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Saturday, January 14, 2012

PML-N should resign from NA, Punjab assembly to show seriousness: Imran



Islamabad: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Chairman Imran Khan has said that Nawaz Shar will have to show seriousness in its efforts against the government by resigning from the National Assembly and Punjab Assembly.
Talking to media after the Executive Committee meeting of the PTI here on Saturday, the PTI chief said that the PML-N had always support the corrupt government during testing times in the name of democracy.
He said that the Tehreek-e-Insaf has decided not to partake in by polls on as 30.7 million votes out of 80 million were found bogus..
Khan said that the meeting has constituted a Balochistan Committee that would negotiate with Baloch leaders, including those who were in exile before its March 23 rally in the province.
Imran Khan said that PTI’s tsunami march would be on the streets against the corruption of the government.
He said that the committee also discussed issue of new administrative units in the country. Khan said the new units should not weaken the country.
The PTI chief said the government was trying to destroy the Supreme Court of Pakistan. Meanwhile Air Martial ret Asghar Khan announced to merge his Tehreek-e-Istiqlal in the PTI.
Those who attended the meeting among others were Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Javed Hashmi, Javed Legahri, Owais Legahri, Shafqat Mehmood, Jehangir Tareen and Maleeha Lodhi.

’نوازنےلندن کو40 دورےاورملتان کو5منٹ نادئیے‘



ملتان : پاکستان تحریک انصاف کے رہنما جاوید ہاشمی نے کہا ہے کہ بیرون ممالک کاروبار و دولت رکھنے والے سیاست دانوں کو پاکستان  میں پالیٹکس نہیں کرنے دیں گے ان کا ہر صورت راستہ روکیں گے۔
ملتان کے علاقے پاک گیٹ میں جلسہ عام سے خطاب کرتے ہوئے جاؤید ہاشمی نے کہا کہ نواز شریف4سالوں میں 40 مرتبہ  لندن گئے مگر انہوں نے ملتان کو 5 منٹ بھی نہیں دئیے ہیں۔
ان  کا کہناتھا کہ  حکمران لوٹ مار کرکے اور عوام کا خون چوس کر امیر ترین بن گئے انہوں نے اپنا خاندان  اور  روپیہ پیسہ بیرون ملک رکھا ہوا ہے جب کہ سیاست پاکستان  میں کرتے ہیں۔
جاوید ہاشمی نے کہاکہ میں  میاں برادران کی عزت کرتاہوں مگر ملک کو مایوسی  کی طرف دھکیلنے والوں کا ساتھ نہیں دے سکتا میں باربار اپنی سابقہ قیادت سے کہاتھا کہ میرا سب کچھ چھین لو مگر این اے 149 کے ترقیاتی فنڈز نہ چھینو۔
انہوں نے کہاکہ  میری سیاست پاکستان کیلئے ہے اور میں ملک کے دشمن مار کر ہی مروں گا۔

Khan Refutes Anti-West Perception



























Imran Khan, the cricketer turned politician presently gaining support in Pakistan, rebutted on Friday charges that he is anti-West, claiming his vision of an ideal Islamic society looked like Scandinavia.
 
Khan, who has drawn hundreds of thousands of followers in recent months after years in the political wilderness, reiterated his staunch criticism of the U.S. campaign against Islamic extremists as he addressed a forum in Washington. Rejecting perceptions that his views are anti-Western, the Oxford graduate who was formerly married to Jemima Khan said he is one of the few Pakistani politicians to have spent substantial time in the West.
 
“To be anti-Western makes absolutely no sense at all. The West is geography. How can you be anti-geography?” Khan told the Atlantic Council, a think tank, via Internet video provider Skype. “And to be anti-American ... how can you be anti a whole country, where there are so many different views? I have always been anti the American war on terror. I have always thought that this was an insane war.”
 
A decade after Pakistan reluctantly supported the U.S.-led campaign against Al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan, Khan said that his country was far more radicalized and billions of dollars had been wasted. “I have never understood what they were trying to achieve. I still don’t know what victory in a war on terror is.”
 
Pakistani forces in 2009 launched an offensive in lawless South Waziristan. The United States regularly carries out deadly drone strikes in areas bordering Afghanistan and has feared that Pakistan maintains ties to some militants. “In my opinion, the only solution is to have dialogue, a political solution, the same as is the case across the border in Afghanistan,” Khan said.
 
Khan—described by former military ruler Pervez Musharraf as a “Taliban without the beard”—said he had to “demystify” his idea of an Islamic society for Western audiences. “If you ask me today what is closest to that ideal, I would say the Scandinavian countries,” he said, praising them for their “humane society, where there is rule of law, a society that looks after its weak, its handicapped.” Such a society is the opposite of Pakistan “where literally the poor people are subsidizing the rich, while all the jails are full of poor people,” he added. 
 
Khan, who for years enjoyed little support despite his sporting stardom, has recently drawn crowds of more than 100,000 people at rallies in which he promised a “good tsunami” against injustice and corruption. Khan’s popularity comes as Pakistan wades through a slew of problems including terror attacks, power and gas shortages, a feeble economy, flood damage, friction between civilian and military leaders and tensions with Washington.
 
Some allege that Khan is being quietly nurtured by Pakistan’s military, which has long been the nation’s chief arbiter of power and whose poor ties with the civilian leadership have recently spilled into the open. Khan has denied such charges. In the Washington appearance, he insisted that his party enjoyed across-the-board support and would triumph in free elections.
 
Khan also harshly criticized former president Musharraf, who has vowed to return to Pakistan this month to launch a political comeback. Khan said Musharraf faced threats from forces stretching from restive Balochistan to the tribal belt. “No longer being the president and having the protection which he has, I would not be the insurance company to give him life insurance.”


Sex workers: ‘Yes, we are sinners, but our life is an open book’




























SUKKUR: The first time, Shahida* felt like her body was being clawed upon by vultures. She was 15 then and new to the red-light area of Sukkur.
Since that first interaction Shahida feels like she has lost ownership of her body. “That day I lost everything, my ego, my self-respect…This body is now public property, it’s like a public bathroom, which people use and pay for.”
She was cheated from an early age. Shahida was 14 when her brother-in-law sold her to a pimp in Lahore’s red-light area, Heera Mandi. The teenage girl, hailing from Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, was resold to another pimp in Hyderabad within a few days.
Clueless about sex, Shahida* ran for her life when the pimp sent in her first customer. “I knew nothing about sexual relations until that man started touching me,” she said. Devastated at how she had been treated, Shahida immediately ran out of the house.
“The pimp came after me and forced me back to the brothel. When I refused to go with the customer, I was locked in a room for three days without food or water,” she said, while talking to The Express Tribuneat her residence in Qasimabad market, a red-light district of Sukkur.
On the third day, a Pakhtun boy from a nearby hotel brought some dough and a glass of water and passed it to her through a window grille. When he brought it again the next day, the pimp caught him and thrashed the boy. She was again denied food and water. “I needed to get out of the room and succumbed to the pressure,” she said. When one of her customers Ghulam Ali* proposed, Shahida saw it as her chance to break free from life in the red-light area. Ali and Shahida got married, but the wedding bliss was short lived.
Three months into their marriage, Ali brought Shahida to Sukkur and rented a house in the red-light area. “My dreams were shattered when my husband brought me to Sukkur and forced me into prostitution. Once again, I did not have a way out and started selling my body. I have hated every minute of my life.”
In the 25 years Shahida* has been in the profession, she says she has never seen a girl come to the bazaar at her own will.  Most of the girls here were either kidnapped or cheated by their lovers, she said.
Shahida said there used to be around 100 houses when she first came to the area and the majority of women in the district used to earn their livelihood by dancing and not prostitution. But then the police raids started and many women were forced out of the area, she said. “Now that prostitution is not confined to one place, brothels have opened up all over the city. However, the police never raid brothels in other areas because it gets its due share,” she alleged.
Ghulam Ali died four years ago and now Shahida lives with her two sons, who are both working and studying. “I married off to my daughter and she is now happily living with her husband,” she said. She has now quit the profession and is dependent on her sons’ meagre earnings.
Everyone has their reasons for selling sex. “It is very easy to criticise women like us, but nobody looks into our souls… yes, we are sinners, but our life is like an open book,” she said.

*Names have been changed to protect privacy

Friday, January 13, 2012

PTI will contact all parties in Opposition except PML-N for movement Against Govt_Imran Khan

NAB opens various cases: sources



























The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) on Friday opened various cases on Supreme Court orders, sources said. Notices were issued to Ismail Qureshi, Raja Ahsan and Adnan Khwaja. Khwaja among various others already presented themselves before the NAB, the sources added. According to sources, Malik Qayyum could not be arrested being abroad whereas; Punjab police is not cooperating for the arrest of Ahmad Riaz Sheikh.

Secretary Defence Pakistan Naeem Khalid tells the reason of Being Fired





Gilani called UK diplomat, fearing coup: official

























Gilani telephoned the top UK diplomat this week and expressed fears about a possible military coup.


Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani telephoned the top British diplomat in the country this week expressing fears that the Pakistani army might be about to stage a coup, a British official and an official in Islamabad said Friday.

The call, which one official said was "panicky", suggests there was or perhaps still is a genuine fear at the highest level of the Pakistani government that army might carry out a coup or support possible moves by the Supreme Court to topple the civilian leadership.

Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani asked High Commissioner Adam Thomson for Britain to support his embattled government, according to the officials, who didn t give their names because of the sensitivity of the issue. It s unclear if the British government took any action.

However, the spokesperson of Prime Minister House, denied the report of foreign news agency.  

 A scandal that erupted late last year, which centered on an unsigned memo sent to Washington asking for its help in heading off a supposed coup following the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, has brought the army and civilian government into near-open confrontation.

While most analysts say army chief Gen Ashfaq Pervez Kayani has little appetite for a coup, they say the generals may be happy to allow the Supreme Court to dismiss the government by "constitutional means."

A Supreme Court commission is probing the memo affair, which in theory could lead to Zardari s ouster.

The court has also ordered the government to open corruption investigations into Zardari dating back years. The government has refused. Earlier this week, the court said it could dismiss Zardari and Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani over the case. Judges are convening Monday for what could be a decisive session.

On Friday, a government-appointed commission investigating the unsolved murder of a journalist last year said that the ISI needed to be more "law-abiding." The report did not find enough evidence to name any perpetrators in the death of Saleem Shahzad, who was killed after he told friends he had been threatened by the ISI.

The commission called on the ISI to be made more accountable to the government through internal reviews and oversight by parliament. It said its interactions with reporters should be closely monitored. 


Imran Khan Shuts up Jasmeen at Tonight with Jasmeen

IMRAN KHAN WHO IS HE?? AMAZING STORY (PYASAHAINA)

Thursday, January 12, 2012

A Youth Openly Challenges IMRAN KHAN .:D..thts exactly wht we think & want from IMRAN KHAN...Waaoo

Bill Gates contacts Arfa's father for treatment



LAHORE: Chairman of Microsoft, billionaire Bill Gates has contacted the parents of the world's youngest Microsoft Certified Professional Arfa Karim and offered to bear the expenses of her treatment in the US, Geo News reported.

According to Arfa's father, Amjab Karim Randhawa, Bill Gates telephoned him and expressed his wish about Arfa's treatment in the US.

Gates has also directed his doctors to adopt every kind of measure for the treatment of the young genius Microsoft professional.

Gates' doctors contacted Arfa's Pakistani doctors and received details about the illness through the internet.

Meanwhile, Pakistani doctors are of the view that Arfa is on ventilator, therefore, it will be hard to shift her to any other hospital.

Arfa Karim was handling a project of NASA before she fell ill.

Arifa Karim has been in intensive care after suffering an epileptic seizure and cardiac arrest.

Her father said the doctors told him that the brain of her daughter is still working and they no longer consider her case as hopeless.

According to the doctors, he said, EEG report had rekindled hope for her life but treatment facilities are not available in Pakistan. He said that the reports of Arfa were sent to various countries from where he gets positive response.

Born in 1995, Arfa Karim got the honor of World’s Youngest Microsoft Certified Professional when she was only 9 years old in 2004. Bill Gates, the Chairman of Microsoft, invited Arfa to visit the Microsoft Headquarters in the USA in the age of 10 only.

Later, in August 2005, Arfa was also honored by the Pakistan Government for the Fatima Jinnah Gold Medal in the field of Science and Technology which she received from then Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz. She was also honored with Salaam Pakistan Youth Award in 2005 which has been set up by Pakistan’s only Nobel laureate Dr Abdul Salam. Moreover, Arfa has won the Presidential Award for Pride of Performance.

Arfa has represented her country Pakistan on a variety of international fora. She was also included as the honorable guest by IT Professionals of Dubai for two weeks stay in Dubai. During that trip, Arfa was awarded by a number of medals and awards from various tech societies and computer companies working in Dubai.

Amazingly, she has been certified for flying a plane at a flying club in Dubai at the age of 10.

Arfa also participated in Microsoft keynote session in the Tech-Ed Developers Conference held in Barcelona, in 2006. The theme of the conference was “Get ahead of the game” and Arfa was in fact a great example of being ahead of the game.

The Imran Khan Phenomenon




In 1992, with his cricket career at its twilight, an aging Imran Khan boldly pledged that the Pakistani national team would win the World Cup for the first time. In March of that year, before a packed stadium in Melbourne, Pakistan defeated former colonial master England, taking the cup and shocking the world of cricket. Khan returned home with a trophy in his hands, enshrined forever as a national hero.
These days, Khan leads another group of underdogs: a political party known as the Pakistan Tehreek-e Insaf (PTI). Last September, Khan made a familiarly bold prediction: PTI, which has only won a single National Assembly seat in its 15-year history, will sweep the next general elections. PTI, Khan says without a semblance of doubt, will rid Pakistan of corruption, endemic poverty, and violence -- and eventually bring the country to what he sees as its rightful place on the world stage.
Since his retirement from cricket, Khan has been devoted to social work and politics. Inspired by his mother's death, he founded the world-class Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research Center, trusted and respected by Pakistanis of all stripes. Khan's political career, however, has been another story. PTI, despite the initial hype and fanfare, never really took off. Its founding members left the scene early on, and Khan was regularly outsmarted by wilier politicos.
A solitary Khan would regularly lambast the political class on Pakistan's many talk shows. Critics dismissed him as the darling of the country's television anchors and the electorally irrelevant"burger-baby" and "mummy-daddy" types (i.e. coddled, Westernized, rootless, upper-middle class youth). Political satire shows lampooned him as a raving, repetitive political loser.
In 2005, Sheikh Rashid Ahmad, then a backer of military ruler Pervez Musharraf, mocked Khan and patronizingly offered to help him win a seat "anywhere he wants." Fast forward six years ahead, and Sheikh Rashid, seated next to Khan on live television, was ingratiatingly referring to the ex-cricketer as a "brother" and meekly asking him for help in winning a few seats in the next elections.
Once an electoral non-entity, Khan's PTI could potentially win dozens of National Assembly seats in the next polls -- hence the Pauline conversion of opportunists like Sheikh Rashid. Already, PTI has upended the détente between the two major political powers -- the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) -- and put both on the defensive. PTI might become the country's third-largest party, giving it the power to determine who heads Pakistan's next coalition government. Khan, no longer a political joke, is a potential kingmaker positioned to prove the doubters wrong once again.
Pakistan's political class began to take PTI seriously last fall as the party organized a series of large rallies in Punjab, the country's largest province and home to its most competitive elections. In late October, PTI beat all expectations and gathered more than 100,000 people in Lahore, the home turf of the PML-N. The jalsa, or gathering, was a smartly choreographed and nationally televised spectacle, featuring religious conservatives, students from the city's elite schools, and well-to-do housewives. Together, they listened to rousing speeches by politicians and musical performances by the country's top pop artists, and sang the national anthem. An article in the web edition of Pakistan's Express Tribune declared, "Imran Khan's 'tsunami' sweeps Lahore." In Lahore, Khan proved he was able to mobilize large numbers of potential voters in a key constituency, signaling to political free agents that his party has a fundraising and logistical network that can get out the vote on Election Day.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

PTI will not support any unconstitutional step by army: Imran Khan


LAHORE: Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan said that even though his party and the people of Pakistan want to get rid of the present government, PTI would never accept any undemocratic and unconstitutional step by the army to remove the government.
Talking to the media at his residence, Khan said that the present confrontation between the institutions was unfortunate but the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) pushed itself into it, so that they can get sympathy votes in the upcoming elections.
PTI media advisor Shafqat Mehmood said that the Supreme Court is as supreme as the parliament and no institution is less significant than others. “The PPP just wants to become a siyasi shaheed,” Mehmood said.
However Mehmood said that he doubted if the military will takeover. “I think the situation would eventually fizzle out and I don’t see any signs of a coup,” the PTI media advisor said.
Earlier PTI Chairman Khan welcomed former PPP leader Khalid Kharal and former Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) provincial leader Inamullah Niazi along with former PPP provincial minister Shah Nawaz Cheema from Gujranwala into the PTI fold.
“I pledge to work for the implementation of Quaid’s vision in the country. The current political system has become rotten and the political parties have turned into dynasties,” Khan said.
The PTI Chairman further said that his party has gained momentum on its own and those who say that it is supported by the security agencies, are themselves the creation of the agencies.
Khan said that at the moment, his party was busy organising itself for the upcoming elections.


Sunday, January 8, 2012

Imran Khan on Ticket distribution for Elections

The Night View of Badshahi Masjid | Lahore



Clearing confusions: ‘We cannot ally with rejected parties’


 “There will be no coalition with former president Pervez Musharraf at any cost,” Shah Mehmood Qureshi, vice chairman of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf, said on Monday.
During his Sunday’s address at the ceremonies on the second day of Bahauddin Zakariya’s urs, Qureshi had said that the decision about forming an alliance with Musharraf will be taken after considering the circumstances. On Monday, however, he denied having said that, saying he had been mistaken. Trying to clarify the false impression that PTI might form an alliance with Musharraf, Qureshi said that no such coalition with the All Pakistan Muslim League will happen under any circumstances.
In an exclusive talk with The Express Tribune, Qureshi said that the party was faced with a flood of people wanting to join the PTI, so it did not need any coalition.
“We cannot unite with parties that have been rejected by the people of Pakistan. The APML is one of them,” he said.
Earlier, Qureshi addressed the media on the last day of the urs celebrations. Sunni Tehreek president Sarwat Ijaz Qadri was also present.


Hashmi chides PML-N for distributing sweets on news of his ailment




























Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) leadership and workers had distributed sweets upon hearing news of his ailment, former PML-N stalwart Javed Hashmi, said while addressing a ceremony in Multan.
He said that I as he fought with death, some party members distributed sweets on hearing that I had suffered a brain haemorrhage attack on me.
Hashmi, who has on numerous occasions blamed the government of Punjab for neglecting his constituency, said that despite funds allocated to Multan, close to Rs1.2 billion had been reallocated from Multan for development projects in Lahore and upper Punjab.
Hashmi was of the view that this move had not only increased the grievances PML (N) workers but had further strengthened the perceived notion of discrimination by Punjab government against the people of south Punjab. “Me and my MPA can hold the seats and can easily earn Rs5 million annually, but I immediately rejected this facility in a second.”
He said that the PML (N) leadership had made four promises of development of Multan including, the construction of agricultural college, engineering university, women and medical university. However, the government had failed to keep its promises.
“I had personally informed Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani and Punjab chief minister Shehbaz Sharif about reservations of the people of the south Punjab but the focus for both is more towards consolidating their governments than addressing the reservations of the people,” Hashmi complained.
The prosperity of Pakistan today needs the accountability of all corrupt leaders and PTI will ensure that. They will give back all money of the people of Pakistan which they had snatched through corruption.
Talking about the relations with United States, he said that they needed to have peaceful relations with Pakistan on the basis of equality and respect for sovereignty. “We will destroy any country including United States for attacking the sovereignty of our country,” said Hashmi.
In a rendition of Gilani, Hashmi said that relations with other countries would be made on the basis of mutual trust and respect for citizens of each nation.