed to provide give a $900 million financial aid to Pakistan which is facing devastating flood that has affected 14 million people.

“The Government of Pakistan has requested around $900 million of financial support from the World Bank, which we have committed to provide,” the World Bank said in statement.

The funding for this would come from the Bank’s Fund for the Poorest (the International Development Association, IDA) through reprogramming of currently planned projects and reallocation of undisbursed funds from ongoing projects.

On August 11, Pakistan had asked the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to undertake a Damages and Needs Assessment in the flood-hit areas, and the United Nations (UN) the Early Recovery Needs Assessment.

The World Bank, the ADB, and the UN will collaborate through participation and sharing of information on their respective assessments, and will also regularly coordinate with key donors.

The Bank and ADB have mobilised staff and a Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR) rapid response team arrived in Islamabad on Friday last to help launch the assessment.

“If there is no fresh wave of flooding, the assessment can be completed by October 15,” the Bank said.

The current floods have now affected over 14 million people, according to Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), with some estimates putting the figure considerably higher.

The affected area covers 132,421 km, including 1.4 million acres of cropped land. Continuing rains have caused additional flooding and hindered relief activities.

The scale of destruction exceeds that of the 2005 earthquake.

“The economic cost is expected to be huge,” the Bank said.

Preliminary information indicates that direct damage from floods was greatest in the housing (current estimates are that 723,000 houses have either been destroyed or damaged), roads, irrigation, and agriculture sectors.

Crop loss was estimated at $1 billion.

The full impact on soil erosion and agriculture could only be assessed when the water recedes, by mid-September.

A grant of $1.3 million has also been made available by the GFDRR to support the Damage Needs Assessment, rescue and relief efforts, and to strengthen disaster management and longer term disaster risk reduction.

“We used some of this grant to purchase Rescue Boats, delivered to the government on Friday last. With the support of donors, we are also prepared to use the newly operational Multi-Donor Trust Fund (MDTF) for the northwest border region to finance recovery, reconstruction and rehabilitation,” the Bank said.

“We are working with the Government to re-prioritise our planned projects and review ongoing projects for possible reallocation to reconstruction activities,” it said.

Some immediate priorities we have agreed with the government are reallocating USD 10 million of existing undisbursed funds to the National Disaster Management Agency providing fast-disbursing additional funds to retroactively finance imports needed for early recovery, reconstruction, and rehabilitation, such as fuel, steel, cement, and related goods and services.

It has also accelerated delivery and expansion of a planned Emergency Operation for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP)/Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) to include flood-affected districts.

The bank is working with the government to help ensure that disaster funds are spent for their intended purpose.

Going forward, in addition to the needs assessment and subsequent assistance with long-term reconstruction, the Bank will be making other contributions to the repair and rehabilitation of critical infrastructure on the Indus River to help with future flood prevention.

Helping flood victims

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s trip to Pakistan and his tour of the affected areas to meet the victims - seeing their plight at first hand - followed by his announcement of $ 10 million from the UN Central Emergency Response Fund was of some consolation. Shocked by the sheer scale of the disaster, the Secretary General did not hesitate to admit the fact that never before had he witnessed so much destruction and chaos. He promised that he would appeal to the international community to rush to Pakistan’s help. One expects him to follow up on his words with definite moves, and since he himself stated that a lot more money and resources were needed in the days to come, he must immediately start striving to get the required aid money from around the world. Estimates made by the UN itself have put the scale of destruction greater than the tsunami of 2004 in terms of damage to area, infrastructure and property. Therefore, it stands to reason that that the foreign funds should be equally large.
Meanwhile, flooding continues to get worse on account of the continuing intermittent spells of monsoon rains. As a result, the water shows no sign of receding in Khyber Pukthunkhwa, and more and more parts of Sindh, Punjab and Balochistan are getting submerged under floods. The government’s failure to put its act together and seriously get on with the rescue work is evidenced from the death of five children from starvation in Kohistan, the drowning of nine persons and the fact that hundreds of thousands of people are stranded, desperately looking for help. However, the call by PML-N urging the centre and the provinces to curtail their development funds and collect Rs 350 billion for the purpose of relief operations to utilise that sum through a non-partisan commission has evoked a positive response by the federal government. The names of its members are expected to be announced shortly and it is hoped that the selected individuals would be of impeccable character. Likewise, in order for swift action, the commission should be allowed to function free of the bureaucratic red tape.

Pakistan floods spur Alta., Man. donations

The government of Alberta will donate $500,000 towards relief efforts in Pakistan, and Manitoba doubled its pledge for flood aid to $200,000 on Monday.

"I have been shocked to see the devastation in Pakistan," Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach said Monday in a news release announcing the contribution to Canadian Red Cross relief efforts.

The federal government has pledged $33-million and Ontario has pledged $1-million.

The Saskatchewan government hasn't announced a contribution, but officials were meeting to discuss the matter Monday afternoon.

Manitoba had previously pledged $100,000 through the Manitoba Council for International Co-operation and announced another $100,000 Monday.

The floods have spread throughout Pakistan after beginning in the country's northwest more than two weeks ago. As many as 20 million people and 160,000 square kilometres of land may have been affected, the Pakistani government estimates.

The United Nations is hoping for $460 million US in immediate donations.

Pakistan can’t tackle floods challenge alone: Shahbaz Bhatti

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s government alone cannot tackle the flood tragedy until the International community comes forward to share the burden. The calamity has hit people from all faiths, caste and creed and the enormity of the calamity is beyond all calculations, said federal Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti while talking to Daily Times on Monday. Bhatti said that he visited the flood-hit areas in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and described it as “a disaster of enormous magnitude and unimaginable proportions... a mega disaster which requires the world to mount a mega response”. Bhatti said that the disaster has eclipsed the scale of devastating 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the 2005 earthquake in Pakistan and January 2010 earthquake in Haiti put together. Bhatti said the devastated flood has ravaged all the crops, homes, and communication lines. Electricity system, water supply and bridges making excess to remote areas have been collapsed. “So many villages and towns have been wiped out, scores of people have been killed and injured and the number is still rising,” he said.

Punjab suffers loss of Rs80 billion

LAHORE – Punjab Chief Minister Mian Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif in a Press briefing on Monday has stated that as per initial assessment of the damages caused by the raging floods, Punjab had suffered a loss of Rs 80 billion, while 15 million people had been affected directly by these devastating floods across Pakistan.
He was giving a briefing to the media about flood devastation in Punjab, relief activities and the efforts for the rehabilitation of the affectees after a 4-hour long meeting of the Punjab Cabinet at Chief Minister’s Secretariat. In an unusual way, the Chief Minister deemed it better to brief the media himself about the decisions taken by the Cabinet regarding rehabilitation of the affectees. In ordinary circumstances, such briefings are usually given by the Law Minister or by one of Chief Minister’s advisers.
He said that additional funds would be generated through adopting austerity measures, reducing non-developmental expenditure and curtailing annual development programme for the relief and assistance to the calamity-stricken people.
He said that no reception or Iftar party would be arranged at the official level in the province. He said that foreign visitors would be served only one dish and the funds thus saved will be utilised for relief and rehabilitation of the flood victims.
The Chief Minister welcomed the setting up of National Flood Commission for the rehabilitation of flood affectees on the proposal of Pakistan Muslim League (N) Quaid Nawaz Sharif and described it as a step towards promotion of national solidarity.
He said that Punjab government will extend all out cooperation to the National Flood Commission. He said that the Commission will comprise those honest individuals who enjoy deep respect in the society. He said that Flood Commission will assess losses in the provinces due to the floods.
He hoped that commission would make a rational assessment of the requirements of the four provinces and ensure fair allocation of funds as per needs of the each province.
He disagreed with a questioner that establishment of commission was an expression of no-confidence over the political leadership.
He also rejected reports that PPP Ministers in the provincial Cabinet expressed their reservations in the meeting for not being taken into confidence over the relief activities.
‘I was the first one who called Senior Minister Raja Riaz to join him at the Jinnah Barrage when it was facing threat from flood water’, he clarified.
Shahbaz said that survey had been started for the assessment of losses and forms have been distributed for this purpose.

Treatment of flood victims ‘400 Indian doctors to arrive in Sindh’

KARACHI: As nations around the globe are planning to help Pakistan's flood victims, Indians have also decided to play their role by sending teams including 400 doctors and paramedical staff to work in the flood-hit districts.

The Indian civil society, who wants to see peace between both nuclear rivals, will make all arrangements to send these teams. The Indian doctors will work in flood-affected districts of Sindh province, but will avoid visiting Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa because of Taliban threat.

An Indian delegation of peace activists including Shri Sandeep Pandey of Voice of Ayodhiya, Mazher Hussain of Confederation of Voluntary Associations (COVA), Mumbai-based prominent human rights and social activists Feroze Mithiborwala, Gurudial Singh Sheetal, Monika Wahi, Zaid Ahmed Shaikh and others arrived in Pakistan on Sunday after holding rallies from Mumbai to Amritsar as part of recently announced Pakistan-India Peace Caravan, the 'Aman Ke Badhte Qadam'.

During a meeting with peace activists of Pakistan, Mazher Hussain offered to send doctors' teams to flood-hit districts. "We want to see peace between both countries and if in situations like this, help comes from India, it will send a message of love. So we will send doctors and medical experts with medicines to help the flood-affected people," he said.

COVA is an Indian Hyderabad-based network of over 800 organisations working in nine districts of Andhra Pradesh, and in the states of Gujarat, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir on different issues including peace.

During the meeting Pak-India Joint Flood Relief Committee was formed comprising Shri Sandeep Pandey, Mazher Hussain and Feroze Mithiborwala from India and Adam Malik, BM Kutty, Karamat Ali, Pakistan Medical Association president Dr Tipu Sultan, South Asia Partnership Executive Director, Muhammad Tahseen and Dr AH Nayyar from Pakistan.

"We will manage the arrival of the Indian doctors here so that they may start their work in flood-hit areas as soon as possible," said Mithiborwala.

The meeting also decided that the Indian doctors would work in Sindh, a southern province of the country. "The law and order situation in Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa is not good, so it will not be advisable to send them there, therefore we have decided to send them to areas in Sindh where they will be safe," said Kutty.

Talking to Daily Times, committee member Adam Malik said that there was no Taliban presence in Sindh and the people would welcome the Indian guests with open arms. "Besides that in Sindh everyone will help Indian doctors work easily in the flood-hot areas," said Malik.

The Indian members will manage the affairs till the teams reach Wagah from where the Pakistani members of the committee will take charge to bring them to the flood-hit areas.

"In the meeting we also decided that the Indian members besides sending doctors would also collect funds, medicines, tents and dry food items in Indian cities," said Pak-India Peace Caravan spokesperson, Sharafat Ali. He said that the Indian delegation also brought 35,000 Indian Rupees and submitted the amount to the Labour flood relief camp, set up by Labour Party Pakistan. "We are also talking to Edhi Foundation to start relief work in flood-hit areas," he said.

After causing widespread devastation in the north western and central parts of Pakistan, the floods, worst in 80 years, struck the southern Sindh province and badly affected more than five million people. In such conditions, the decision by Indian civil society to send doctors will boost the ongoing peace process.

Misery for 'doomed orphans' of Pakistan floods


NOWSHEHRA, Pakistan — Six million children are suffering from Pakistan's devastating floods: lost, orphaned or stricken with diarrhoea, they are the most vulnerable victims of the nation's worst-ever natural disaster.

At relief camps in government schools and colleges, and in tent villages on the edge of towns and by roadways, children are prostate from the heat, sick from dirty drinking water, or simply trying to find work.

"These are the most bitter days of my life," said Iltaz Begum, 15, suffering from diarrhoea and stretched out in a government tent on the muddy outskirts of the northwestern town of Nowshehra.

"The weather has made our lives miserable," she said. "I had to leave my blind mother behind and there's no one to look after her as my father died two years ago."

The tent village has no electricity. The rains have gone, only to be replaced by heat and humidity. Flies buzz everywhere and the smell of faeces wafts through the camp.

Girls like Iltaz are just a drop in the ocean for the massive relief effort that the international community is trying to mobilise in one of the biggest ever UN aid operations.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, visiting Pakistan on Sunday, said millions had lost their livelihoods as he witnessed "heart-wrenching" scenes of destruction. Pakistan says 20 million people have been hit by the floods.

"Many have lost families and friends. Many more are afraid their children and loved ones will not survive in these conditions," said Ban.

Sami Abdul Malik, spokesman for the UN children's fund UNICEF, said six million children were affected by the floods.

"Currently we are in a life-saving phase," he told AFP. "We are distributing high-energy biscuits because malnutrition is a curse. It can lead to several other diseases.

"Children are always vulnerable. They cannot control their thirst, they will drink any type of water and may get watery diarrhoea, cholera, malaria and other diseases."

In addition, there are trauma and psychological problems facing children who have been orphaned or separated from their parents.

In the south, people fleeing flooded homes have headed towards tent camps near the city of Sukkur. Abdul Ghani, 14, arrived from the remote village of Karampur, the eldest of seven orphaned siblings.

"Both my parents died in the space of six months last year. Me and a younger brother of mine worked as labourers to support the family," said Ghani, wearing a worn grey shalwar khamis.

"Life was already so difficult, but now we're doomed.

"My four-year-old sister is hungry and ill but I have no idea what to do, where to go. No one is there to help us," he said.

Shakeel Ahmed, 15, another orphan, faces a similar problem providing shelter and food for his three younger siblings.

"We're too young and no one takes our problems seriously. No one listens to us. I tried to explain our problems but they shrugged me away," he said.

In a relief camp at a Nowshehra technical college, children are crying, many walk naked without shoes, and a foul stench pervades the air due to people urinating and defecating next to the tents.

Doctors at the camp's field hospital say most of the children are suffering from gastroenteritis, skin diseases and dehydration caused by filth and infection resulting from the destruction of sewers in the floods.

Twenty-five year-old Bushra Humayun, a labourer's wife, said she had given birth to twins in the camp, adding to her six other children.

She recalled losing her house in the flood and wading up to her neck through water while pregnant to reach the camp, two miles (three kilometres) away.

"I'm not getting enough food to feed my two infants and they're getting weak as they remain underfed," Humayun told AFP, sweat dripping down her face.

Her 12-year-old son Haroon had stomach pain and mosquito bites all over his arms and face. Life in the camp is their only prospect for the foreseeable future.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Happy Independence Day :: AUGUST 14 2010

It's august 14,2010 and I suppose no excitement out there. Anyway Happy Independence Day and enjoy this day. Governament has announced not to celebrate independence day as we used to but to donate money to the flood affected people. I think this is real independence day celebration to help other Pakistanis in this holly month of Ramzan. Please donate for them and celebrate independence day.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Flood in Pakistan 2010 Wallpaper

Pakistan floods — a timeline

- July 29: Flash floods and landslides caused by monsoon rains hit northwestern Pakistan and Pakistani-administered Kashmir as the country mourns its worst aviation disaster, which killed 152 people in Islamabad.

- July 31: Local authorities say the floods have killed at least 800. The deluge kills another 65 people in mountains across the border in Afghanistan.

- August 2: The UN says that nearly 980,000 people have been left homeless or have been displaced.

- The Red Cross appeals for aid.

- August 4: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani calls on his administration to speed up the delivery of aid. There is a growing backlash against the civilian government and President Asif Ali Zardari over failures to provide food, water and sanitation to the victims.

- August 5: The UN estimates that the flooding has killed 1,600 people in northwestern Pakistan alone.

- Numerous cases of diarrhoea.

- The UN says it has received 18 million dollars of international aid.

- August 6: Pakistan declares a red alert as the flooding worsens, reaching the south and leading to the evacuation of half a million people.

- The floods have affected 12 million people in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, the National Disaster Management Agency says.

- August 7: In the south, notably in the densely populated province of Sindh, a million people are evacuated, bringing to 15 million the number affected across the country according to the local authorities.

- August 8: Landslides in Gilgit-Baltistan province in the far north.

- Gilani visits flood-hit areas of Sindh province, calling again for international aid.

- August 9: Around 13.8 million people have been affected by the floods in Pakistan, making the scale of the disaster worse than the 2004 tsunami, 2005 earthquake in Kashmir and the 2010 Haiti earthquake, a UN official says.

- August 10: Six million people need humanitarian aid in order to survive, according to the UN.

- Zardari returns to Pakistan, after a European tour for which he was criticised.

- August 11: The UN appeals for 460 million dollars in emergency aid for flood victims.

- A senior UN envoy warns that militants could exploit Pakistan's worst humanitarian disaster.

Saved By The Rain

August 12, 2010: In the Pakistani tribal territories, the recent record floods have halted most combat operations, as many (nearly 100,000) troops turn to relief and rescue work. Most of the military helicopters have switched to flood related operations, thus taken away a major tool for dealing with the Taliban and al Qaeda fighters. Meanwhile, the Islamic terrorist death squads have continued going after military and police leaders. Although the floods have affected only about ten percent of the Pakistani population, most of that is in the tribal territories. The floods have been a problem for about two weeks, and are expected to be around for another week or so. The U.S. has sent six heavy (CH-47) helicopters, with another dozen or so on the way. Islamic radical groups have also set up flood relief operations, and made sure that pictures and videos of this got out onto the Internet, with accusations that the government is doing nothing (which is not true, most of the flood relief is from government organizations.) About six million Pakistanis are in need of food and housing aid. Foreign donors are reluctant to give because recent disaster relief operations have seen much of the aid stolen by government officials or Islamic radical groups. Some 1,600 have died from the flooding so far, and thousands more are likely to die from hunger and disease if enough aid is not delivered.
Meanwhile, the al Qaeda and Taliban sanctuaries in North Waziristan and parts of Baluchistan remain untouched by the Pakistani security forces. The flood relief work will occupy the troops, perhaps for months. But Western nations believe that pro-terrorist elements in the Pakistani government continue to have a veto on any attempt to eliminate all such sanctuaries.

Three Islamic terrorists were killed by an army patrol 75 kilometers outside Srinagar, the state capital of Indian Kashmir. Despite the record floods there, Islamic terrorists continue to cross over from Pakistan via the high mountain passes. In the last two months, over fifty have died as a result of riots, largely by teenagers and people in their 20s, protesting Indian rule and unemployment (caused by two decades of Islamic terrorism). The many students involved in the riots has shut down many schools. Students who want to keep up with their studies have gone to schools in non-Moslem areas in southern Kashmir. The violence isn't all just about anger at the unemployment and constant presence of security forces. There is also a civil war going on among Kashmiri Moslems, with a minority wanting an independent Kashmir, but most wanting to remain a part of India and get the local economy going again. The kids mainly want to raise hell.

The Indian war against Maoist rebels in the east is having more success in urban areas, where many rebel leaders live in hiding, and tend to administration, fund raising and logistical matters. The thousands of police and paramilitary troops out in the countryside are disrupting, but not destroying, Maoist combat capabilities. Meanwhile, the pressure is causing feuds between Maoist and communist factions. These tensions have always been there, but the government anti-Maoist operations have made internal differences more volatile. There have also been some feuding within the security forces, which now include air force support. But these disputes are being resolved, and there is growing cooperation between police and intelligence forces in states suffering from Maoist violence.

August 11, 2010: In Indian Kashmir, Islamic terrorists carried out two attacks, killing four and wounding 21. These are the first such attacks in four months. But in that time, teenage rioters have created a lot more unrest.

Pakistani president makes first visit to flood zone

The floods, triggered by torrential monsoon downpours, have engulfed Pakistan's Indus river basin, killing more than 1,600 people, forcing two million from their homes and disrupting the lives of about 14 million people, or 8 percent of the population.

The deluge, which began two weeks ago, has caused extensive damage to the country's main crops, agriculture officials said, after the United Nations appealed for $459 million in emergency aid and warned of more deaths if help didn't arrive.

Agriculture is a mainstay of the economy. The International Monetary Fund has warned of major economic harm and the Finance Ministry said the country would miss this year's 4.5 percent gross domestic product growth target though it was not clear by how much.

Zardari, widower of assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, set off on visits to meet the leaders of Britain and France as the floods were beginning.

Two days after returning home, he arrived in the city of Sukkur on the banks of the Indus river in the southern province of Sindh to inspect the destruction and aid efforts.

"He is going for a briefing on the damage and on protection measures and relief and rehabilitation measures," said presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar.

Officials from the government and international agencies are still assessing the extent of the flood damage, but a spokesman for U.N. humanitarian operations said a third of the country had been affected.

Hundreds of roads and bridges have been destroyed from northern mountains to the plains of the southern province of Sindh, where the waters have not yet crested.

Countless villages and farms have been inundated, crops destroyed and livestock lost. In some places, families are huddled on tiny patches of water-logged land with their animals, surrounded by an inland sea.

People have been jostling for food at distribution points throughout the disaster area, with the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, when hungry people break their fast at dusk with a special meal, adding to people's anxiety.

"The government ... should provide clean water and clean food to the people," said Mohammad Ali, a bread maker scrambling for supplies in the northwest. "Ramadan has arrived, but we see no sign of the government giving us any of these things."

BILLIONS OF DOLLARS

The costs of rehabilitating the agriculture sector could run into the billions of dollars, said U.N. humanitarian operations spokesman Maurizio Giuliano.

The wheat, cotton and sugar crops have all suffered significant damage and the United Nations has warned of a second wave of death among survivors from disease and food shortages unless help arrives quickly.

The military, which has ruled the country for more than half of its 63-year history, has taken the lead in relief efforts, reinforcing the faith many Pakistanis have in their armed forces and highlighting the comparative ineffectiveness of civilian governments.

Analysts say the armed forces would not try to take power as they have vowed to shun politics and are busy fighting militants.

The United States announced on Wednesday more helicopters and aid to beef up relief efforts. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the U.S. military was tripling the number of helicopters from six to 19 and was sending in a landing platform to be used off the coast of Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city.

The United States needs a stable Pakistan to help it end a nine-year war by the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Some U.S. officials are worried that the Pakistani military might have to draw soldiers off the Afghan border to help rescue flood victims, giving militants breathing room.

Investors in Pakistani stocks have been fretting about the costs and the market has lost more than 5 percent since the floods began.

The Pakistani meteorological office forecast scattered rain with a chance of thunderstorms across much of the country.

Pakistan Seeks Relief Supplies as Floods Ravage South

Aug. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistani officials battling the most destructive floods in the country’s history appealed for urgent deliveries of food, shelters and medicine for 14 million displaced people.

“We need relief supplies immediately, not today, not tomorrow but right now,” Ahmed Kamal, spokesman for the National Disaster Management Authority, said by phone from Islamabad, the capital, hours after the United Nations launched an appeal for $460 million in emergency aid.

Mosquito nets, tents and tarpaulins, kits to prevent cholera, ready-to-eat meals and water-purifying tablets are all needed as the catastrophe that has killed at least 1,600 people enters its third week. Pakistan’s resources “will run out in the next 25 days, or if we can stretch them, in the next 40 days,” Kamal said.

Flood surges triggered by unprecedented monsoon rains have swept south along the 3,200-kilometer (2,000-mile) long Indus River, decimating low-lying areas of Punjab and Sindh provinces, the densely populated economic and agricultural heartland of Pakistan, damaging 722,000 homes. About 700,000 hectares of standing crops, including rice and cotton, are under water or destroyed by floodwaters, the Food and Agriculture Organization has said.

Fresh Warnings

Thunderstorms are expected to bring more rain to the north of Pakistan in the next 24 hours, Muhammad Riaz, the chief meteorologist said by phone from Karachi, though they are not expected to be heavy. Flood forecasts were issued for parts of Punjab along the Chenab River.

President Asif Ali Zardari is expected to visit inundated areas for the first time today, after being criticized by the opposition for proceeding with a trip to Europe as the floods spread. He responded by calling on his opponents not to politicize the natural disaster.

Zardari will visit the southern province of Sindh, where his hometown of Nawabshah is located, Farhatullah Babar, the president’s spokesman, said by phone.

“This is a major disaster,” John Holmes, the UN’s emergency relief coordinator, said in New York yesterday. The U.S. has pledged $55 million in emergency aid.

“Thousands are still stranded in their homes because they are refusing to leave,” said Rizwan Ullah Baig, director- general of the Provincial Disaster Management Authority in Punjab, where 7 million people have fled the floods. “We are getting them food and other relief by air.”

Navy Helicopters

Water is roaring through a system of barrages along the Indus at rates exceeding 1 million cubic feet per second, up to 10 times the normal levels.

“The flooding in Pakistan has the potential to be significantly more disastrous” than the 2005 Pakistan earthquake that killed about 86,000 people, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said yesterday. The Pentagon said in a statement last night that Gates had authorized the deployment of 19 Navy and Marine Corps helicopters to support the flood-relief effort. The 19 choppers will relieve six U.S. Army helicopters already in Pakistan that were loaned from operations in Afghanistan.

Pakistan’s ambassador to the UN, Abdullah Haroon, said the floods have returned some areas to a “primordial” state. “At least 6,000 villages have been “wiped off the face of the Earth,” he said at a press conference yesterday with Holmes.

Dam Fears

In Sindh concern has mounted over a possible breach of the Kotri dam, the last before the city of Hyderabad, which with its 1.6 million people is the country’s sixth largest and the biggest conurbation directly on the river. Large parts of the province’s north have already gone under.

“We have managed to evacuate some 800,000 people from the flood-stricken areas,” said Khai Muhammad Kalwar, a relief official in the province. “Another 700,000 people have also made their way to safety themselves.” Up to 100,000 more were unwilling to leave their belongings.

“It has been three days since we have issued a warning to evacuate to the people of Larkana city and Qambar-Shahdadkot but they are not willing to leave,” Kalwar said. “The total population of both these cities is 1.6 million.”

Six million children have been affected by the floods, with some 2.7 million children in need of urgent, life-saving assistance, the New York-based United Nations Children’s Fund said in a statement on its website yesterday.

The U.S. and Islamic militant groups, both pushing for influence in the world’s sixth-most populous country, have sent teams to help homeless villagers in areas of the ethnic Pashtun northwest that for two years have been combat zones. Rain halted some relief activity in the region today, Mujahid Khan, a spokesman for the Edhi rescue service, said.

Pak-Arab Refinery Ltd. yesterday closed its Multan plant, which processes a third of the country’s crude oil, and said it may start supplying fuel again within a week.

PFF approves two more teams in league

Based on performance, all 14 participants of PPFL 2009 and top two teams of PFF League 2009 entered the showpiece event of PFF. The draws of the event will be issued to participating teams and technical officials in mid-September. The winner of PPFL 2010 will earn the rights to play in the 7th AFC President’s Cup 2011.



“Launched at Karachi’s YMCA ground back in 1948 as the National Championship, the league has been known as the Pakistan Premier League since 2004 when the two-tier system was adopted in domestic football. National Football Championship (Tier I) is called the Pakistan Premier Football League (PPFL) while National Championship (Tier-II) is known as the PFF League,” said PFF Secretary Ahmed Yar Khan Lodhi here on Wednesday.



Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) will defend the title in the 16-team event in 2010. The matches will be played at Karachi, Lahore, Chaman, Nushki, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Sahiwal and Faisalabad.



The other teams in the marathon 240-match league will be Karachi Port Trust (KPT), Pakistan Army, Wapda, National Bank of Pakistan (NBP), Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), Pakistan Navy, Karachi Electric Supply Corporation (KESC), Habib Bank Limited (HBL), Chaman’s Afghan Club, PMC Athletico Club Faisalabad, Lahore’s Pak Elektron Limited (PEL), Nushki’s Baloch FC, Pakistan Air Force (PAF), Sui Southern Gas Company and Sahiwalo.



PMC Athletico Club Faisalabad and Nushki’s Baloch FC were relegated on 13 December 2009 by finishing 13th and 14th respectively in the previous edition but they received the recall when the PFF Congress, held under the Chairmanship of Makhdoom Syed Faisal Saleh Hayat, approved the increment of two more teams in the top footballing event of Pakistan.



The previous edition, which had 14 teams, comprised of 182 matches, with every team playing 26 matches. Now each team will play 30 matches in a lengthy 240-match league that will conclude in mid-December 2010.

Pak military would not change its India centric policy: former ISI chief

Press Trust of India / Washington August 12, 2010, 15:32 IST



A former ISI chief credited with helping in creation of Afghan Taliban, has said his country's army would not change its India-centric policy, unless the Kashmir issue is resolved.

"The kind of terrorism which is going on in Pakistan is due to Kashmir issue," Hamid Gul, the former head of the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) who is also believed to have created Kashmiri militants groups claimed in the CNN's "Connect the World" programme.

Gul was responding to the question as to why Pak military remains India centric.

"The second (reason) is because of the wrongful occupation of Afghanistan, by the allied forces, it's very wrongful," he argued.

"So I think that proud nation is being really ravaged which is very wrong. So, this is the root cause – unless you address the root cause, you are not going to find the solution, as far as Pakistan's orientation towards India is concerned that is a reality, and Indians themselves are making it a reality," Gul claimed.

"This is amazing that India continues to aim at Pakistan and considers it the enemy – Kashmir dispute is still going on; Kashmir movement is very much on the boil, and at this time it is expected that Pakistan should shift forces from the Eastern border and transfer them to the Western border – it is not possible, we don't have the resources," he said.

The former ISI chief told the CNN that the Soviet occupation was wrong, and so is the American occupation.

"And that Afghan nation will not accept that position, Afghan nation has never accepted for past 5000 years, they won't accept it now. So I don't regret it at all, because at that time the whole world was with us.

"I think then America should be the first to regret that adventure at that time," he argued.

Gul argued that there can be no peace in Afghanistan without Mullah Omar.

"I think Mullah Omar has to be spoken to – that's very important – because without him no settlement in Afghanistan can take place. He symbolises the national resistance of Afghanistan against the occupation," he said.

Noting that the US for its operations in Afghanistan is depended on a long line of communication, the logistic support is coming through Pakistan.

"And Pakistan is being destabilised by India – their ally. This is one problem, and you know now the floods have cut off the lines of communication. Karachi rioting is creating another problem, so you cannot depend on this logistical tail.

And the second is the intelligence input. If Wikileaks is any reflection of the kind of intelligence input that the American forces are getting, then I can already conclude what would be the outcome," he said.

The leaks by the website whistleblower Wikileaks had pointed out that ISI continued to have links with Taliban and other militant groups fighting US and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Anatomy of Floods: Problems Ahead in Pakistan

The recent floods in Pakistan are estimated to have affected between 14 and 16 million people and rendered up to two million homeless. The people deserve sympathy and support of all right thinking people. The floods pose serious challenges to Pakistan’s economy, social harmony, political stability and long term future. Khyber-Pakhtunkhawa (KP) and Punjab are the worst affected. Baluchistan has been the least affected so far and Sindh is only now being threatened by floods.

The floods have exposed yet again, if confirmation was required, the incapacity and ineptitude of the Pakistani political leadership and administration. The scale and intensity of the floods was so enormous, it would have been challenging to deal with even for the most well prepared government. For the Pakistani government it was simply way too much. The ill timed visit of Zardari to Europe was a PR self goal for the government. Democracy as such faces a big crisis in Pakistan today with no political party being seen in good light by the people. The longer-term effect of the floods could see a further weakening of the Pakistani government's credibility.

Unlike in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake in POK in 2005, the Pakistani Army has moved in quickly to provide relief to the affected people. Their endeavour was inadequate, yet the Army is still being seen to be doing something in no small measure due to their friends in the media. Reportedly around 30,000 soldiers are involved in the relief effort, with Gen. Kayani himself visiting some of the flood affected areas. The comparatively better show being put up by Army will give them even larger political space and credibility.

The jihadis on the other hand have moved in force to set up relief camps and are providing free ‘langars’ and medical aid. Even in 2005 the best equipped and most functional camps were run by Jamat ul Dawa (JuD). This time around it is again Falah-i-Insaniyat Foundation; the so called charity arm of Laskar-e-Toiba is in the forefront of the relief effort. Charities associated with Islamist parties like Jamaat e Islami have also pitched in with relief efforts to regain political space and public acceptance. The implications are grave for Pakistan as well as its neighbours. The government in Pakistan is hardly functional. Even the opposition ruled Punjab is being governed poorly. Under the present circumstances democracy is hardly an ideal that people would be seeking. In fact, as a matter of habit, calls for the Army to help is a default reaction for the people. But since Army itself lacks the capacity to provide all kinds of relief to the people, any group which can help them earns their gratitude and respect.

The Jihadis led by LeT are flush with funds, courtesy the donors in the Gulf and the collections within Pakistan from the increasingly conservative urban middle class mainly in the Punjab province. They have many doctors and other professionals and service providers as their members and sympathisers who are ready to do their bidding. The misery that the floods have brought upon the hapless people of Pakistan has provided a heaven sent opportunity to Islamists to ingratiate themselves with the people and win their hearts and minds. The Pakistani leadership has literally raised their hands in helplessness and paved the way for the Islamists to be seen as legitimate players in Pakistani society.

Many of the militants in KP are reported to have moved to relief camps after leaving their weapons and caches to help the people in need. They have an opportunity not only to survive this tragedy but to build their support bases amongst dislocated and disaffected people. It is hardly likely that anyone of them would be reported to the authorities. It is therefore expected that buoyed by increased public support and inability of the government to challenge them head on, the jihadi groups will stage a comeback not only in areas like Swat and Malakand but also in Punjab.

The IMF will clear the scheduled tranche of more than $1billion by the end of this month, and perhaps more. As per UN officials, Pakistan will require more than $500 million to keep the people affected by floods alive in the coming months. Whole villages having been washed away, the bill for resettling the people will run into billions. Besides, the time that it will take for re-settlement and rehabilitation of the people and recreating the infrastructure will take years.

It seems that America, Army and the Islamists are in a race to earn public gratitude. In this race for winning hearts and minds of the people and moderating anti-Americanism in the country, USA has moved in force with helicopters, relief material and economic assistance worth more than $51 million, which is included in about $200 million already pledged by various countries so far. This is only the first instalment and much more can be expected from the US and its allies in days to come. It would be interesting to see how Pakistan’s closest friend China responds. If past experience is any indicator, China would be miserly in assisting marooned Pakistan despite holding trillions in reserves.

The floods will dissipate sooner or later and agriculture maybe benefited in the medium term despite a severe hit that it will take in the current kharif season. Food shortages which are already acute in some areas will accentuate and inflation is bound to shoot up. Even in the best of times there are no easy solutions for Pakistan’s food and energy shortages. The rich will take the deluge and its effects in their stride but the poor have nowhere to go. They have lost their houses and will now be hard pressed to make both ends meet. Infrastructure like roads, bridges, irrigation canals, hospitals, schools and houses have suffered massive damage. As per some estimates the immediate loss to Pakistan’s economy will be about $1.8 billion and will shave off about 1 per cent of its GDP. Given the insensitivity and inadequate capacity of the administration and state of governance in Pakistan, returning the infrastructure back to pre-flood days, leave alone improving it, will be a Herculean task.

The anger and frustration of the people against the political parties and the nimble footed response of the Islamists will result in disaffection of people towards the state and rising support for the jihadis. The jihadis will find enough recruits for their cause and public support for them will solidify. The performance of the Pakistan government can hardly improve during this period and Army’s resources will be further stretched in trying to rebuild the damaged infrastructure. A government with reduced credibility and an overstretched Army will provide the perfect opportunity for the jihadis to regroup and reassert themselves even in those areas where they had been forced to lie low due to ongoing Army offensive.

If the Islamists are the ones who are doing any good to the people, the government will not be in a position to act against them even if it desires. Doing so would be seen by the people as vengeance of the evil government against the do-gooders. There have been no US missile strikes in the tribal regions during the floods. If the US were to resume firing missiles at such a sensitive time, it could erase any gains it has made in public opinion because of its aid efforts. The flood is impacting army operations as well since large numbers of bridges in KP and FATA have been washed away and roads damaged, affecting the mobility of troops. Aerial operations are affected due to prevailing weather conditions. Although the jihadis will also face logistical problems their requirements are comparatively much lesser and hence they would still be able to act when they decide.

Even the most optimist scenario for Pakistan in the short to medium term is bleak. In the long term, in any case Jihadis like Hafiz Saeed would like to see the government so weakened and the Army so exhausted that they can glide into the seat of power without much difficulty. Therefore, even the long term scenario for Pakistan is no better. Growing misery of the people and chaos created by the Jihadis has the potential to make the mainstream political parties irrelevant in the longer term unless they change their ways. Should the situation not improve there is likelihood that there can be a chaotic leaderless revolution leading to bloodshed and instability, with temporary and inadequate leaders rising to fill up the vacuum and jihadis with active support from elements within the Army attempting to take over the state. History is replete with examples of peoples’ revolutions sweeping even the most powerful regimes away. Pakistan could be the latest edition to history.

Why Armed Forces are only reliable aid-worker?

IT goes against the credibility of the current dispensation in the government in Islamabad that people have hardly donated any amount in the Prime Minister’s Flood Relief Fund but people throng to the Army-led camps and relief centers, to volunteer or give aid. The reason is simple, the Islamabad government has as usual been caught napping; first the Government’s Meteorological Department forecast weaker Monsoon rains than previous years (it changed its website after the deluge hit Pakistan) thus leaving the people totally unprepared for the catastrophe. The National Disaster Management Authority, which was created after great fanfare in the aftermath of the 2005 Earthquake, and is supposed to have a proactive role in managing disasters, was also totally unprepared. Pressure mounted on the government because the head of the state, President Zardari chose to visit his private chateau in France and revel in one of the most expensive hotels in London on a private trip as well as call on the British Prime Minister, despite the Brit’s insulting and humiliating comments against the people of Pakistan and thousands continued to drown in the floods back home. Touched to the quick, the reaction of the government was twofold. One, the Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani was asked to make a few cosmetic visits to some flood affected localities and observe the devastations caused from the safety of his helicopter window. When he did make a landing at Mianwali, the NDMA rigged up a fake field hospital with phony flood affectees, who were awarded compensation cheques by the PM. As soon as the PM departed for safer climes, the bogus hospital was disbanded but not before a private TV channel exposed the fraud. To rub salt in the wound, President Zardari became a victim of a shoe hurler in a PPP organized rally in Birmingham. The shoe thrower was also a jiyala, but perhaps with a pang of conscience since he could not bear his President’s merrymaking while thousands perished back home. The government, instead of gearing up its relief efforts, directed its total anger at the private TV channel, stopping its transmission, burning its newsprint and jiyalas all over Sindh, instead of stopping the flood, surrounded, attacked and ransacked the private TV channel and its newspaper offices.

In this void of rescue and relief, there was only one organization, the Armed Forces of Pakistan, which rushed to help its countrymen. Pakistan Army, which is the bigger force, bore the brunt of the rescue and relief efforts. Pakistan Air Force and Navy, though smaller in size, were not found wanting in spirit. PAF rushed its C-130s and helicopters for aiding the flood victims, while PN boats and helicopters were plying round the clock to help the people stranded in the floods. Pakistan Army engineers strived to build bridges where the original ones had been washed off; medical teams of the three forces have been in the flood hit region in all four provinces from day one while Army Jawans have not only risked their lives to rescue those swept by floods, but have also helped build dykes to keep the flood waters away.It is obvious that the Armed Forces of Pakistan, especially the Army is likely to endear itself to the people because they have been there to aid them in their hour of need. It has not indulged in photo opportunities or fake camps but even the highest level of Commanders is regularly visiting the flood affected areas. The Government on the other hand, has not only been involved in criminal neglect of the people in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Baluchistan (Punjab has fared slightly better because of its vibrant provincial government) but failed to learn from its mistakes in the former two provinces and could have made provisions to avert danger in Sindh. Unfortunately, the NDMA or for that matter the Government in Islamabad and Karachi took few steps to save its people. The provincial government in Sindh was busier trying to whip up pressure against the private TV channel mentioned earlier, to “save” the honour of its President and play up the Sindh Card rather than save lives. Such disastrous moves made it imperative for the Armed Forces to bend backwards to save the people in distress.

MUZAFFARGARH CITY NEWS

MUZAFFARGARH: Corps Commander Lt-Gen Shafqaat Ahmad said, “We have saved lives of 75,000 people who were marooned in flooded areas, only six people lost their lives and now we have started the rehabilitation work and we would restore the Muzaffargarh-Dera Ghazi Khan route in next 48 hours”.

Briefing journalists here on Wednesday, he said Chief of Army Staff Gen Ashfaq Pervez Kiyani was visiting the flood hit areas and he was monitoring the supply of food and daily use items to affectees. He said 300 boats and seven helicopters pressed into service to evacuate the marooned people and to supply the food. He said next 72 hours were crucial because another spate of eight lakh cusec is reaching in Indus. He told the newsmen that Pak-Arab Refinery (PARCO), Kotadu Power Plant (KAPCO), Muzaffargarh Thermal power stations and Muzaffargarh city are safe, however, flood water entered the AES Lalpir thermal power station. He said that water scattered around Shah Jamal but town is still safe. While 3.5 feet-deep water had reached at Basira, nine km away from Muzaffargarh. He said UAE and Saudi Arabia had provided good for flood affectees which was being distributed among the needy people. He said Pakistan Army has engaged all available resources to carry out rescue and relief operations in the flood-affected areas of South Punjab. On Wednesday, four trucks of National Logistics Cell brought relief supplies to flood-hit areas. The supplies included milk, dry rations, water bottles, water coolers and blankets. In Multan and Muzaffargarh, rescue and relief operation continued with the help of boats and helicopters. In the last 24 hours more than 2,230 people have been evacuated to safer places. 100,000 people are being provided necessary assistance in 13 relief camps established by the army. Doctors and paramedical staff of the army are providing treatment to patients.

Repair work on six bridges is in progress in Sakhra, Kala Kot, Bagh Dheri, Darolai, Ain and Wainai. Alpura to Bala Baba road has been repaired by army engineers while repair work on different segments of the Karakoram Highway is in progress. Army engineers are working round-the-clock to repair damaged bridges in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FATA.

REHABILITATION OF FLOOD AFFECTEES: Director General Social Welfare Dr Akhtar Nazir has said social welfare department was playing a vital role in the rehabilitation of flood affectees. Briefing journalists here on Wednesday, he said his department was providing medicines to 15,000 people while four buses were provided for the shifting of People of Muzaffargarh to Multan and other safer places. He said 180 coolers, food for 500 families, 100 fireplaces and 200 bed-sheets were handed over to Muzaffargarh DCO Farasat Iqbal.



CM asks doctors to volunteer services for affectees

Orders commissioners, police officers to pay full attention to relief activities

From Our Correspondent

MUZFFARGARH: Chief Minister Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif has said that compensation and rehabilitation of the flood victims will not be delayed and all basic facilities will be provided to affectees in tent villages.

He was addressing flood-hit families at Talari Canal here on Wednesday, he said that all affectees would be registered and shifted to makeshift camps till their complete rehabilitation. He directed the district administration to provide all facilities, including security and clean drinking water, to the flood affectees besides vaccinating their cattle.

Later, he visited Kot Addu and Dera Din Panah. He directed the officials to be present at the complaint cells round-the-clock. He urged the federal government to distribute foreign aid among flood-affected people keeping in view devastation in the provinces. He said Rs 25 billion demanded from the federal government would cover only emergency relief while trillions of rupees would be needed for the rehabilitation of the affectees.

The chief minister said that the country’s wealth and resources had been misappropriated and they should be taken back from plunderers and distributed among the victims. He called for giving foreign aid to provinces.

Our Lahore Correspondent adds: Chief Minister Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif has appealed to medical students and young doctors to volunteer their services to the Punjab government for protecting flood-hit people from diseases.

He feared large-scale outbreak of epidemic diseases in flood-affected areas, saying that the Punjab government had evolved an effective strategy to deal with such situation. He said medical teams comprising specialist doctors had reached those areas and medicines worth millions of rupees had been provided to hospitals, dispensaries and relief camps.

The chief minister said that flood-hit areas where medical teams could not reach due to destruction of roads would be fumigated by helicopter. He said that a large number of doctors and paramedics would be needed to meet the challenge in coming days.

Later addressing the affectees at Jampur, the chief minister said that he had issued instructions to the administration to provide two-time meal to the affectees at Iftar during Ramazan. He hoped that the nation should demonstrate the same spirit which it had displayed at the time of earthquake in 2005.

The chief minister was given a briefing by the administration regarding flood situation in Kot Addu. He was informed that roads in Layyah, Dera Din Panah and Kot Addu had been opened and all marooned people had been evacuated successfully from those areas.

Meanwhile, the chief minister directed the commissioners and police officers to pay full attention to the relief and rehabilitation of flood affectees and there was no need of accompanying with him during his visits to flood-hit areas. He directed that only those officers should be present during his visits who were practically engaged in relief activities at local level whereas other officers should continue relief activities in their respective areas.



Edibles’ prices up ahead of Ramazan

From Our Correspondent

MUZAFFARGARH: Prices of commodities have increased ahead of Ramazan, but the rates of dates and other Ramazan items have been registered record high.

Prices of vegetables, dates and other commodities are likely to go up by 100 percent. On the other hand, the city government failed to distribute fixed price list to retailers. Disruption in supplies from the flood affected areas also caused price hike. The shopkeepers of Bohar Gate said green chillies were being sold at Rs 70 to 80 per kg against Rs 35 to Rs 40 kilo. Sponge gourd and bitter gourd rates had peaked at Rs 70 and Rs 80 per kg while cucumbers were being sold at Rs 100 to 120 against Rs 35 40 a per kg, lemon at Rs 100 against Rs 30 per kg. The rates of onions of Balochistan and potatoes from Punjab were being sold at Rs 30 to 35 against Rs 20 to 25 per kilo. In Ramazan, ghee and cooking oil demand goes up by 30 to 40 percent which pushed up import of main raw materials. Many companies announced price discount of at least Rs 2 per kg but the fact is that the prices of ghee and cooking oil swelled by Rs 4 to Rs 5. The prices of dates is likely to surge 20 to 30 percent in retailers market compared to previous year following imposition of heavy and arbitrary taxes on import of dates from Iran.

The traders said the prices of lower grade dates imported from Basra also surged compared to previous year as they are currently priced at Rs 60 to Rs 70 per kg. Even locally grown dates rates have also surged as they priced at Rs 3,800 to Rs 4,000 for 40 kg compared to previous prices of Rs 1200. The traders informed that demand of dates remained within 10,000 tonnes but in the Ramazan, it jumps up to 40,000 tonnes in city wholesale markets.

Pak Army rescues 1417 tourists

Rawalpindi : Pakistan Army has rescued 1417 tourists from Kalam, Behrain, Madyan, Chuprial and Shahpur so far.

According to ISPR, 10,830 packs of cooked food, 11 tons of ration, 1000 packets of Rice and 30 shelters were distributed at Nowshera, Charsadda, Bishigram, Shinkai, Roringar, Gwalerai Kuz, Durshikhela and Asharai. 2300 patients were given medical treatment at different Field Hospitals established by Pakistan Army in last 24 hours.

So far, Pakistan Army has distributed more than 1000 tons of rations from its own quota. Army is also working on 28 exchanges of PTCL in Swat, Dir and Chitral.

More than 50 Helicopters are busy in rescue and relief activities round the clock. Pakistan Army Aviation has dropped 4, 05,000 Kgs relief goods in flood affected areas in more than 1000 flying hours.

Kayani gets tough over terrorist havens in Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD – Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has called for adequate steps to purge Afghanistan of the terrorists’ havens.
General Kayani made this demand during the daylong 31st meeting of the Tripartite Commission held in Kabul on August 9.
“Such a demand from the Pakistan Army has come for the first time since inception of the Commission comprising USA-led ISAF, Afghanistan and Pakistan,” well-placed sources privy to the meeting informed TheNation on Wednesday.
According to the informed sources, General Kayani emphasised the need for elimination of safe sanctuaries being used by the terrorist groups inside Afghanistan.
Sources said General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, Chief of Army Staff, General David H Petreaus, Commander International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), and General Sher Muhammad Kirmi, Chief of General Staff of Afghan National Army, who headed the respective delegations, attended the meeting.
Sources were of the view that General Kayani called upon the allied commanders of ISAF and ANA for elimination of the terrorists’ hideouts on Afghan soil, as they were equally creating problems for Pakistan through illegal border crossing.
Sources said that General Kayani regretted that despite massive resources both in terms of men and material ISAF and ANA had failed to curb illegal border crossing and infiltration of militants into Pakistan.
He also pointed out the measures taken by the Pakistan Army on the Pak-Afghan border to curb the illegal border crossing, but he was disappointed over the lack of adequate security checkpoint on the Afghan side of the border.
General Kayani, the informed sources said, also expressed his disappointment over the Western media’s allegations about existence of the terrorists’ sanctuaries in Pakistani territory bordering Afghanistan.
He had also taken serious exception to the baseless criticism against the ISI by the so-called independent Western media, and brushed aside the unfounded and baseless allegations against Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency.
The meeting agreed to further enhance coordination to improve the security on Pak-Afghan border.

Kidnapped journalist appeals to CJ, Army

PESHAWAR: A journalist and documentary-maker, Assad Qureshi, who is in Taliban captivity for the past four months, has appealed to the Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry and Pakistan Army spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas to make efforts for his release and save his life.

In a video message released by Lashkar-e-Jhangvi al-Alami led by a militant commander Abidullah Mansoor, the journalist said it was his last message. He deplored that the government had not taken any step for his release.

He said four people were kidnapped by a group of militants in North Waziristan on March 26, 2010 and he was one of them. Other members of the group, he said, were Khalid Khwaja, Col Imam and Rustam Khan.

A bearded Rustam Khan, who Assad Qureshi said was his servant working with him in Islamabad for years, for the first time appeared in the video. In the past the militants only released videos of Khalid Khwaja, who was beheaded by the kidnappers sometime back.

Assad Qureshi said he had informed director general of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Maj Gen Athar Abbas and others before his visit to North Waziristan. He claimed he had worked with ISPR on a film in Swat and South Waziristan in the past, but it had now ignored him. “I request DG ISPR to use his influence for our release. I also appeal Chief Justice Mr Iftikhar Chaudhry to kindly work for our release as our government has not made any effort so far,” the journalist said in the video.

He asked the government to accept demands by Lashkar-e-Jhangvi al-Alami, otherwise the group would kill them one by one. “This is the last message of my life as these people may not give us more time,” he said.

Understanding Pakistan's Military

Voltaire remarked of Frederick the Great’s Prussia that “Where some states have an army, the Prussian Army has a state.” In view of the sheer size, effectiveness and wealth of the Pakistan military and associated institutions compared to the rest of the state, much the same could be said of Pakistan.

The Pakistani military is the only Pakistani state institution which works as it is officially meant to – which means that it repeatedly does something that it is not meant to, which is to overthrow what in Pakistan is called “democracy” and seize control of the state from other institutions. The military has therefore been seen as extremely bad for Pakistan’s progress, at least if that progress is to be defined in standard western terms.

On the other hand, it has also always been true that without a strong military, Pakistan would most probably long since have disintegrated. That is more than ever true today, as the country faces the powerful insurgency of the Pakistani Taleban and their allies. The Taleban threat makes the unity and discipline of the Army of paramount importance to Pakistan and the world – all the more so because the deep unpopularity of US strategy among the vast majority of Pakistanis has made even the limited alliance between the Pakistani military and the US extremely unpopular in Pakistani society, and among many soldiers.

The Pakistani military owes its success as a modern institution to the fact that it has to a considerable extent separated itself from the political culture of the rest of the country, which revolves around kinship, factions, and patronage – which alas all too often shades over into corruption and even kleptocracy. Of course, corruption does exist within the military, but to nothing like the same extent as in the rest of society.

The military has been able to achieve this separation because of two deeply intertwined and mutually dependent factors: a collective ethos which promotes honest service to the military as an institution; and a great deal of money. Without the resources to reward the soldiers adequately and provide them with decent services, the collective ethos of service, honesty and discipline could not be maintained. On the other hand, without this collective ethos, many of the resources given to the military would simply be stolen, as they are in the rest of the state.

To put it another way, the military’s success as an institution and its power over the state comes from its immunity to kinship interests and the corruption they bring with them; but it has only been able to achieve this immunity by turning itself into a sort of giant kinship group, extracting patronage from the state and distributing it to its members.

The scale of military spending has severely limited funds available for education, development, medical services and infrastructure. If continued, this imbalance risks eventually crippling the country and sending Pakistan the way of the Soviet Union – another country which got itself into a ruinous military race with a vastly richer power. On the other hand, the rewards of loyal military service have also helped to prevent military mutinies and coups by junior officers – something that would plunge Pakistan overnight into African chaos, and usher in civil war and Islamist revolt.

Our mad dog

As a Lt Colonel fighting the Pakistani Taleban told me in July 2009:

“The soldiers, like Pakistanis in general, see no difference between the American and the Russian presences in Afghanistan. They see both as illegal military occupations by aliens, and that the Afghan government are just pathetic puppets. Today also, they still see the Afghan Taleban as freedom-fighters who are fighting these occupiers just like the Mujahedin against the Russians. And the invasion of Iraq, and all the lies that Bush told, had a very bad effect – soldiers think that the US is trying to conquer or dominate the whole Muslim world. But as far as our own Taleban are concerned, things are changing.

Before, I must tell you frankly, there was a very widespread feeling in the Army that everything Pakistan was doing was in the interests of the West and that we were being forced to do it by America. But now, the militants have launched so many attacks on Pakistan and killed so many soldiers that this feeling is changing…

But to be very honest with you, we are brought up from our cradle to be ready to fight India and once we join the Army this feeling is multiplied. So we are always happy when we are sent to the LOC [the Line of Control dividing Pakistani and Indian Kashmir] or even to freeze on the Siachen. But we are not very happy to be sent here to fight other Pakistanis, though we obey as a matter of duty. No soldier likes to kill his own people. I talked to my wife on the phone yesterday. She said that you must be happy to have killed so many miscreants. I said to her, if our dog goes mad we would have to shoot it, but we would not be happy about having to do this.”

Between 2004 and 2007 there were a number of instances of mass desertion and refusal to fight in units deployed to fight militants, though mostly in the Pathan-recruited Frontier Corps rather than in the regular Army. In these morally and psychologically testing circumstances, anything that helps maintain Pakistani military discipline cannot be altogether bad – given the immense scale of the stakes concerned, and the consequences if that discipline were to crack.

Fortunately, commitment to the Army, and to the unity and discipline of the Army, is drilled into every officer and soldier from the first hour of their joining the military. Together with the material rewards of loyal service, it constitutes a very powerful obstacle to any thought of a coup from below, which would by definition split the Army and would indeed very likely destroy it and the army altogether. Every military coup in Pakistan has therefore been carried out by the Chief of Army Staff of the time, backed by a consensus of the Corps Commanders and the rest of the High Command. Islamist conspiracies by junior officers against their superiors (of which there have been two over the past generation) have been penetrated and smashed by Military Intelligence.

Morally superior

The Pakistani military therefore, more even than most militaries, sees itself as a breed apart, and devotes great effort to inculcating in new recruits the feeling that they belong to a military family different from (and vastly superior to) Pakistani civilian society. The mainly middle-class composition of the officer corps increases contempt for the “feudal” political class. The Army sees itself as both morally superior to this class, and far more modern, progressive and better-educated.

This belief is also widely present in Pakistani society as a whole, and has become dominant at regular intervals. It is sadly true that whatever the feelings of the population later, every military coup in Pakistan when it happened was popular with most Pakistanis, including the Pakistani media, and was subsequently legitimized by the Pakistani judiciary. As Hasan-Askari Rizvi writes, “the imposition of martial law was not contested by any civilian group and the military had no problem assuming and consolidating power.”

It is possible that developments since 2001 have changed this pattern, above all because of the new importance of the independent judiciary and media, and the way that the military’s role both in government and in the unpopular war with the Pakistani Taleban has tarnished their image with many Pakistanis.

However, this change is not proven yet, and depends critically on how Pakistani civilian governments perform in future. On that score, by the summer of 2009, only a year after Musharraf’s resignation, many Pakistanis of my acquaintance, especially in the business classes, were once again calling for the military to step in to oust the civilian administration of President Zardari – not necessarily to take over themselves, but to purge the most corrupt politicians and create a government of national unity or a caretaker government of technocrats.

Military loathing for the politicians is strengthened by the fact that Pakistani politics is dominated by wealth and inherited status, whereas the officer corps has become increasingly socially egalitarian, and provides opportunities for social mobility which the Pakistani economy cannot, and a position in the officer corps is immensely prized by the sons of shopkeepers and big farmers across Punjab and the NWFP. This allows the military to pick the very best recruits, and increases their sense of belonging to an elite. In the last years of British rule and the first years of Pakistan, most officers were recruited from the landed gentry and upper middle classes. These are still represented by figures like former Chief of Army Staff General Jehangir Karamat, but a much more typical figure is the present COAS (as of 2010), General Ashfaq Kayani, son of an NCO. This social change reflects partly the withdrawal of the upper middle classes to more comfortable professions, but also the immense increase in the numbers of officers required.

Meanwhile, the political parties continue to be dominated by “feudal” landowners and wealthy urban bosses, many of them not just corrupt but barely educated. This increases the sense of superiority to the politicians in the officer corps – something that I have heard from many officers and which was very marked in General Musharraf’s personal contempt for Benazir Bhutto and her husband.

I have also been told by a number of officers and members of military families that “the officers’ mess is the most democratic institution in Pakistan, because its members are superior and junior during the day, but in the evening are comrades. That is something we have inherited from the British”.

This may seem like a ludicrous statement, until one remembers that in Pakistan, saying that something is the most spiritually democratic institution isn’t saying very much. Pakistani society is permeated by a culture of deference to superiors, starting with elders within the family and kinship group. Pakistan’s dynastically-ruled “democratic” political parties exemplify this deference to inheritance and wealth; while in the Army, as an officer told me:

“You rise on merit – well, mostly - not by inheritance, and you salute the military rank and not the sardar or pir who has inherited his position from his father, or the businessman’s money. These days, many of the generals are the sons of clerks and shopkeepers, or if they are from military families, they are the sons of havildars [NCOs]. It doesn’t matter. The point is that they are generals.”

Pakistani nationalism

The social change in the officer corps over the decades has led to longstanding Western fears that it is becoming “Islamized”, leading to the danger that either the Army as a whole might support Islamist revolution, or that there might be a mutiny by Islamist junior officers against the high command. These dangers do exist, but in my view only a direct and massive attack on Pakistan by the US could bring them to fruition.

It is obviously true that as the officer corps becomes lower middle class, so its members become less westernized and more religious – after all, the vast majority of Pakistan’s population are conservative Muslims. However, as the last chapter explained, they are many different kinds of conservative Muslim, and this is also true of the officer corps.

On the whole, by far the most important aspect of a Pakistani officer’s identity is that he (or sometimes she) is an officer. The Pakistani military is a profoundly shaping influence as far as its members are concerned. This can be seen amongst other things from the social origins and personal cultures of its chiefs of staff and military rulers over the years. It would be hard to find a more different set of men than Generals Ayub, Yahya, Zia, Musharraf, Beg, Karamat and Kayani in terms of their social origins, personal characters and attitudes to religion. Yet all have been first and foremost military men.

This means in turn that their ideology was first and foremost Pakistani nationalist. The military is tied to Pakistan, not the universal Muslim ummah of the radical Islamists’ dreams; tied not only by sentiment and ideology, but also by the reality of what supports the Army. If it is true, as so many officers have told me, that “No Army, no Pakistan”, it is equally true that “No Pakistan, no Army”.

In the 1980s General Zia did undertake measures to make the army more Islamic, and a good many officers who wanted promotion adopted an Islamic façade in the hope of furthering this. Zia also encouraged Islamic preaching within the army, notably by the Tabligh-e-Jamaat. However, as the careers of the generals Karamat and Musharraf indicate, this did not lead to known secular generals being blocked from promotion; and in the 1990s, and especially under Musharraf, most of Zia’s measures were rolled back. In recent years, preaching by the Tabligh has been strongly discouraged, not so much because of political fears (the Tabligh is determinedly apolitical) as because of instinctive opposition to any groups that might encourage factions among officers, and loyalties to anything other than the Army itself.

Of course, the Army has always gone into battle with the cry of Allahu Akbar (God is Great) – just as the old German army carried Gott mit Uns (God with Us) on its helmets and standards; but according to a moderate Islamist officer, Colonel (retd) Abdul Qayyum:

“You shouldn’t use bits of Islam to raise military discipline, morale and so on. I’m sorry to say that this is the way it has always been used in the Pakistani army. It is our equivalent of rum – the generals use it to get their men to launch suicidal attacks. But there is no such thing as a powerful jihadi group within the army. Of course, there are many devoutly Muslim officers and jawans, but at heart the vast majority of the army are nationalists, and take whatever is useful from Islam to serve what they see as Pakistan’s interests. The Pakistani army has been a nationalist army with an Islamic look.”

However, if the Army is not Islamist, its members can hardly avoid sharing in the bitter hostility to US policy of the overwhelming majority of the Pakistani population. To judge by retired and serving officers of my acquaintance, this includes the genuine conviction that either the Bush administration or Israel were responsible for 9/11. Inevitably therefore, there was deep opposition throughout the Army after 2001 to US pressure to crack down on the Afghan Taleban and their Pakistani sympathizers. “We are being ordered to launch a Pakistani civil war for the sake of America”, an officer told me in 2002. “Why on earth should we? Why should we commit suicide for you?”

Mutineer scenarios

In 2007-2008, this was beginning to cause serious problems of morale. The most dangerous single thing I heard during my visits to Pakistan in those years was that soldiers’ families in villages in the NWFP and the Potwar region were finding it increasingly difficult to find high-status brides for their sons serving in the military, because of the growing popular feeling that “the Army are slaves of the Americans”, and “the soldiers are killing fellow Muslims on America’s orders.”

By late 2009 the sheer number of soldiers killed by the Pakistani Taleban and their allies, and still more importantly the increasingly murderous and indiscriminate Pakistani Taleban attacks on civilians, seems to have produced a change of mood in the areas of military recruitment.

Nonetheless, if the Pakistani Taleban are increasingly unpopular, that does not make the US any more popular; and if the US ever put Pakistani soldiers in a position where they felt that honour and patriotism required them to fight America, many would be willing to do so.

The most dangerous moment in my visits to Pakistan since 9/11 came in August-September 2008, when on two occasions US forces entered Pakistan’s Tribal Areas on the ground in order to raid suspected Taleban and Al Qaeda bases. On the second occasion, Pakistani soldiers fired in the air to turn the Americans back. On September 19th 2008 the Chief of the Army Staff, General Kayani, flew to meet the US Chief of the Joint Staffs, Admiral Mike Mullen, on the US Aircraft Carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, and in the words of a senior Pakistani general “gave him the toughest possible warning about what would happen if this were repeated”.

Pakistani officers from Captain to Lt General have told me that the entry of US ground forces into Pakistan in pursuit of the Taleban and Al Qaeda is by far the most dangerous scenario as far as both Pakistani-US relations and the unity of the Army is concerned. As one retired general explained, drone attacks on Pakistani territory, though the ordinary officers and soldiers find them humiliating, are not a critical issue because they cannot do anything about them:

“US ground forces inside Pakistan are a different matter, because the soldiers can do something about them. They can fight. And if they don’t fight, they will feel utterly humiliated, before their wives, mothers, children. It would be a matter of honour, which as you know is a tremendous thing in our society. These men have sworn an oath to defend Pakistani soil. So they would fight. And if the generals told them not to fight, many of them would mutiny, starting with the Frontier Corps.”

At this point, not just Islamist radicals but every malcontent in the country would join the mutineers, and the disintegration of Pakistan would come a giant leap closer.

India and Kashmir

Traditionally, hostility to the US in Pakistan has stemmed from a mixture of anger at US policies in the Muslim world more widely (especially of course concerning Israel and Palestine) and a feeling that on specific occasions, the US has used and then abandoned Pakistan. More recently, however, hostility has been considerably strengthened by the growing alliance between the US and India. This is especially dangerous as far as the military is concerned, for fear of India is the military’s central raison d’etre.

Speaking of the average Pakistani officer of today, however, Lt General (retd) Tanvir Naqvi told me that:

“He has no doubt in his mind that the adversary is India, and that the whole raison d’etre of the Army is to defend against India. His image of Indians is of an anti-Pakistan, anti-Muslim, treacherous people. So he feels that he must be always ready to fight against India.”

Pakistan was born in horrendous bloodshed between Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims; and within two months of its birth, fighting had broken out with India over the fate of the Muslim-majority state of Kashmir. This fighting has continued on and off ever since. Two out of Pakistan’s three wars with India have been fought over Kashmir, as have several smaller campaigns. These include the bitter, 25-year-long struggle for the Siachen Glacier (possibly the most strategically pointless fight in the entire history of human conflict) initiated by India in 1984. The vast majority of Pakistani soldiers have served in Kashmir at some point or other, and for many this service has played a formative role in their worldview.

The military’s obsession with India and Kashmir is not in origin Islamist, but Pakistani Muslim nationalist. With rare exceptions, this has been true even of those senior officers most closely involved in backing Islamist extremist groups to fight against India, like former ISI chief Lt General Hamid Gul. Most have used the Islamists as weapons against India without sharing their ideology.

The Islamist radical groups, madrasahs and networks which had served to raise Pakistani volunteers for the Afghan jihad had always hated India, and were only too ready to accept Pakistani military help, including funding, weapons supplies, provision of intelligence, and the creation of training camps run by the Pakistani military.

However, just as in Afghanistan first the Mujahedin and then the Taleban escaped from the US and Pakistani scripts and ran amok on their own accounts, so the militants in Kashmir began to alienate much of the native Kashmiri population with their ruthlessness and ideological fanaticism; to splinter and splinter again into ever-smaller groups and fight with each other despite ISI efforts to promote co-operation, and to prey on kashmiri civilians.

Finally – though it is not clear if this was really a departure from the script, as ISI officers claim in private, or was planned by the ISI as the Indian government believes – the militants began to carry out terrorist attacks on Indian targets outside Kashmir (starting with an attack on Indian soldiers at the Red Fort in Delhi in December 2000). This last development in particular ensured that in the wake of 9/11, Pakistan would come under irresistible US pressure to abandon its active support for the Kashmiri jihad and crack down on its militant allies.

In January 2002, Musharraf formally banned Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, and ordered an end to militant infiltration into Indian Kashmir from Pakistan. Due mainly to intense US pressure, from mid-2003 on this ban has been enforced, leading to a steep reduction in violence in Kashmir. Largely as a result, in November 2003 India and Pakistan agreed a ceasefire along the Line of Control in Kashmir, and initiated a dialogue on a possible settlement over Kashmir. However, the Pakistani military remained firmly convinced that India would never agree to terms even minimally acceptable to Pakistan unless at least the threat of future guerrilla and terrorist action remained present.

The ISI

By 2008, as the Taleban insurgency against Pakistan itself gathered pace and an increasing number of ISI officers and informants fell victim to it, the ISI itself began to see the need for a new and much tougher approach to some of its militant allies within Pakistan.

However, the military is genuinely concerned that if it attacks some of these groups it will drive them into joining the Pakistani Taleban – as has already occurred with Sipahi-Sabah, Lashkar-e-Janghvi and some sections of Jaish-e-Mohammed. The suspected involvement of JeM activists in the attempts to assassinate Musharraf in December 2003 (apparently with low level help from within the armed forces) led to a harsh crackdown on parts of the group by Pakistani intelligence.

The ISI’s long association with the militants, first in Afghanistan and then in Kashmir, had led some ISI officers into a close personal identification with the forces that they were supposed to be controlling. This leads to a whole set of interlocking questions: How far the Pakistani High Command continues to back certain militant groups; how far the command of the ISI may be following a strategy in this regard independent from that of the military; and how far individual ISI officers may have escaped from the control of their superiors and be supporting and planning terrorist actions on their own. This in turn leads to the even more vital question of how far the Pakistani military is penetrated by Islamist extremist elements, and whether there is any possibility of these carrying out a successful military coup from below, against their own high command.

Since this whole field is obviously kept very secret by the institutions concerned (including Military Intelligence, which monitors the political and ideological allegiances of officers), there are no definitive answers to these questions. What follows is informed guess-work based on numerous discussions with experts and off-the-record talks with Pakistani officers including retired ISI officers.

Concerning the ISI, the consensus of my informants is as follows: There is considerable resentment of the ISI in the rest of the military, due to their perceived arrogance and suspected corruption. However, when it comes to overall strategy, the ISI follows the line of the high command. It is after all always headed by a senior regular general, not a professional intelligence officer, and a majority of its officers are also seconded regulars. The present Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Kayani, was director of the ISI from 2004-2007, and ordered a limited crackdown on jihadi groups that the ISI had previously supported.

Concerning the Afghan Taleban, the military and the ISI are at one, and the evidence is unequivocal: The military and ISI continue to give them shelter, and there is deep unwillingness to take serious action against them on America’s behalf, both because it is feared that this would increase Pathan insurgency in Pakistan, and because they are seen as the only assets Pakistan possesses in Afghanistan. The conviction in the Pakistani security establishment is that the West will quit Afghanistan leaving civil war behind, and that India will then throw its weight behind the non-Pathan forces of the former Northern Alliance in order to encircle Pakistan strategically.

Concerning the Pakistani Taleban and their allies, however, like the military as a whole, the ISI is now committed to the struggle against them, and by the end of 2009 had lost more than seventy of its officers in this fight – some ten times the number of CIA officers killed since 9/11, just as Pakistani military casualties fighting the Pakistani Taleban have greatly exceeded those of the US in Afghanistan. Equally, however, in 2007-2008 there were a great many stories of ISI officers intervening to rescue individual Taleban commanders from arrest by the police or the army – too many, and too circumstantial, for these all to have been invented.

It seems clear therefore that whether because individual ISI officers felt a personal commitment to these men, or because the institution as a whole still regarded them as potentially useful, actions were taking place that were against overall military policy – let alone that of the Pakistani government. Moreover, some of these men had at least indirect links to Al Qaeda. This does not mean that the ISI knows where Osama bin Laden (if he is indeed still alive), Aiman al-Zawahiri and other Al Qaeda leaders are hiding. It does however suggest that they could probably do a good deal more to find out.

On the crucial question of support for terrorism against India, it is obvious that not just the ISI but the military as a whole are committed to keeping Lashkar-e-Taiba (under its cover as Jamaat-ut-Dawa) at least in existence, both as a potential future weapon against India and because they are genuinely scared of driving this very powerful and popular group to revolt.

Jamaat-ut-Dawa’s extensive international network in the Pakistani diaspora also leads Pakistani officers to fear that if they attempt seriously to suppress the group it will also launch successful terrorist attacks in the West, with disastrous results for Pakistan’s international position. Lashkar-e-Taiba members certainly have contacts with Al Qaeda, and helped Al Qaeda operatives escape from Afghanistan after the defeat of the Taleban and helped shelter them within Pakistan. As Stephen Tankel writes:

“Ideologically, for all of its strategic restraint following 9/11 Lashkar is, after all, a jihadi organization with a long history of waging pan-Islamic irredentist campaigns. Indian-controlled Kashmir may be the group’s primary ideological and strategic target, but it has never been the apotheosis of Lashkar’s jihad.”

Blaming Pakistan

All the groups and individuals within this net hate the US, Israel, India and indeed Russia alike, though they have different targets at different times. Despite LeT’s strategic decision to concentrate on India, therefore, there is no ideological barrier to its members taking part in actions against the West. The jihadi world could even be called a kind of cloud of gas in which individuals join some clump for one operation and then part again to form new ad hoc groups for other attacks. This also makes it extremely hard for the ISI to keep tabs on the individuals concerned, even when it wants to.

By far the biggest terrorist attack actually carried out by LeT itself was that in Mumbai in November 2008. The great majority of the Pakistani experts and retired officers whom I know do not think that the Pakistani high command, either of the ISI or the army, was involved in ordering Lashkar-e-Taiba’s terrorist attack on Mumbai in November 2008. They point out in particular that while deliberately targeting Westerners greatly boosted LeT’s prestige among international militants, it would have been an unprecedented, reckless and pointless strategy for the Pakistani high command, ensuring a furious reaction from the international community.

Equally, there is an overwhelming consensus that this operation could not have been planned without ISI officers having been involved at some stage and without the ISI knowing that some sort of operation was being planned. Whether the operation then continued as it were on autopilot, was helped only by retired officers, or whether the junior officers concerned deliberately decided to pursue it without telling their superiors, is impossible to say at this stage.

ISI help is however not necessary for Islamist terrorists who wish to carry out attacks against India (though it has certainly occurred in the past). The discontent of sections of India’s Muslim minority (increased by ghastly incidents like the massacres of Muslims in Gujarat in 2002, encouraged by the Hindu nationalist state government) gives ample possibilities of recruitment; the sheer size of India, coupled with the incompetence of the Indian security forces, gives ample targets of opportunity; and the desire to provoke an Indian attack on Pakistan gives ample motive. But whether or not the ISI is involved in future attacks, India will certainly blame Pakistan for them.

This creates the real possibility of a range of harsh Indian responses, stretching from economic pressure through blockade to outright war. Such a war would in the short term unite Pakistanis, and greatly increase the morale of the Army. The long term consequences for Pakistan’s (and possibly India’s) economic development could however be quite disastrous; while if the US were perceived to back India in such a war, anti-American feeling and extremist recruitment in Pakistan would soar to new heights.

All of this gives the US every reason to press the Pakistani military to suppress some extremist groups and keep others on a very tight rein. Washington also however needs to press India to seek reconciliation with Pakistan over Kashmir, and to refrain from actions which will create even more fear of India in the Pakistani military.