Tag Archives: islamabad

Pakistan’s Sharif gets resounding election victory

Supporters of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif celebrate the victory of their leader in Islamabad, Pakistan on Sunday, May 12, 2013. Sharif looked set Sunday to return to power for a third term, with an overwhelming election tally that just weeks ago seemed out of reach for a man who had been ousted by a coup and was exiled abroad before clawing his way back as an opposition leader. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) — Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif looked poised to return to office with a resounding election victory — a mandate that could make it easier to tackle the country’s daunting problems, including growing power outages, weak economic growth and shaky government finances.

Questions remain, however, about Sharif’s stance on another key issue: violent Islamic extremism. Critics have accused his party of being soft on radicals because it hasn’t cracked down on militant groups in its stronghold of Punjab province. The United States has pushed Pakistan for years to take stronger action against Islamic militants whose fighters stage cross-border attacks against American troops in Afghanistan.

As unofficial returns rolled in Sunday, a day after the election, state TV estimates put Sharif close to the majority in the national assembly needed to govern outright for the next five years. Even if he falls short of that threshold, independent candidates almost certain to swing in Sharif’s favor would give his Pakistan Muslim League-N party a ruling majority.

That would put the 63-year-old Sharif in a much stronger position than the outgoing Pakistan People’s Party, which ruled for five years with a weak coalition that was often on the verge of collapse.

Pakistan suffers from a growing energy crisis, with some areas experiencing power outages for up to 18 hours a day. That has seriously hurt the economy, pushing growth below 4 percent a year. The country needs a growth rate of twice that to provide jobs for its expanding population of 180 million.

Ballooning energy subsidies and payments to keep failing public enterprises afloat have steadily eaten away at the government’s finances, forcing the country to seek another unpopular bailout from the International Monetary Fund. Pakistan also has an ineffective tax system, depriving the government of funds.

Sharif, the son of a wealthy industrialist, is seen by many as more likely to tackle the country’s economic problems effectively because much of his party’s support comes from businessmen. He is also expected to push for better relations with Pakistan’s archenemy and neighbor India, which could help the economy.

The Pakistan People’s Party was widely perceived to have done little on the economic front.

“Anything better than zero and you have already improved on the PPP’s performance in terms of managing the economy,” said Cyril Almeida, a columnist for Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper.

The former ruling party was soundly beaten in Saturday’s election. Sharif’s party was leading in contests for 127 seats, just short of the 137 directly elected seats needed to form a majority, state TV said.

The PPP was ahead in contests for 32 national assembly seats, a significant drop from the 91 seats the party won in the 2008 election.

Independent candidates were leading in more than 20 contests, and they historically join the party that forms the government, which would leave the Pakistan Muslim League-N with a majority.

“I’m sure business and the economy will be far better in a couple of years,” said Amir Nayaz, one of hundreds of Sharif supporters who gathered outside his home in Punjab’s capital, Lahore, beating on drums, dancing and chanting slogans.

It was a remarkable comeback for the two-time prime minister, who was toppled in a 1999 coup by then-army chief Gen. Pervez Musharraf and was sent into exile in Saudi Arabia for years. He returned in 2007, and his party came in second in elections the following year.

Over the last five years, Sharif put steady pressure on the PPP-led government. But because he was wary of army interference, he never applied enough pressure to threaten the government’s hold on power. That attitude helped enable parliament to complete its term and transfer power in democratic elections for the first time since the country was founded in 1947.

President Barack Obama praised “the historic peaceful and transparent transfer of civilian power.”

In an ironic twist, the man who toppled Sharif in a military coup, Musharraf, is currently under house arrest after returning from self-imposed exile. Sharif’s government will have to decide whether to bring treason charges against Musharraf in the Supreme Court.

Sharif’s party managed to weather a serious challenge from former cricket star Imran Khan, whose criticism of traditional politicians energized the youth. Even though Khan failed to deliver his promised “political tsunami,” his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party did much better than it had historically.

It was leading in contests for 31 national assembly seats, state TV said, and appeared to be in position to possibly form the government in northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The party boycotted elections in 2008 and only won one national assembly seat in 2002.

Khan claimed in a video message that there was vote rigging in Punjab and in the southern city of Karachi. The election commission has said it is investigating reports of problems with the election in Karachi and is re-doing the vote at 40 polling stations in one constituency of the city.

The Pakistani Taliban, which has been waging a bloody insurgency against the government, tried to derail the election with attacks. More than 150 people were killed with guns and bombs in the run-up to the election, including 29 on election day.

The deadly campaign failed to keep people away from the polls. Turnout was nearly 60 percent, the highest in more than 40 years, the election commission said. But the violence, which mainly targeted secular parties, may have helped candidates seen as taking a softer line toward the militants, like Sharif and Khan, because they were able to campaign more freely.

Sharif has called for negotiations with the Pakistani Taliban but hasn’t said clearly whether he thinks army operations against the militants should continue until peace is achieved. His party, which has ruled Punjab for the past five years, has not taken any clear action against the powerful Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group based in that province. Those militants are blamed for the 2008 attack on the Indian city of Mumbai that killed 166 people.

“I don’t think that these guys have enough understanding of the risk,” said Imtiaz Gul, director of the Islamabad-based Center for Research and Security Studies, referring to Sharif’s party members. “They think they cannot afford to stoke unnecessary trouble for them by cracking down on people or groups who are extremists or terrorists.”

It’s also unclear what Sharif’s policy will be toward neighboring Afghanistan, where the U.S. plans to withdraw most of its combat troops by 2014 and is seeking help from Pakistan to negotiate peace with the Afghan Taliban. Pakistan and Afghanistan have long had tense relations.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai promised “full cooperation” with Pakistan’s new government Sunday, but alluded to the often-hostile relationship between the two countries and suspicions that Islamabad has aided insurgents and contributed to Afghanistan’s instability.

“We hope that the new elected government provides the ground for peace and brotherhood with Afghanistan” and cooperates “in rooting out terrorist sanctuaries,” he said.

The U.S. and Pakistan have also had a troubled relationship, especially after the 2011 American raid that killed Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani army town.

Sharif is expected to be somewhat more nationalistic and protective of state sovereignty when it comes to relations with the U.S. than the outgoing government. He defied U.S. opposition to Pakistan’s nuclear test in 1998 and has criticized unpopular American drone attacks targeting militants in the country. But that doesn’t mean the relationship will radically change, especially since the army often plays a dominant role in foreign policy issues.

“At the end of the day, Sharif is a businessman, and he looks at these things through a kind of pragmatic analysis,” Almedia said. “I don’t see any reason for him to want ties with U.S. to be poor, tense or troublesome.”

___

Abbot reported from Islamabad. Associated Press writers Rebecca Santana, Munir Ahmed and Zarar Khan in Islamabad and Kathy Gannon in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Originally from: 

Pakistan’s Sharif gets resounding election victory

Pakistanis go to polls as 20 killed in attacks

Pakistani women line up to enter a polling station and cast their ballots, on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, Saturday, May 11, 2013. Pakistanis streamed to the polls Saturday to vote in a historic election pitting a cricket star-turned-politician against an unpopular incumbent and a two-time prime minister, but twin bombings killing nine people and wounding dozens underlined the dangers voters face. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

(AP) — Defying threats of violence, Pakistanis streamed to the polls Saturday for a historic vote pitting a former cricket star against a two-time prime minister and an unpopular incumbent. But militant attacks that killed 20 people underlined the risks many people took just casting their ballots.

The violence was a continuation of what has been a bloody election season, with more than 130 people killed in bombings and shootings. Some are calling this one of the deadliest votes in the country’s history.

Despite the violence, many see the election — the country’s first transition between an elected government fulfilling its term to another — as a key step to solidify civilian rule in a country that has experienced three military coups.

With the Pakistani Taliban threatening to target political parties in the vote, the government deployed an estimated 600,000 security personnel across the country to protect polling sites and voters.

Many Pakistanis seemed determined to cast their ballots despite the violence.

“Yes, there are fears. But what should we do?” said Ali Khan, who was waiting to vote in the northwestern city of Peshawar, where one of the blasts took place Saturday. “Either we sit in our house and let the terrorism go on, or we come out of our homes, cast our vote, and bring in a government that can solve this problem of terrorism.”

That exuberance seemed to be widespread. The secretary of the election commission, Ahmed Khan, told reporters in Islamabad that he expected the turnout to be “massive.”

The election is being watched closely by the United States, which relies on the nuclear-armed country for help fighting Islamic militants and negotiating an end to the war in neighboring Afghanistan.

This vote is notable for more than just the historic handoff of power from one civilian government to another.

The rise of former cricket star Imran Khan has reshaped the Pakistani political scene, challenging the stranglehold of the country’s two main parties and making the outcome of the vote very hard to call.

The 60-year-old Khan is facing off against the Pakistan Muslim League-N, headed by two-time former prime minister Nawaz Sharif and the Pakistan People’s Party, led by President Asif Ali Zardari.

While Sharif has billed himself as the candidate of experience, Khan is trying to tap into the frustrations of millions of Pakistanis who want a change from the politicians who have dominated the nation’s politics for years.

“I never voted for anyone in the past, but today my sons asked me to go to the polling station, and I am here to vote,” said Mohammed Akbar in the northwestern city of Khar. “Imran Khan is promising to bring a good change, and we will support him.”

Khan survived a horrific fall off a forklift during a campaign event Tuesday in the eastern city of Lahore that sent him to the hospital with three broken vertebrae and a broken rib. He is not believed to have voted Saturday because he couldn’t travel to his polling place.

Nobody is sure how effective he will be in translating his widespread popularity into votes, especially considering he boycotted the 2008 election and only got one seat in 2002.

Turnout will be critical, especially among the youth. Almost half of Pakistan’s more than 80 million registered voters are under the age of 35, but young people have often stayed away from the polls in the past.

The election’s outcome is likely riding on the tally in the province of Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous, where Sharif and Khan have been dueling for the people’s support with a series of large rallies and campaign events.

Even on election day the excitement was evident. In Lahore, which has not been touched by the pre-election violence seen in other parts of Pakistan, Sharif supporters carried stuffed tigers — the party’s election symbol — and Khan followers carried cricket bats as they chanted slogans in favor of their candidates.

As Sharif cast his ballot at a Lahore voting station, supporters serenaded him with chants of “Lion! Lion!”

“We brought change before. We will bring change again,” he said.

On the campaign trail, Sharif played up his extensive political experience compared to Khan’s, and touted key projects he completed while in office, including a highway between the capital Islamabad and Lahore.

“It’s better to try a lesser evil instead of trying a novice,” said one Lahore voter, Haji Mohammad Younus. “The lesser evils at least have the experience of governing. They might be corrupt but they have lately realized that they have to deliver if they want to survive.”

The mood remained jubilant despite a series of attacks that marred the vote in some districts.

The deadliest violence struck Karachi, where twin blasts blew up outside an office of the Awami National Party, one of three secular liberal parties that have been targeted by Taliban militants during the campaign, said police officer Shabir Hussain. Ten people died in the attack and 30 were wounded.

A roadside bomb in Karachi also killed one person riding in a bus of ANP supporters, while in the northwestern city of Peshawar a blast outside a polling station killed one person and wounded 10 others.

In the southwestern province of Baluchistan, gunmen killed two people outside a polling station in the town of Sorab and a shootout between supporters of two candidates in the town of Chaman killed 6 people, officials said.

There is concern that the violence could benefit Islamist parties and those who take a softer line toward the militants, including Khan and Sharif, because they were able to campaign more freely.

The outgoing Pakistan People’s Party is likely to fare poorly in this election. Voters are fed up with five years of power outages, rising inflation and militant attacks. The party, which rose to power in 2008 in part by widespread sympathy after the death of party leader Benazir Bhutto, has carried out what many called a lackluster campaign.

Their effort has been hampered by threats of Taliban violence and a lack of high-profile figures to rally the party. Benazir Bhutto’s son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, is officially the party chairman and had been expected to play a high-profile role in the election.

But he’s appeared at few election events, and was out of the country Saturday.

The election was also marred by reports that some women in the North Waziristan tribal area were not allowed to vote. Clerics using loudspeakers at local mosques in the cities of Mir Ali and Miran Shah urged women to stay home, and none could be seen at the polls.

Women in Pakistan have had to fight extensive discrimination to assert their electoral rights. They represent only about 43 percent of the roughly 86 million registered voters. In many areas, particularly in the conservative northwest, the men decide ahead of the election that women cannot vote.

Polls were scheduled to close at 5 p.m. local time (1200 GMT and 8 a.m. EST) but the commission extended voting for an extra hour across the country and three hours in parts of Karachi.

The election commission said they were investigating reports of a lack of polling staff and materials, and threats to election commission staff in some areas of Karachi.

The election winner will inherit a country struggling on a number of fronts. Pakistanis suffer from rolling blackouts that can be as long as 18 hours a day as well as rising inflation. The country is also battling Islamic militants who want to overthrow the government, while on the western border there are fears that a U.S. military departure from Afghanistan will send violence spilling over into Pakistan.

Both Khan and Sharif have favored negotiations with militants in the country’s tribal areas, and Khan has even said he would pull out troops from the borderlands if elected.

That would likely put him at odds with the country’s powerful military. While Pakistan has been under civilian rule for the last five years, the military still is considered the country’s most powerful institution and usually makes the major decisions when it comes to militancy or foreign policy issues such as Afghanistan or India.

In what appeared to be a show of support for democracy in Pakistan, the country’s most powerful military officer, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani went himself to the voting booth — shown live on Pakistani television — instead of mailing in his ballot.

On the eve of the historic vote Pakistan expelled the New York Times correspondent, Declan Walsh.

The newspaper said in an article published on its website Friday that their longtime foreign correspondent was handed a two-sentence letter accusing him of unspecified “undesirable activities” and ordering him to leave.

__

Raza reported from Karachi. Associated Press writers Riaz Khan in Peshawar, Rasool Dawar in Mir Ali, Anwarullah Khan in Khar and Asif Shahzad in Lahore contributed to this report.

Associated Press

More here: 

Pakistanis go to polls as 20 killed in attacks

Pakistan’s Musharraf lashes out after arrest

In this Monday, April 15, 2013 photo, Pakistan’s former President and military ruler Pervez Musharraf addresses his party supporters at his house in Islamabad, Pakistan. Police arrested former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf overnight at his home in the capital, where he had holed up following a dramatic escape from court to avoid being detained, officials said Friday. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

(AP) — Former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf criticized allegations against him as “politically motivated” Friday, following his arrest in a case involving his decision to fire senior judges while in power.

Police arrested former Musharraf overnight at his home in the capital, Islamabad, where he holed up following a dramatic escape from court Thursday morning to avoid being detained. Musharraf fled the Islamabad High Court in a speeding vehicle after a judge rejected his bail and ordered his arrest.

It was a new low in Musharraf’s troubled return from self-imposed exile last month to attempt a political comeback in the upcoming parliamentary election.

Police presented Musharraf before Islamabad District Court on Friday morning after arresting him, said police officer Mohammed Khalid. Local TV video showed Musharraf entering the court surrounded by a heavy security detachment of police and paramilitary soldiers.

The district court judge instructed police to keep Musharraf in their custody for two days and then present him before an anti-terrorism court, said one of his lawyers, Malik Qamar Afzal. His legal team is trying to decide what to do next, said Afzal.

Police returned Musharraf to his home on the outskirts of Islamabad, where he is being held under house arrest, said police officer Mohammed Rafique.

“These allegations are politically motivated, and I will fight them in the trial court, where the truth will eventually prevail,” Musharraf said in a message posted on his Facebook page Friday after he was arrested.

The decision by the police to arrest Musharraf ended an awkward situation in which the former military ruler was being protected by security forces for hours while holed up in his house, but none of them made a move to detain him. They were likely awaiting orders from senior officials trying to figure out how to deal with the delicate situation.

Pakistan’s government has been reluctant to wade into the controversy surrounding Musharraf since he returned last month, especially given his position as a former chief of the army, considered the most powerful institution in the country.

His return also presents complications for the current army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, who may have to decide whether to intervene to protect Musharraf or watch him be prosecuted. If Musharraf is sent to prison, it would be the first time an army chief has been put behind bars in the country’s 65-year history.

Musharraf seized control in a coup in 1999 and spent nearly a decade in power before being forced to step down in 2008. Despite legal challenges and Taliban death threats, he returned last month after four years in London and Dubai.

But he has received paltry public support, and earlier this week he was disqualified from running in the May 11 election because of his actions while in power. A court has also barred him from leaving the country.

The upcoming vote is historic because it will mark the first time in Pakistan that parliament has completed its full five-year term and handed over power in democratic elections. The country has experienced three military coups and constant political instability since it was founded in 1947.

Thursday’s case before the Islamabad High Court involved Musharraf’s decision to dismiss senior judges, including the chief justice of the Supreme Court, when he declared a state of emergency and suspended the constitution in 2007. He was concerned the judges would challenge his re-election as president, citing the growing Taliban insurgency in the country as justification for the state of emergency.

The man who filed the petition before the Islamabad High Court, Aslam Ghuman, also accused Musharraf of placing the judges under house arrest.

Musharraf’s spokeswoman, Aasia Ishaq, denied he issued an arrest order then, even though the judges were clearly confined to their homes. Government officials at the time claimed they restricted the movement of the judges for their own security.

Musharraf’s crackdown on the judges outraged many Pakistanis and fueled a nationwide protest movement by lawyers that eventually resulted in him stepping down under threat of impeachment.

Before he returned to the country, Musharraf was granted bail for the judges’ case and two others, meaning he could not be arrested when he landed — a feature of Pakistan’s legal system. But the bail agreement was temporary.

An Islamabad High Court judge, Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui, who extended the bail agreement once on April 12, refused to do so again Thursday and ordered Musharraf’s arrest, according to a copy of the court order. The judge ordered Musharraf to be investigated under an anti-terrorism law, which does not allow bail, the order said.

Siddiqui wrote that Musharraf’s “shameful” decision to arrest judges “spread fear in society … and terror throughout Pakistan.”

Immediately following the judge’s arrest order, Musharraf’s bodyguards hustled him out of the court past policemen and paramilitary soldiers and helped him into a black SUV. The vehicle sped off with a member of Musharraf’s security team hanging on the side of the vehicle.

The security forces on duty at the court seemed caught off guard, and nobody appeared to try to prevent Musharraf from leaving as he pushed past them.

Lawyers taunted the 69-year-old as he roared away, yelling, “Look who is running! Musharraf is running!”

Musharraf is facing a raft of other legal challenges, including allegations before the Supreme Court that he committed treason while in power. He also faces legal charges in two other cases. One involves allegations that Musharraf didn’t provide adequate security to former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who was killed in a gunfire and suicide attack in 2007. The other relates to the death of a nationalist leader in Baluchistan in 2006.

Given the legal challenges and Taliban threats against Musharraf, many experts have been left scratching their heads as to why he returned. Some have speculated he misjudged the level of public backing he would get, while others suggested he was simply homesick.

Associated Press

Excerpt from - 

Pakistan’s Musharraf lashes out after arrest

Police arrest former Pakistani ruler Musharraf

In this Monday, April 15, 2013 photo, Pakistan’s former President and military ruler Pervez Musharraf arrives under tight security to address his party supporters at his house in Islamabad, Pakistan. Musharraf and his security team pushed past policemen and sped away from a court in the country’s capital on Thursday after his bail was revoked in a case in which he is accused of treason. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

(AP) — Police say they have arrested former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf in connection with a case involving his decision to fire senior judges while in power.

Police officer Mohammed Khalid said Friday that authorities arrested Musharraf overnight from his home on the outskirts of Islamabad. He fled there from court Thursday after an Islamabad High Court judge rejected his bail and ordered his arrest.

Khalid said Musharraf was presented before a judge at Islamabad District Court on Friday who will decide whether he will be taken to jail or held under house arrest.

Local TV footage showed Musharraf entering the court in Islamabad amid high security.

Musharraf’s lawyer Malik Qamar Afzal says the judge asked police to keep Musharraf in their custody.

Associated Press

Visit source: 

Police arrest former Pakistani ruler Musharraf

Bus plunges into ravine in Pakistan


Bus plunges into ravine in Pakistan, killing 27

From Nasir Habib, CNN

March 16, 2013 — Updated 0741 GMT (1541 HKT)

Islamabad, Pakistan (CNN) — A bus accident in northern Pakistan killed 27 people Saturday, including 25 soldiers, authorities said.

The two other passengers were civilians.

The bus plummeted into a ravine in Kohistan province, which is near the border with Kashmir, the military said.

Roads through the mountainous terrain are treacherous, and accidents occur frequently there.

CNN’s Ben Brumfield wrote in Atlanta

Link to original: 

Bus plunges into ravine in Pakistan

Christian protesters, police clash in Pakistan

Pakistani Christians chant slogans during a demonstration demanding that the government rebuild their homes after they were burned down following an alleged blasphemy incident, in Islamabad, Pakistan, Sunday, March 10, 2013. The incident in Lahore began on Friday, March 8, 2013 after a Muslim accused a Christian man of blasphemy, an offence that in Pakistan is punished by life in prison or death. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

(AP) — Hundreds of Christians clashed with police across Pakistan on Sunday, a day after a Muslim mob burned dozens of homes owned by members of the minority religious group in retaliation for alleged insults against Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

Christians are often the target of Pakistan’s harsh blasphemy laws, which rights activists say are frequently used to persecute religious minorities or settle personal disputes. Politicians have been reluctant to reform the laws for fear of being attacked by religious radicals, as has happened in the past.

The plight of Pakistan’s other religious minorities, such as Shiite Muslims, Hindus and Ahmadis, has also deepened in recent years as hard-line interpretations of Islam have gained ground and militants have stepped up attacks against groups they oppose. Most Pakistanis are Sunni Muslims.

The latest incident began Friday after a Muslim in the eastern city of Lahore accused a Christian man of blasphemy — an offense punishable by life in prison or even death. A day later, hundreds of angry Muslims rampaged through the Christian neighborhood, burning about 170 houses.

Authorities have arrested 160 suspected members of the mob, many of whom were identified through TV footage and photos published in newspapers, said police officer Abdur Rehman.

But it remains to be seen whether anyone will be held to account. Mob violence is not uncommon following blasphemy allegations, and police often round up large numbers of suspects. However, these arrests rarely result in actual convictions.

There have been no convictions related to a deadly attack on Christians in 2009 in the eastern city of Gojra that was also sparked by blasphemy allegations, the Express Tribune newspaper reported Sunday. Angry Muslims burned dozens of houses in Gojra, killing eight Christians — seven of them from one family trapped in a burning home.

No Christians were hurt in Saturday’s attack in Lahore because they fled the area overnight before the mob arrived. But police were criticized for failing to prevent the mob from attacking the Christians’ homes.

The largest demonstrations on Sunday were in Lahore and the southern city of Karachi. About 1,000 people protested in both places, and smaller demonstrations were held in the capital, Islamabad, and the adjoining city of Rawalpindi.

In Lahore, hundreds of protesters, some carrying large crucifixes, blocked a main highway as they pressed their demands for better compensation payments from the government, said police official Malik Awais. Police fired tear gas canisters and used batons to disperse the demonstrators and took six of them into custody, he said.

The protesters damaged several vehicles, uprooted a fence along the road and burned an electricity generator, Awais said. They also pelted police with stones, injuring seven of them, he said.

Government spokesman Pervaiz Rasheed promised the government would help the Christians rebuild their houses, but the protesters expressed dissatisfaction with the way the government was handling the incident.

“I have been robbed of all of my life’s savings,” said Yousuf Masih, standing outside his burned home. He said the government’s announcement that it would give 200,000 rupees ($2,000) compensation to each family was a joke.

Awais said the protesters were demanding the government raise the compensation amount from 200,000 rupees ($2,000) to 1 million rupees ($10,000).

In Karachi, protesters blocked a road in a main market and damaged about 25 vehicles, said police officer Ali Raza. Some of the demonstrators also attacked 10 shops and looted valuables and cash, he said. Police beat back the protesters and fired tear gas to disperse them. At least two protesters were taken into custody, Raza said.

Police have taken the Christian man accused of blasphemy into custody pending an investigation. Those who attacked the Christian neighborhood are also being investigated for a range of offenses, including arson, robbery and insulting the feelings of the Christian community, said Rehman, the police officer.

Akram Gill, a local bishop in the Lahore Christian community, said the incident had more to do with personal enmity between the two men involved than blasphemy. He said the men got into a brawl after drinking late one night, and in the morning the Muslim man made up the blasphemy story as payback.

Once an accusation is made, it’s difficult to get it reversed, partly because law enforcement officials and politicians do not want to be seen as being soft on blasphemers.

Two prominent politicians were assassinated in 2011 for urging reform of the law. The killer of one of the politicians was hailed as a hero, and lawyers at his legal appearances showered him with rose petals.

According to Human Rights Watch, there are at least 16 people on death row in Pakistan for blasphemy and another 20 are serving life sentences.

While Muslims are frequently accused of blasphemy, members of Pakistan’s small Christian community are especially vulnerable to the accusations. Christians make up less than 5 percent of Pakistan’s 180 million people and many hold low-paying jobs, such as cleaning and street sweeping.

Last year, there was a rare reversal of a blasphemy case against A teenage Christian girl with suspected mental disabilities who was accused of burning pages of the Quran. She was released after a huge domestic and international outcry about her treatment. A local Muslim cleric was arrested and accused of planting the pages in her bag to incriminate her, a rare example of the accuser facing legal consequences. However, he was later freed on bail.

___

Associated Press Writer Rasool Dawar in Peshawar and Adil Jawad in Karachi, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Originally posted here: 

Christian protesters, police clash in Pakistan

Suicide bomber hits US vehicle, kills 2 Pakistanis

Officials and rescue volunteers gather at the bombing site in Peshawar, Pakistan on Monday, Sept. 3, 2012. A car filled with explosives rammed into a U.S. government vehicle on Monday, killing a number of Pakistanis and wounding over a dozen others, police said. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — A suicide bomber rammed a car filled with explosives into a U.S. government vehicle in northwestern Pakistan on Monday, killing two Pakistanis and wounding 19 others, including two Americans, officials said.

The attack in the city of Peshawar was a vivid reminder of the danger U.S. officials face while working in Pakistan, especially in the country’s northwest where Taliban and al-Qaida militants are strongest. Insurgents have carried out scores of bombings in Peshawar in recent years, but attacks against American targets have been relatively rare because of the extensive security measures taken by the U.S. government.

The bomber struck the vehicle after it left the U.S. Consulate in Peshawar and while it was traveling through an area of the city that hosts various international organizations, including the United Nations, said police officer Pervez Khan, who was part of the security escort for the vehicle as it moved.

The attack killed two Pakistanis and wounded 19 other people, said senior police officer Javed Khan.

Two Americans and two Pakistanis working at the U.S. Consulate in Peshawar were among the wounded, the U.S. Embassy said in a statement, calling the attack a “heinous act.”

“We stand ready to work with Pakistani authorities on a full investigation so that the perpetrators can be brought to justice,” it said.

The car driven by the suicide bomber contained 110 kilograms (240 pounds) of explosives, Pakistani police officer Abdul Haq said.

The blast ripped apart the SUV carrying the U.S. Consulate employees and triggered a raging fire, local TV footage showed. Rescue workers and local residents rushed to put out the fire and pull away the dead and wounded. All that was left of the SUV in the end was a carcass of blackened, twisted metal.

Irfan Khan, a local resident, said he was at a nearby shop when the blast occurred.

“I quickly looked back in panic to see smoke and dust erupt from the scene,” he said. “I ran toward the scene along with others and saw two vehicles destroyed and the larger vehicle on fire.”

One dead person was on the ground near the SUV, and a foreigner was injured, said Khan.

“We put the injured man and the dead body in a private vehicle,” said Khan. “There were more injured in the surrounding area too.”

Another eyewitness, Wajid Ali, said he helped put another seriously wounded foreigner into the vehicle.

But another vehicle arrived, presumably from the U.S. Consulate, and took away the wounded foreigners, said Javed Khan, the police officer.

Some of the policemen escorting the U.S. vehicle were also wounded in the attack, and their vehicle was damaged, said Khan.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but suspicion will fall on Taliban and al-Qaida militants who have long had their sights set on the U.S. American drones have fired scores of missiles at the militants’ hideouts in Pakistan in recent years, and Washington has given the Pakistani military billions of dollars to fight the extremists.

Islamist militants have targeted American assets in Peshawar, which is located some 135 kilometers (85 miles) from the capital of Islamabad, on several occasions in recent years.

They unleashed a car bomb and grenade attack against the U.S. Consulate in Peshawar in April 2010 that killed four Pakistanis, including three security personnel and a civilian. In August 2008, the top U.S. diplomat at the consulate survived a gun attack on her armored vehicle. Three months later, gunmen shot and killed an American in Peshawar as he was traveling to work for a U.S.-funded aid program in the region.

Despite the danger, Peshawar has long been a vital hub for U.S. interests in the region. It is the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and is located on the border of Pakistan’s semiautonomous tribal region, the main sanctuary for Taliban and al-Qaida militants in the country.

Much of the funds that were handed to Afghans fighting Soviet rule in neighboring Afghanistan in the 1980s were channeled through Peshawar. The city’s proximity to the tribal region made it a vital place for American officials to be based following the attacks in the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001, that triggered the invasion of Afghanistan. Many militants have used the tribal region as a base to attack U.S.-led forces in neighboring Afghanistan.

___

Associated Press writer Sebastian Abbot contributed to this report from Islamabad.

Associated Press

Continue reading:  

Suicide bomber hits US vehicle, kills 2 Pakistanis

New US leverage seen in talks with Pakistan

In this Wednesday, June 6, 2012 photo, Pakistani oil tanker drivers, sit on the ground chatting next to their tankers which were used to transport NATO fuel supplies to Afghanistan, and parked in a compound in Karachi, Pakistan. U.S. negotiators pushing Pakistan to allow NATO troop supplies to resume to neighboring Afghanistan could get a boost from a deal the coalition struck to withdraw military equipment from the war-torn country through Central Asia. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)

Buy AP Photo Reprints

(AP) — The U.S. is trying to break deadlocked talks with Pakistan over reopening a route for NATO troop supplies into Afghanistan — a deal that has proven elusive due to Islamabad’s demands for more money and Washington’s refusal to apologize for accidentally killing Pakistani forces.

Now the U.S. may have a little more leverage on its side, thanks to an agreement struck with some Central Asian countries to carry NATO equipment out through their territory. Before this week’s agreement, Pakistan provided the only available land route to pull out gear.

Peter Lavoy, a senior Defense Department official, is expected in Islamabad at the end of the week to try to resolve the current dispute.

Pakistan first closed the supply line in retaliation for U.S. airstrikes that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers in November. Prior to the attack, the U.S. and other NATO countries shipped about 30 percent of their nonlethal supplies through Pakistan into southern Afghanistan.

Since then, the coalition compensated by using a longer, more costly route that runs through northern Afghanistan, Central Asia and Russia. This alternative route was only available to ship supplies into Afghanistan until Monday, when Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan agreed to allow the coalition to withdraw equipment as well. NATO already has an agreement with Russia for the withdrawal of material.

Monday’s deal means that the coalition will be able to ship back to Europe tens of thousands of vehicles, containers and other items as it seeks to withdraw most combat forces from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

“I think this will be an advantage for the U.S. and leverage over Pakistan, especially against those who said the U.S. was dependent and had no other choice,” said Pakistani defense analyst Hasan-Askari Rizvi. “I think greater realism will dawn on Pakistani policymakers that the U.S. has shown it can use the northern channel, although it will be expensive and take more time.”

It’s not exactly clear how much more expensive the northern route is compared to the one that was previously used via the Pakistani port of Karachi.

The top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen, said recently that the northern supply line through Central Asia was twice as expensive as the one through Pakistan. But Pentagon figures obtained by The Associated Press in mid-January indicated the U.S. was paying six times as much to use the northern route.

Before Pakistan closed the southern route because of the November attack, it was charging $250 per truck. Now it is demanding $5,000 per truck, while the U.S. has countered with an offer of $500.

“If most of the weapons systems and equipment ends up being transported out through the northern route, it means Pakistan would be losing out on a great opportunity,” said Talat Masood, a Pakistani defense analyst and retired army general. “It would be losing out both in terms of its economy and its relations with NATO.”

President Barack Obama made clear U.S. anger at Islamabad’s refusal to reopen the supply line at a NATO summit at the end of May in Chicago, where he refused to have a one-on-one meeting with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari.

Pakistan’s reluctance to reopen the route is linked to concerns about political backlash at home, where anti-American sentiment is rampant despite receiving billions of dollars in U.S. aid in the past decade.

“Money is an issue, but public backlash is a greater concern because the government is unpopular and they don’t know what to do about the response,” Rizvi said.

The U.S. airstrikes that killed the 24 Pakistani soldiers at two Afghan border posts in November brought outrage in Pakistan. The U.S. military has said the attack was an accident, but the Pakistani army has claimed it was deliberate.

Pakistan’s parliament demanded the U.S. apologize for the attack and also used the opportunity to press Washington to stop drone strikes in the country.

The Obama administration has expressed regret over the deaths of the Pakistani soldiers but has refused to apologize out of concern that it could open the White House to criticism at home, where anger at Pakistan is high because of its alleged support for militants fighting U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan.

The U.S. has refused to stop drone strikes in Pakistan’s northwest tribal region because they are seen as a key tool in fighting al-Qaida and Taliban militants. The latest success came Monday when a drone killed al-Qaida’s second-in-command, Abu Yahya al-Libi, in the North Waziristan tribal area.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta made it clear during a trip to India on Wednesday that the strikes will continue as long as the U.S. needs to defend itself against terrorists who threaten America.

The attacks are unpopular in Pakistan because they are seen as a violation of the country’s sovereignty and many people believe they mostly kill innocent civilians, an allegation disputed by Washington. The complaints about sovereignty are also deemed suspect because elements of the Pakistani government and military are widely believed to support the strikes.

Panetta said the U.S. goal was not only seeking to get the supply route reopened, but also to try to improve relations with Pakistan.

“That is not easy, but it is necessary that we continue that effort,” he said.

The Pakistani army, which is the most powerful institution in the country, is believed to want the supply route reopened to free up more than $1 billion in U.S. military aid that has been frozen. But it has tossed the issue to the civilian government out of concern about the domestic backlash, Rizvi said.

“Pakistan should realize they are going to be pushed out of the game if they continue with these kinds of
00003992
policies,” he said.

___

Associated Press writers Slobodan Lekic in Brussels and Lolita Baldor in New Delhi contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Read article here: 

New US leverage seen in talks with Pakistan

Flugzeugunglück in Pakistan – Boeing 737 stürzt auf Dorf – Keine Überlebende

Nahe der pakistanischen Hauptstadt Islamabad ist ein Passagierflugzeug bei heftigem Regen abgestürzt. Keiner der 127 Insassen überlebte. Da die Boeing 737 auf ein Dorf stürzte, befürchten Helfer noch mehr Tote.

Nach Angaben der Behörden hat keiner der 127 Insassen den Flugzeugabsturz überlebt. Da die Boeing 737 der privaten Fluglinie Bhoja Air am Freitag auf ein Dorf wenige Kilometer von der pakistanischen Hauptstadt entfernt stürzte, könnten die Opferzahlen noch steigen.

Innenminister Rehman Malik sagte, möglicherweise sei das Flugzeug vom Blitz getroffen worden. Die Flügel hätten vor dem Absturz gebrannt.

Im Landeanflug

Von etwa 110 Insassen seien Überreste gefunden worden, sagte ein Sprecher der pakistanischen Zivilflugbehörde. Die Retter seien bemüht, auch die übrigen 17 Leichen zu bergen. Die Angaben zur Anzahl der Passagiere schwankte mehrfach. Zunächst hatte Behördensprecher Perves George die Zahl der Menschen an Bord mit 131 angegeben, dann mit 122.

Die Boeing 737 der privaten Gesellschaft Bhoja kam aus Karachi und war auf dem Weg nach Islamabad. Es war ihr Jungfernflug. Die Maschine befand sich im Landeanflug auf den wichtigsten Hauptstadtflughafen im Vorort Rawalpindi, als sie abstürzte. Den Flughafenbehörden zufolge sollte sie um 18.50 Uhr Ortszeit (15.50 Uhr MESZ) in Islamabad landen, der Kontakt des Towers zum Cockpit sei jedoch um 18.40 Uhr abgebrochen. Wenig später sei das Flugzeug kurz vor der Landebahn abgestürzt.

Helferin befürchtet 150 Tote

Eine Sprecherin des Rettungsdienstes 1122 sagte am Absturzort, da das Flugzeug zudem auf ein kleines Dorf gestürzt sei, habe es auch unter den Dorfbewohnern Opfer gegeben. Sie rechnete mit 150 Toten.

Ein Dorfbewohner sagte dagegen: „Einige Teile (des Flugzeugs) fielen auf unsere Häuser, aber Gottlob verloren wir weder Menschen noch Vieh.“ Das Flugzeug sei auf den Boden geprallt, wieder in die Luft geschnellt und dann in Einzelteile zerbrochen.

Gerade wieder Betrieb aufgenommen

Nach Auskunft der Zivilbehörde hatte Bhoja Airlines ihren Betrieb wegen einer Pleite eine Zeitlang ausgesetzt und erst am Freitag wieder aufgenommen. Auf der Homepage kündigt die Fluglinie „zusätzliche tägliche Flüge“ zwischen Karachi und Islamabad ab Freitag an.

Erst im Juli 2010 waren beim Absturz eines pakistanischen Linienfliegers

während des Landeanflugs auf Islamabad 152 Menschen ums Leben gekommen. Auch damals herrschten heftiger Regen und schlechte Sicht.

Continue reading:

Flugzeugunglück in Pakistan – Boeing 737 stürzt auf Dorf – Keine Überlebende

Flugzeugabsturz in Pakistan – Boeing 737 stürzt bei Jungfernflug auf Dorf

Nahe der pakistanischen Hauptstadt Islamabad ist ein Passagierflugzeug bei heftigem Regen abgestürzt. Keiner der 127 Insassen überlebte. Da die Boeing 737 auf ein Dorf stürzte, befürchten Helfer noch mehr Tote.

Nach Angaben der Behörden hat keiner der 127 Insassen den Flugzeugabsturz überlebt. Da die Boeing 737 der privaten Fluglinie Bhoja Air am Freitag auf ein Dorf wenige Kilometer von der pakistanischen Hauptstadt entfernt stürzte, könnten die Opferzahlen noch steigen.

Innenminister Rehman Malik sagte, möglicherweise sei das Flugzeug vom Blitz getroffen worden. Die Flügel hätten vor dem Absturz gebrannt.

Im Landeanflug

Von etwa 110 Insassen seien Überreste gefunden worden, sagte ein Sprecher der pakistanischen Zivilflugbehörde. Die Retter seien bemüht, auch die übrigen 17 Leichen zu bergen. Die Angaben zur Anzahl der Passagiere schwankte mehrfach. Zunächst hatte Behördensprecher Perves George die Zahl der Menschen an Bord mit 131 angegeben, dann mit 122.

Die Boeing 737 der privaten Gesellschaft Bhoja kam aus Karachi und war auf dem Weg nach Islamabad. Es war ihr Jungfernflug. Die Maschine befand sich im Landeanflug auf den wichtigsten Hauptstadtflughafen im Vorort Rawalpindi, als sie abstürzte. Den Flughafenbehörden zufolge sollte sie um 18.50 Uhr Ortszeit (15.50 Uhr MESZ) in Islamabad landen, der Kontakt des Towers zum Cockpit sei jedoch um 18.40 Uhr abgebrochen. Wenig später sei das Flugzeug kurz vor der Landebahn abgestürzt.

Helferin befürchtet 150 Tote

Eine Sprecherin des Rettungsdienstes 1122 sagte am Absturzort, da das Flugzeug zudem auf ein kleines Dorf gestürzt sei, habe es auch unter den Dorfbewohnern Opfer gegeben. Sie rechnete mit 150 Toten.

Ein Dorfbewohner sagte dagegen: „Einige Teile (des Flugzeugs) fielen auf unsere Häuser, aber Gottlob verloren wir weder Menschen noch Vieh.“ Das Flugzeug sei auf den Boden geprallt, wieder in die Luft geschnellt und dann in Einzelteile zerbrochen.

Gerade wieder Betrieb aufgenommen

Nach Auskunft der Zivilbehörde hatte Bhoja Airlines ihren Betrieb wegen einer Pleite eine Zeitlang ausgesetzt und erst am Freitag wieder aufgenommen. Auf der Homepage kündigt die Fluglinie „zusätzliche tägliche Flüge“ zwischen Karachi und Islamabad ab Freitag an.

Erst im Juli 2010 waren beim Absturz eines pakistanischen Linienfliegers

während des Landeanflugs auf Islamabad 152 Menschen ums Leben gekommen. Auch damals herrschten heftiger Regen und schlechte Sicht.

View original - 

Flugzeugabsturz in Pakistan – Boeing 737 stürzt bei Jungfernflug auf Dorf