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Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts

Friday, December 24, 2010

NW Pakistan gun battle leaves 35 dead

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Pakistan (AFP) – Taliban insurgents launched co-ordinated attacks on five paramilitary checkpoints in northwestern Pakistan Friday, leaving at least 11 soldiers and 24 militants dead, officials said.

"At least 11 of our men have been martyred and 12 others wounded," Amjad Ali Khan, the administrator of lawless Mohmand tribal district, told reporters at a press conference in the area's main town, Ghalanai.

Security officials earlier said at least three soldiers were killed in the attacks.

Khan said that at least 24 militants were killed when paramilitary soldiers "befittingly repulsed" the attack at five checkpoints near the border with Afghanistan.

"The army has sent helicopter gunships and bombed suspected hide outs of Taliban," Khan said.

Earlier a senior security official told AFP: "About 150 Taliban militants attacked five Frontier Corps checkposts in Baidnami village near the border with Afghanistan.

Security forces had cordoned off the area and were searching for the fleeing militants, he said, while reinforcements were sent in "to beef up the checkpoints".

Local administration officials in Ghalanai and the paramilitary force confirmed the attack and casualties.

In a telephone call to AFP Taliban spokesman for Mohmand district Sajjad Mohmand claimed two paramilitary soldiers had been captured but security officials rejected the claim, saying no one was missing.

"We have killed 12 soldiers and occupied a checkpost," Mohmand said.

Mohmand district has seen much of the violence linked to Taliban militants in northwestern Pakistan. On December 6, twin suicide bombings killed 43 people in Ghalanai, about 175 kilometres (110 miles) northwest of Islamabad.

Meanwhile, a bomb fitted with a timer exploded in a private boys' primary school in Peshawar's Pelosi neighbourhood, wounding four children, senior police official Shafiullah Khan told AFP.

"Four children were wounded in the bomb blast at a primary school," Khan said, adding that the children were in the playground during break time when the bomb exploded indoors.

Peshawar is the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and has seen several bombings and suicide attacks blamed on Taliban militants.

Around 4,000 people have died in suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan since government forces raided an extremist mosque in Islamabad in 2007. The attacks have been blamed on networks linked to the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.

Mohmand is one of seven Pakistani tribal districts. The United States considers Pakistan's tribal belt the global headquarters of Al-Qaeda and the most dangerous place on Earth.

US officials are putting pressure on Pakistan to launch a major ground offensive in the tribal region of North Waziristan, considered a fortress for Taliban groups fighting US-led troops in Afghanistan.

Pakistan vehemently denies accusations that it is not doing enough to eradicate the Taliban in the northwest, saying 2,421 troops have been killed in fighting Islamist militants from 2002 until April this year.

Pakistan supported the Taliban regime in Afghanistan from 1996-2001, but became a US ally after the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington by Al-Qaeda.

View Source :

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101224/wl_asia_afp/pakistanunrestnorthwest


Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Pakistan India Peace Deal

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Most of people know about the cyberwar between Pakistan And India.
No need to explain how much both sides suffered.

After some long conversation we decided now to make a thread to finalise a peace deal.From Pakistan Side PCA,Pakcobra's,UrduHack Team,Itqalam and CyberHax0rs have already agreed to this peace deal.
Also ICA and indishell did the same from Indian side.

Here r a few rules which i think we should follow and respect.

1-No hacker from both sides will deface any site of the opposite side.
2-If any kid tries to disturb this peace deal by defacing a site both sides will show patience and will discourge such activities.
3-On Forums like indishell and Cyberhaxors,pca and itqalam Admins won't allow anyone to post threads with hacked Pakistani or Indian sites.
4-Admin should try their best to avoid any problem.Any thread which could cause problems should be closed and the members involved in such activities should be banned.
5-The best thing i suggest is that every Hacking forum should have a guest Moderator from opposite side.That moderator should have powers to close and delete threads specially in website and hacking section.So that if anybody posts any racist thread he could delete and bann the member straight away.

I hope u people like these points.If u got anything in ur mind please share here.We want to make this deal break proof.


Islamic party quits Pakistan government over minister

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ISLAMABAD  – An Islamic party said on Tuesday it was pulling out of Pakistan's ruling coalition after the dismissal of one of its members as a minister, but the government was not expected to fall.

"It is impossible to stay in the coalition. We are saying goodbye to the government" Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Islam (JUI) leader Fazal-ur-Rehman told reporters after a party meeting. His party's name translates to "Party of Islamic Clerics."

The decision was taken after Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani sacked two ministers including one from JUI, Muhammad Azam Khan Swati, the minister for science and technology, for publicly trading accusations of corruption.

While the government is highly unlikely to collapse -- the JUI is a small coalition partner -- the move will raise fresh questions over U.S. ally Pakistan's political stability.

The governing coalition, which faces an array of challenges including homegrown Taliban militants and a fragile economy, now holds 181 out of 342 seats in parliament, nine more than the 172 needed to maintain its majority.

Rehman said two other JUI members of the cabinet -- the ministers of tourism and housing -- from his party would also resign.

Gilani's government, struggling to implement reforms needed to secure the sixth tranche of an $11 billion International Monetary Fund loan keeping the economy afloat, could now be distracted by political turbulence.

The IMF's program, agreed in November 2008, is increasingly critical for Pakistan as it grapples with a widening fiscal deficit and summer flood losses of $10 billion.

Pakistan plans to seek an extension of the loan program to win more time to implement the reforms needed to secure the next tranche, a Finance Ministry official has said.

The main issue is Pakistan's slow implementation of a reformed general sales tax (RGST), a key condition for the possible release of the sixth tranche.

"With JUI quitting the coalition, the approval for RGST will become even more challenging," said Asif Qureshi, director at Invisor Securities Ltd.

Rehman said his party would vote against the RGST.

Pakistan is under intense international pressure to broaden its tax-to-GDP ratio, currently around 10 percent, one of the lowest in the world.

Pakistan's most popular politician, Nawaz Sharif, has said his party will oppose any imposition of the RGST.

"The government will find it difficult to sustain itself unless it maneuvers to find new partner," said political analyst Hasan Askari Rizvi.


Monday, December 13, 2010

Pakistan's Butt denies fixing claims

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Former Pakistan captain Salman Butt has denied allegations he was involved in a spot-fixing scam in England, saying "I have not done anything such as this in all my life or cricketing career".

And he insisted there was no way as a novice skipper he could have improperly influenced any of his players.

Butt and pacemen Mohammad Asif and Mohammed Aamer were provisionally suspended by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for breaking their code of conduct following allegations they'd conspired in the bowling of deliberate no-balls during the fourth Test against England at Lord's in August.

The trio, who all deny the allegations against them, face a disciplinary hearing in Doha next month that is set to determine their future in cricket.

The ICC, cricket's global governing body took action after the players were 'exposed' as part of an undercover probe by Britain's News of the World (NoW) tabloid newspaper.

Butt in his first major interview since the scandal broke, broadcast on British television's 'Special Report on Sky Sport News' here on Monday, said: "I would like to say obviously I have not done anything such as this in all my life or my cricketing career.

"But apart from this we as players have a code to follow from the ICC which restricts us to talk about this event before the hearing takes place so I am so sorry but I cannot talk about the case at the moment," added Butt, interviewed at his home in Lahore.

The opening batsman was thrust into the Test captaincy after Shahid Afridi quit as skipper following the team's 150-run thrashing by Australia at Lord's.

It was on the team's return to Lord's a month later for the fourth and final Test against England where the NoW claimed Butt had instructed teenage left-arm quick sensation Aamer to bowl a no-ball deliberately.

The Now said the delivery was a test set by players' agent Mazher Majeed to prove he could, as he claimed, act as the middle man between members of the Pakistan team and illegal sub-continental bookmakers.

"I became captain as a result of an accident where the previous captain suddenly decided he couldn't play Test cricket anymore, so to have this kind of influence inside three or four games I think any kind of captain would like that!," said Butt.

"These kinds of people (Aamer and Asif) do not let others decide their roles."

As for the Now producing video evidence of Majeed correctly predicting when Aamer's huge no-ball would indeed be bowled, Butt said: "This relates to the case and I again remind you about the code.

"Hopefully, once things settle down, I can tell what I have in my mind right now."

There were reports in the British media that when police raided Butt's London hotel room they found marked notes used in the betting scandal.

Butt though said the money, which Sky said amounted to 29,000 pounds (46,000 dollars), was made up of his tour allowances from the Pakistan Cricket Board and cash from legitimate sponsorship deals.

"People can have their opinions but I actually know where the money came from," he insisted.

Butt said his suspension had been tough, with a seemingly new dawn for cricket in Pakistan, scarred by an armed attack on Sri Lanka's team bus last year that turned the country into a no-go area for international cricket, overshadowed by the allegations.

"We were building up a very good unit and we won two Test matches -- after 15 years we beat Australia and after nine years we beat England.

"It would have been wonderful to carry on that but good times/bad times are all part of life and hopefully this thing will pass as well."

Butt said corruption was a global problem and the 26-year-old left-hander, a veteran of 33 Tests, was adamant he would play for Pakistan again.

"I know inside what I am made of, where I have come from and how I have played my cricket. The love of the game has brought me there. And that love is bigger than anything, any corrupt thing which exists.

"So I believe, inshallah (god willing), that I will be back playing for my country again."


Militants target teachers in Pakistan's southwest: HRW

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Militants in Pakistan's Baluchistan are increasingly attacking teachers, college professors and other school personnel, pushing the education system in the southwest province to the "brink of collapse."

New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report called "Their Future is at Stake" and released in Islamabad on Monday, that the attacks were forcing several hundred education officials to flee.

For decades, separatists in Baluchistan have been fighting a low-level guerrilla war for control of the province's resources, which they say are unfairly exploited by richer provinces.

Ali Dayan Hasan, HRW's South Asia researcher, said militants killed at least 22 teachers and other education personnel in the past two years.

"This is a kind of crisis that will lead to Baluchistan being set back by decades and it will bring darkness to the province and it will ensure children in Baluchistan simply have no future," he told a news conference.

Critics say the government has failed to provide millions of with a proper education in Pakistan. Many poor Pakistanis can only afford to send their children to religious schools, which the critics say promote Islamic fundamentalism.

Hasan urged militants to stop what he called "war crimes."

"If they do not, they are sucking the entire province into a spiral of violence. Emerging from it will become very difficult," he said.

"If there is a group waging a war for independence, it is still governed by rules of engagement and those rules are not being followed."

Baluchistan, Pakistan's largest but poorest province bordering Afghanistan and Iran, has large mineral reserves, including oil, gas, copper and gold.

Hasan said disappearances of Baluch nationalists and abuses allegedly committed by state agencies were also serious issues.

Human rights groups have reported hundreds of missing people in Baluchistan.

Hasan said: "You do not combat abuse with abuse and I'm afraid that is happening in Baluchistan."

Out of fear of militant attacks, he said 200 teachers had transferred to jobs in safer areas, while another 200 were hoping to find jobs elsewhere.

HRW urged the Baluchistan government to investigate these alleged attacks and try the perpetrators.

"It is for the state to provide protection to teachers....and above all it is up to the state to establish its writ, which is absent in large parts of Baluchistan," he said.


Explosion in Pakistan kills school bus driver, injures 2 children

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An explosion Monday near a school bus in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar killed the bus driver and injured two children, police said.

Two suspects were detained at the blast site, said Ejaz Khan, a senior police official in Peshawar.

Authorities do not believe the bus was the target of the bomb, which was planted in the road, said Salim Khan, another senior police official in Peshawar.

The explosion occurred in the area of Bhana Marri, Khan said.

CNN affiliate GEO TV showed images of a charred, windowless bus.




 

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