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Archive for September, 2013

MULLACRACY’S LUST FOR POWER IN A DEMOCRATIC PAKISTAN: LAL MASJID, MULLA DIESEL & IRAN GAS PIPELINE

 
LEST WE FORGET & LET DOWN OUR GUARD
 
LAL MASJID & DIR ATTACK:  MULLACRACY’S WARNING SHOT
 
From the time of Rameses, the Pharaohs, Emperor Caesar Augustus of the Romans, the Kings, Emperors and Dukes of  Britain, French, Germans, Moghul Kings, & Iranian Emperors, it has been observed that the Priest class  use their religious clout to gain wealth and power through the state.
Modern day Pakistan is no different. It’s religious leaders both real and fake, single-mindedly are in pursuit of power. This is evident by the number of long beards and multi-colored, psychedelic turbans observed in national and provincial legislature.  But, this quest for power has turned into a insatiable thirst for Absolute Power. This has taken the form of  demonic  mullahism.
Taliban are its latest demons of Mullacracy.
 
LESSONS FROM LAL-MASJID : MULLACRACY OR PRIESTS RUN AMOK:THE 21ST CENTURY MULLA INVENTED BRAND OF “TURBO-POWERED ISLAM”
 
These political Mullas have hijacked our beautiful Deen. They demonize Islamic religious scholars, like Shaikh-ul-Islam, Allama Tahir-ul-Qadri or kill them Like Allama Naeemi and Binori. The epitome of  the most blatant and egregious form of lust for power Mulla Fazal-ur Rahman a.k.a Mulla Diesel.  He longs for the day, when he either becomes the Prime Minister under the current system or become an amir ul Momineen, under a theocratic state.  His power base lies in the emotionally charged,  functionally illiterate, and Islamically challenged region of the Pashtun belt.  Here the politico-mullas have their sway.  This region is ideal for selling  snake oil under the banner of “true” Deen.  
 
There is an alphabet soup of Jamait ud-this and Jamaat-ud-that, all vying for power in the region.  Their illiterate electorate is too naive and illiterate to see through their chicanery. Therefore. these Flim Flam Men, otherwise known as Allama-this and Allama-that keep on trucking their Snake Oil Diesel. The Master Showman  among the political mandaris is Mulla Diesel, along with his red-cheeked youthful, “Bacha-Jamooras. ”  Turbo Mulla Diesel rides around in air-conditioned cars. He lives a high life in  pleasure palaces of Islamabad, at the same time beating the drums of piety.  Mulla Diesel is nothing but a power hungry political prostitute masquerading around in a garb of  the protectors of “Deen.” 
 
Mulla Diesel : The Amir-ul-Momineen in a “Mullacracy.”  
 
Our Prophet (PBUH) abolished Priesthood and Dynastic Religiosity.  In Islam, there is no Pope or Pontif, no Bishop, or Cardinal.  Power lies with the Will of the People. Muslim leaders are elected by consensus of the Ummah.  Mullacracy is neither sanctioned in Qu’raan or Hadith. Allah(SWT) grants His Vice-Regency to All Men on this Earth. Leaders are chosen among the best of Men/Women, in Word and Deed, with no exceptions. In Islamic system of Governance, diktats of the Ruler are unacceptable. All decisions are taken through consultations, discussions, debates leading to a consensus of opinion.  But,  fork-tongued, power hungry Mullas like Fazal-ur Rahman, are throw back to animistic Hindu Era. In Hinduism, Casteism is embedded for thousands of years. This casteism was developed by the powerful Brahmins. The Numero Uno in the caste hierarchy are the Brahmins or the Temple Priests. The Dalits, the aboriginal inhabitants of India were relegated to the lowest caste. The fair-skinned Aryan invaders from Central Asia, the Brahmins became the highest caste. It is somewhat similar to what the British and Europeans did to the people they colonized.   A similar phenomenon is occurring in Pakistan. Politico Mullas like Fazlur Rahman have become the Brahmins of Pakistani society, especially in the less developed regions of FATA, KPHK, Gilgit, and Baltistan.  

fazlurehman
 
 
Is Mulla Diesel an Agent of a Super Power?
 

JUI chief Fazal ur Rehman meets US Ambassador at his residence

Founder Editor Tazeen Akhtar..

Islamabad; 17 May 2013 { Staff Reporter } In a very rare meeting of the history of Pakistan and USA , chief of Jamiat Ulmai Islam Maulana Fazal Ur Rehman met with US ambassador Mr Richard Olson here at his (Fazal’s) residence today. Different circles are taking different meaning of this meeting but Fazal says that he only briefed the ambassador about law and order situation during the recent elections.

It is worth mentioning that Fazal Ur Rehman is considered very near to the Taliban of Afghanistan. Is is said that most of them are students of those Madrasas that are run by Fazal’s JUI in KPK.

Fazal gave his justification for the meeting but no word has come from US embassy that most often issue a press release of all important meetings.

Fazal’s JUI is looking for alliance in KPK and Center but unfortunately the chances of his coming into power politics are very less this time. PTI is ready to form the government in KPK with the support of Jamat e Islami and Watan Party. PMLN has refused any alliance in center because they dont need any party to muster more support. They are already full.

The meeting is being observed in that context also. Political circles analyse it as Fazal wants to look acceptable for USA.

 
Mulla Diesel Meets,The US Ambassador
 
Self-pro-claimed “Maulana” Fazal ur Rehman, who heads his faction of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, has opposed the Pak-Iran gas pipeline project on the pretext that it was accorded because of financial kickbacks (1). The most biased and incorrect claim he made that Pakistan doesn’t need to import gas from any foreign country because Pakistan has gas reserves enough for the next 20 to 25 years.  The notorious Mullah Diesel has joined the chorus of the United States-led coalition for the killings by said comments because the leader of the global imperialism, the U.S., has opposed the gas pipeline project.  As a matter of fact, Pakistan is suffering from worst sort of energy crisis and Pakistan needs multiple energy sources. The biased and pseudo leader of the JUI-F is known for smuggling Pakistani diesel to Taliban in Afghanistan and that was why he was named as Mulla Diesel.

Pakistan has no alternate of the Pak-Iran gas pipeline project.  Head of Pakistan’s Inter Gas System has on record said that the gas being imported from Iran will revive at least 30 percent of Pakistani economy and plans were made to that effect.

Unlike Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project, Pakistan will not have to pay transit fee to any country for IP gas pipeline project. For the first time, Pakistan has ignored the U.S. threats and went ahead of its plan in the larger interest of Pakistani nation. The IP gas pipeline project will help Pakistan generate at least 4000 megawatt of electricity and thus the power outages will be overcome.

Mulla Diesel should tell Pakistani nation who are involved in financial kickbacks because due to U.S. pressure no financial institution has come forward to finance the project. Iranian and Chinese governments have no record of giving kickbacks to any individuals. Mulla Diesel’s opposition proves him an agent of the U.S. and Israel because they don’t want Pakistan overcomes its energy crisis with the help of Iran. Shame on Mulla Diesel.

FAZAL UR RAHMAN’S LUST FOR POWER OOZES FROM HIS EYES AND HIS  CHAMELEON TONGUE. HE IS WORSE THAN MULLA FAZAL ULLAH, WHO HAS AT LEAST COME OUT IN THE OPEN WITH HIS TRUE INTENTIONS TO TAKEOVER PAKISTAN FOR THE TALIBAN.  ALL “MULLA” FAZAL-UR-RAHMAN WANTS IS TO BE THE KHALIFA OF PAKISTAN TO CONVERT IT TO A MULLACRACY

 
 
 
 
 
THESE TAKFIRIS, SALAFIS,ZIKRIS, AL-MAHAJIROON, DEOBANDI & WAHABI SAUDI AND ZIONIST AGENTS
 
Conducting an operation against these militants. Look at the photographs below.
 
Pakistan Army  SSG Defeated these Monsters from taking over Islamabad

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PLEA TO SAVE PRE-PARTITION HERITAGE OF BOTH INDIA & PAKISTAN: SAVE LAKSHMI MANSION FROM DEMOLITION BY DRUG BARON MIRZA IQBAL BAIG

 

THIS ARTICLE WAS WRITTEN IN 2005, AS IT PREDICTED, LAKSHMI MANSION, A HERITAGE SITE FOR LAHORE’S MUSLIMS & HINDUS IS SET TO BE DEMOLISHED BY A DRUG SMUGGLER MIRZA IQBAL,

WHO HAS CLOUT WITH NAWAZ SHARIF & SHAHBAZ SHARIF

LDA or Lahore Development Authority has been Bribed by Mirza Iqbal Baig

Lakshmi Mansion heritage being threatened by commercialisation

By Yasser L Hamdani

LAHORE: What do these people have in common: Meraj Khalid, former Pakistani prime minister, Saadat Hassan Manto, world renowned short story writer, Zafrullah Chaudhry, the first foreign minister of Pakistan, and Mani Shankar Aiyar, the Indian petroleum minister? The answer is Lakshmi Mansion, a pre-partition residential establishment off The Mall and Hall Road, which now faces the threat of extinction because of extensive commercialisation. 

Hall Road’s business establishments are slowly beginning to creep into the once peaceful enclave. Houses, some of them eight decades old, are being replaced by commercial plazas, creating a myriad of parking problems and other civic issues for the residents of the leafy Lakshmi Mansion environs, an additional reason why some of them are leaving. Though the area is registered as residential, Hall Road vendors have acquired property and there are visible signs of destruction. Shops selling music, movies and cellular phones have changed the residential locality forever. Now a new commercial plaza is being built within the enclave.

The residents of the area have gone to court in the past, most recently in 1996. A writ petition was filed that stopped construction temporarily. Later the area was reaffirmed as residential, but that would matter little given that many in the area are willing to sell. Residents have written to the chief minister to intervene personally. 

“There is a Hall Road mafia that doesn’t stop at anything and will slowly engulf our neighbourhood,” said an elderly resident, residing there since independence. 

Muhammad Usman, a Hall Road businessman and a member of one of the many traders’ associations on that road, told Daily Times that it was only a matter of time before all of Lakshmi Mansion fell into their hands since people wanted to sell and they wanted to buy. While regretting that it would mean the loss of a great historical heritage, Mr Usman said that anything was possible in a country like Pakistan. “As long as Meraj Khalid was alive, such acquisition was impossible but now things have changed,” he added. 

The history of the residential enclave is older than independence. It was here that Mani Shankar Aiyar, the current Indian petroleum minister, was born in 1941. His family eventually moved to India at independence, but people in the neighbourhood still remember him. 

The Lakshmi Mansion Residents Association has formally invited Mr Aiyar to come. “If the Indian government can accord a special status to the Neharwali Haveli area because President Musharraf was born there, why can’t the Pakistani government do the same and declare Lakshmi Mansion enclave heritage property?” asks one resident. It would be a great confidence-building measure, he adds..

Saadat Hassan Manto, arguably Pakistan’s greatest short story writer, moved to this area in January 1948. It was here that he wrote some of his finest short stories and sketches including Toba Tek Singh, Thanda Ghost, Khol Do and Mera Sahib. Today his daughter resides in the house which has become a memorial of sorts to the man hailed as Pakistan’s most gifted writer. The plaque that indicates that Manto once resided in the building has been vandalised with graffiti. “People often come looking to find material about Manto and we try and help the best we can,” Nighat Patel, Manto’s daughter, told Daily Times. 

Meraj Khalid also lived here for a large part of his life. Lakshmi Mansion thus served on several occasions as the residence of the chief minister, National Assembly speaker and finally the prime minister of the country. 

A small library and museum dedicated to the life and work of Mr Khalid today operates without government patronage. Since the former prime minister’s demise two years ago, the family has moved and the house now serves as the office building of Daily Jinnah, an Urdu newspaper.

There is also a beautiful park in the centre of this historical locality. Trees in this park are said to be over a 100 years old. If the area gets commercialised, it is feared that this lush green park might end up a concrete car park one day.

REFERENCE

 

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HEROIN-DRUG BARON MIRZA IQBAL BAIG DESTROYS LAHORE’S HISTORICAL LAKSHMI MANSION FOR BUILDING SHOPPING PLAZA

 

US CONVICTED PAKISTANI HEROIN SMUGGLER MIRZA IQBAL BAIG BUYS PROPERTY ON HALL & MALL ROADS

IN LAHORE FOR SHOPPING PLAZA CONSTRUCTION

PML(N) IS REWARDING HIM WITH A PERMIT FOR

SHOPPING PLAZA CONSTRUCTION

ON THE CORNER OF HALL/MALL/BEADON ROAD, LAHORE

THUS DESTROYING LAHORE’S HISTORICAL LAKSHMI MANSION

SHAHBAZ SHARIF & NAWAZ SHARIF ARE SUPPORTING MIRZA

IQBAL BAIG AS PART OF LAHORE  IMPROVEMENT SCHEME 

HOW MIRZA IQBAL BAIG INTRODUCED HEROIN INTO PAKISTAN

 

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Pakistani Drug Lord Iqbal Baig has set-up shop in Lahore, specifically in the vicinity of Hall and Mall Road, in an area formerly called Lakshmi Mansion. He acquired these properties to build a Shopping Mall under blessing of Shahbaz Sharif, Nawaz Sharif, and Asif Zardari. Iqbal Baig is money laundering, by converting drug money into legitimate cash by buying properties in Lahore. He bought almost whole of Lakshmi Mansion and Hall Road properties. He is a known accomplice of Taliban and is clear and present danger to the global community including the US and Europe. He is the financier of Taliban and funnels money to every terrorist organization through money laundering in legitimate business enterprises. During the PPP government, he stayed under the radar and kept building assets to finance his patrons the Taliban. Pakistan’s ISI and US CIA should look into the activities of this dangerous criminal on par with Pablo Escobar. In 1995, Iqbal Baig, Pakistan’s most notorious drug lords was extradited to the United States, where he was charged with 100 counts of heroin and hashish smuggling. Iqbal Baig and Anwar Khattak were put on a U.S. government plane in 1995 night only hours after his appeals against extradition was turned down by the High Court in Rawalpindi.Baig and Khattak together ran one of Pakistan’s biggest heroin- and hashish-trafficking networks, according to U.S. and Pakistani officials. Both were imprisoned in Pakistan, where they had been convicted of drug smuggling.Baig and Khattak will face 102 counts of smuggling heroin and hashish into the United States. The trials are likely to take place either in Michigan or New York City, where the offenses allegedly occurred, a U.S. official said. Pakistan has been cooperating with the United States since 1993, when the Americans gave Pakistan a list of 17 suspected drug barons it wanted extradited. Seven were extradited in 1993; most others are in custody in Pakistan. 

 
 
 

HEROIN SCOURGES MILLION PAKISTANIS

By JOHN F. BURNS
Published: April 05, 1995
 

In lucid moments, Mohammed Ilyas has happy memories of life as a fisherman on one of Karachi’s deep-sea shark boats. But that was 10 years ago, before Mr. Ilyas began smoking the low-grade heroin he knows as “brown sugar,” and before home became a threadbare blanket tacked to a grimy Karachi wall as a windbreak.

Now, Mr. Ilyas’s addiction brings him to the same lonely spot each night, with a sliver of silver paper to hold the heroin bought with a day’s panhandling in the docks, and a lighted taper to heat the powder into the vapors he inhales. On either side, fellow addicts crouch in their own pitiful isolation, ignored by the police and passers-by.

“What can I do, sir?” Mr. Ilyas asked on a recent evening, between pulls on the tube of rolled paper he uses as a pipe. “I would like to do something. I would like to be back with my family. But the brown sugar tastes too good.”

For Mr. Ilyas, who is 25, and 1.5 million other heroin addicts in Pakistan, there is little to prevent a slide that often leads to a lonely death. In a country of 120 million people, most of them poor and illiterate, heroin addicts are left mostly to fend for themselves. There is little in the way of help, and not much ceremony in the morning sweeps by private charities that carry wasted addicts’ bodies to the morgue.

The tragedy for Pakistan set in much deeper 15 years ago, when Afghan warlords, thrown into turmoil by the Soviet military intervention in their country, stepped up the growing of opium poppies as other forms of commerce collapsed. The product, as opium gum, traveled down old trade routes into the deserts and mountains along Afghanistan’s border, where Pakistani frontiersmen, who grow tons of opium themselves, took the gum and ran it through refineries, producing the cheap “brown sugar” smoked by Mr. Ilyas, as well as heroin in its purer, more lucrative forms.

Over the years, as ever larger quantities of the narcotic began flowing into Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar and other cities, the drug ate its way into the fiber of Pakistan. Political life was corrupted, to the point that one of the country’s most notorious drug barons, Ayub Afridi, sat as an elected member of Parliament from 1988 to 1990, dropping out only when an ordinance was passed barring any known drug trafficker from running in an election.

Drug barons have continued to exercise a pervasive political influence, discouraging decisive government action against them.

What’s more, the backwash from the Afghan conflict has brought a flow of weapons into Pakistan, creating a nexus between the drug barons and new generation of heavily armed gangs. In Karachi mainly, but also in other cities, these gangs have established a terror that is overwhelming the local authorities.

Along with Afghanistan, and to a much smaller extent India, Pakistan has become one of the world’s leading producers of heroin — and by some estimates, a larger producer now than the Golden Triangle countries of Southeast Asia.

With growing anxiety, Western nations, including the United States, have been looking at Pakistan in the way they have long looked at countries like Colombia and Thailand — as a place where narcotics trafficking, left to run rampant, has become a danger not only to the country itself but also to much of the world.

Pakistani leaders have made no secret of their belief that drug money was in some way linked to the March 8 attack that killed two Americans working at the United States Consulate in Karachi, and to the terrorist underground that supported Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, a 27-year-old fugitive and suspected mastermind of the World Trade Center bombing in New York in 1993. Mr. Yousef was arrested in Islamabad, the Pakistani capital, in February.

These links are likely to be discussed when Pakistan’s Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, arrives in the United States on April 5. For five years, the main stumbling block to improved ties has been Pakistan’s persistence with a covert program to develop nuclear weapons. But on this visit, Pakistan’s Prime Minister may find American leaders at least as concerned about Pakistan’s role as a center for drugs and terrorism.

When she recently met with American reporters in Islamabad, Ms. Bhutto offered a stark picture of Pakistan as a society where torrents of drugs and weapons have combined to undermine the basis for a civil society.

“We are a clean Government,” she said. “For the first time in our history, we are going to take action against drug barons, militants and terrorists.”

Western embassies that have pressed for years for a narcotics crackdown were encouraged three months ago when the Government froze $70 million in assets belonging to seven leading Pakistani drug lords, and took steps, for the first time in Pakistan, to curb money laundering by drug bosses. The Government also announced the biggest raid on a narcotics laboratory in North-West Frontier Province, site of many of the heroin refineries, seizing 132 tons of hashish and nearly half a ton of heroin.

Ms. Bhutto also promised to speed up action by Pakistani courts on United States requests for the extradition of six drug lords held in Pakistan, and for the arrest and extradition of two others, including Mr. Afridi, the former legislator.

Maj. Gen. Salahuddin Termizi, the country’s anti-drug chief, has won the confidence of Western narcotics experts. But few with experience in combatting the drug world in Pakistan are ready to congratulate Ms. Bhutto just yet.

[ In a crackdown on the eve of the Bhutto trip, two suspected drug barons, Mirza Iqbal Baig and Anwar Khattak, were flown to the United States on April 3. The extraditions were cited by General Termizi as further proof of Pakistan’s commitment to rolling back booming drug production and trafficking. General Termizi said on April 4 that Pakistan had smashed the bulk of its heroin factories and arrested all but 2 of 12 leading drug barons. ]

Top army officers have been accused in the past of conniving with the drug lords, to the extent of running heroin shipments to Karachi aboard army-owned trucks.

And even if Pakistan were to live up to all of Ms. Bhutto’s promises, it would not tackle what has always been the core of the heroin problem: Afghanistan’s role as a secure hinterland for the traffickers. Years of efforts and millions of dollars have been spent by Western governments in an effort to persuade Afghan warlords to stop growing poppies and plant other crops, but poppy acreage has increased every year.

United States officials who have seen the blaze of white, red and pink poppies that cover much of Afghanistan each spring argue that little will be achieved until Washington shifts its spending priorities. The officials say spending $80 million of the State Department’s anti-narcotics budget on efforts to combat cocaine production in South America, and barely a tenth as much on all of Asia and Africa, means that efforts against heroin have to take a back seat.

Currently, the closest thing to a United States Government anti-narcotics program in Afghanistan is a $100,000 grant to Mercy Corps, an American volunteer agency that is trying to persuade communities in a small part of Helmand Province to substitute other cash crops for poppy-growing. Narcotics experts say that their work is hampered because Washington has no embassy in Kabul, the Afghan capital, and that the Clinton Administration has played virtually no part in efforts to negotiate peace between Afghan factions that have been fighting a civil war since Soviet troops withdrew.

When Mrs. Bhutto meets President Clinton, she seems likely to argue for an American responsibility to help Pakistan and Afghanistan deal with their narcotics problems. The argument is that Washington’s decision to channel billions of dollars in weapons and financial backing to the Afghan rebel groups in the 1980′s, without close scrutiny of the some of the Afghan leaders involved, contributed to a climate in which some of those leaders turned to heroin trafficking.

“We have been getting a bad name, and it is clear that our activity needs to be geared up,” Brig. Gen. Mohammed Aslam, deputy director of the new anti-narcotics force, said at his office in Rawalpindi.

But the general smiled when he was asked what part of the blame he attributed to the United States.

“I will only say this,” he said. “I believe that we in Pakistan are doing what we can to undo our part of the crime.”

Reference: http://www.nytimes.com/1995/04/05/world/heroin-scourges-million-pakistanis.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm

PAKISTAN EXTRADITES DRUG SUSPECTS TO U.S. : CRIME: TURNING OVER ALLEGED KINGPINS IS LATEST MOVE BY ISLAMABAD THAT PLEASES AMERICAN OFFICIALS.

April 04, 1995|JOHN-THOR DAHLBURG | TIMES STAFF WRITER

NEW DELHI — Two days before Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto leaves for a U.S. visit, her government handed over two alleged heroin kingpins to the United States and a court opened the way for more quick extraditions.

Haji Mirza Mohammed Iqbal Baig, once reputedly the head of Pakistan’s largest drug syndicate, and his lieutenant, Mohammed Anwar Khattak, were flown to the United States on Sunday night aboard an American aircraft, said officials at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, the capital. The two Pakistanis’ names appear in more than 100 U.S. narcotics cases.

“There is a lot of evidence that these guys are big-time heroin dealers. We’re happy to bring them to justice,” a U.S. drug official in Islamabad said.

In Washington, Justice Department officials said the men were due to arrive Monday night in Hawaii and will be flown to Travis Air Force Base in Northern California’s Solano County before being transferred to New York for arraignment.

Baig and Khattak are wanted on various federal charges, including conspiracy to smuggle heroin into the United States. They had already been convicted by a Pakistani court in the 1985 seizure of more than 17 tons of hashish in the southwestern province of Baluchistan.

The drug dealers’ extradition, which the Clinton Administration had sought since 1993, is the latest of several tough-on-crime measures by Bhutto’s government that–by design or not–have especially pleased the United States.

On Feb. 7, Pakistani and U.S. agents joined forces in Islamabad to arrest Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, the alleged mastermind of the World Trade Center bombing. He was flown to New York to stand trial.

Such actions will undoubtedly be cited by Bhutto, who leaves for the United States today, as proof of her determination to do her part in combatting the global narcotics trade and Islamic terrorism, two major U.S. security concerns.

Next Tuesday, Bhutto is scheduled to meet President Clinton at the White House. She has been seeking more U.S. help–including the lifting of a law that has barred most American aid to Pakistan since October, 1990, because of the Asian country’s nuclear weapons program.

Late last year, U.S. drug czar Lee P. Brown warned Bhutto that Pakistan could lose badly needed World Bank and International Monetary Fund loans unless the country, the world’s No. 3 opium producer, did more to stem narcotics production and trafficking.

*

U.S. drug officials have praised what has happened since. On March 23, more than 2,000 paramilitary troops staged an unprecedented drug raid in the remote, lawless Khyber region bordering Afghanistan. They seized 6.3 tons of highly refined heroin, as much as Pakistan normally confiscates in a year.

Baig and Khattak had been served notice earlier this year that they could be extradited to the United States. Pakistan’s law allows citizens in such a position to file a petition in court opposing extradition.

On Sunday, their petitions were rejected and they were quickly put on a plane for the United States.

Special correspondent Jennifer Griffin in Islamabad contributed to this report.

 

 

Drug barons' extradition challenged in SC 
-------------------------------------------------------------------  
*From  Nasir Malik 
 
ISLAMABAD, April 4: The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Wednesday  
about the admissibility ) of three petitions filed by the wives of  
alleged drug lords Mirza Iqbal Baig and Anwar Khattak against the Lahore  
High Court decision that cleared the way for their extradition to the  
United States. 
 
The Lahore High Court on Sunday allowed the extradition of seven drug  
barons, including Baig and Khattak. The two were immediately flown to  
the United States in a US military plane. 
 
Though apparently the petitions will make  little difference for Baig  
and Khattak who have already been sent abroad, they can affect the  
remaining five accused who are in Adiala Jail. 
 
One of the five accused, Nasrullah Hanjera has applied to the Supreme  
Court to grant an order blocking his possible extradition. 
 
Khawaja Haris, lawyer for the accused, has maintained in his petitions  
that the extraditions are in isolation of Section 5 (2) of Extradition  
Act 1972 which bars extradition until an accused has been  acquitted or  
completed a sentence in his own country. 
 
Interior Minister Naseerullah Babar told reporters on Monday that the  
alleged drug barons were handed over to the US authorities after  
completing all legal requirements. 
 
But constitutional experts say the government acted in haste by  
immediately parcelling the two accused thus denying them of their  
constitutional right to appeal before the Supreme Court. They also point  
out that the extradition was also contrary to Article 4 of the  
Extradition Agreement signed between the two countries. 
 
Article 4 says: The extradition shall not take place if the person aimed  
has already been tried, discharged or punished or is still under trial  
in the territories of the high contracting party (applied to in this  
case Pakistan) for the crime or offence for which his extradition is  
demanded. If the person claimed would be under examination or under  
punishment his extradition shall be deferred until the conclusion of the  
trial or the full execution of any punishment awarded to him." 
 
Haris told reporters that Baig and Khattak were still serving their  
five-year jail term awarded to them by a Karachi magistrate. Besides,  
two cases were also pending against them. 
 
For Drug Traffickers, Balochistan a Safe Haven
 
The Nation
 
March 7, 1995
 
Balochistan provides land and sea exist routes to international drug traffickers who operate in this province or in the tribal borderlands of Pakistan and Afghanistan. Owing to the ineffectiveness of governmental control, for drug traffickers to use these exit routes to their best advantage is not so difficult.

 

Balochistan’s Makran Coast along the Indian Ocean is the most active zone for drug smuggling operations, in which Afghan and Pakistani drug barons are allegedly engaged in the trafficking business. Drug traffickers are seemingly scared of operating through Iran, for fear of being hanged by its revolutionary authorities. Otherwise, Iran would have provided them a relatively easier road access to Turkey and then to Europe, the final destination for drugs.

Here comes the strategic importance of the Makran coastal range for drug traffickers. To some extent, the port of Karachi also acts as a drug trafficking exit point, in the wake of the current lawlessness in Pakistan’s financial centre. Khyber Pass and Vash crossing point at the Kandahar-Balochistan border remain the two normal road passages for drug traffickers, stationed in Afghanistan and bringing purified drugs from there to the southern coast of Balochistan.

Even otherwise, much of the Durand Line remains open for any sort of smuggling. Among other means of road transportations, trucks are frequently used to traffic drug. On these, the agents of drug barons travel hundreds of miles—and often without any fear, since their safely is assured allegedly by the government officials, including those belonging to Anti-Narcotics Task Force (ANTF), Customs and Police departments, and the border security forces.

In some instance, state agencies are also helpless. For instance, the encounters between drug traffickers and jawans of the Frontier Corps (FC), patrolling along Balochistan’s borders with Kandahar, take place routinely. Many a times, the druglords of Afghanistan have kidnapped FC personnel men and taken them inside Afghanistan as hostages. They are released only after these barons are assured of “safe passage.”

Much of the poppy which after purification takes the shape of heroin and other drugs is still being grown in the war-ravaged Afghanistan. The rise of Taliban in southern Afghanistan has not made much of difference in the country’s poppy production capacity. In Helmand, for instance, the poppy cultivation remains as popular a profession as before.

The last of the drug processing factories in Balochistan were destroyed in December 1990, following a bloody skirmish between the FC and Notezai tribal forces. Such units, however, still exist reportedly in other parts of the lawless tribal areas. It is in the war-ravaged Afghanistan that heroin and other drugs are principally processed and produced. The drug barons are said to be benefiting the most form the prevailing anarchy in Afghanistan.

The operational ineffectiveness, willful collusion or helplessness of other state agencies aside, even ANTF has so far failed to make headway in checking the growing drug trafficking in the country. As a part of the Pakistan Narcotics Control Board (PNCB), the ANTF was created by the caretaker government of Moeen Qureshi in October 1993. The other three steps which the government had taken for the purpose were: the issuing of the Dangerous Drugs (Arms) Ordinance, 1993, under which drug traffickers can be hanged after being declared guilty of crime by the court of law; the extradition of five Pakistani drug traffickers to the United States who were facing drug charges in various US courts and, finally, the appointment of Maj Gen Salahuddin Trimzi as head of the PNCB and the ANTF.

One particular incident depicting the PNCB-ANTF failure—rather, ineffectiveness—was the arrest and, then, sudden release of Shorang Khan by the Crime Investigation Agency (CIA) in Karachi in June 1994. Known as the king of heroin in Karachi, Shorang Khan is of Afghan origin a familiar name as far as Balochistan’s Chamman district. Despite protests by Gen. Trimzi, the CIA released him.

In terms of the powers vested in it, ANTF can override the authority of any other state security agencies in its anti-drug trafficking operations. It can employ the Army commandos during the operations. The Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate assists it in tracing the international connections of drug traffickers based in Pakistan. For the purpose, ANTF can also receive information from the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and Interpol.

In recent years, even some arrested or convicted drug barons in the Frontier province escaped from prison. In November 1994, three drug traffickers, two Afghans and one Pakistani, escaped from Peshawar jail. They were to be extradited to the US. In October 1993, Ammanullah Kundi, related to a former Federal Minister, escaped from his hospital confinement in Dera Ismail Khan. He was serving seven years in jail, after the court had proven him guilty of smuggling heroin to Germany. He also feared extradition. No one has been aware of his whereabouts since his escape.

Five of them—including Salim Malik, Khalid Khan, Taweez Khan, Shahid Hafeez Khawaja and Mishal Khan—were extradited by the former caretaker government. The sixth one, Muhammad Azam, was extradited in 1994 by the Benazir Bhutto government.Similarly, Haji Ayub Afridi who allegedly runs a drug empire from his stronghold in the Khyber Agency is still at large. In 1994, the tribal jirga freed him from all the charges leveled against him by Pakistani government and American courts. Like Shorang of Karachi and the Notezais of Chaghai, he is on the government’s Most Wanted list of drug traffickers. The United States had demanded the extradition from Pakistan of some 20 traffickers.

Many of the arrests of persons already extradited to the US or to be extradited were made following the joint PNCB-FC action against the Notezais in October and December 1990. For instance, those among the Notezais arrested following the action, confessed the names of their copartners such as Salim Malik (already extradited), Anwar Khattak and Mirza Iqbal Baig (facing extradition).

BALOCHISTAN SARDARS/FORMER MINISTERS AND BLA INVOLVED IN HEROIN SMUGGLING FROM PAKISTAN

 

A major obstacle to combating drug trafficking is the political clout of drug barons in provincial and central governments. Additionally, the continuing tribal warfare in Balochistan—between Hamidzais and Ghaibezais, Bugtis and Kalpars, Raisanis and Rinds. The government of formerChief Minister Zulfiqar Magsi was considered to be very weak—a loose coalition, with majority of parliamentarians out of a total of 43, elected as independents. Magsi himself does not have any political

association.

And in the police station of Jhal Magsi, the seat of his tribe, some 300 miles south west from Quetta, in an FIR registered against him by his uncle Sardar Yousaf Ali Khan Magsi, the Balochistan Chief Minister is accused of committing multiple murders, with court decision on the issue still pending. With such circumstances prevailing in Balochistan, which are nothing less than anarchic, the trans-national drug traffickers, based in this province or elsewhere, are having a field day.

 

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FOCUS ON SHINING DAUGHTER OF PAKISTAN: HUMAIRA BACHAL

Struggling from age six, 24-year-old Bachal finally catches up with her dreams

 
Published: July 14, 2013
 

Pop singer Madonna with activist Humaira Bachal and filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid.

PHOTO: MADONNA FACEBOOK PAGE

KARACHI: 

In the densely populated cluster of houses in Baldia Town’s slum settlement of Mawach Goth, residents believe that a young woman in her early 20s has the potential to pave the way for their future.

In this neighbourhood, where education was deemed worthless merely a decade ago, now stands a one-storey building in Bohri Muhalla, where over 1,200 children, receive formal and vocational education by 25 volunteers in 11 spacious rooms.

The school is named Dream Model Street School and residents of the neighbourhood know only one face behind the change – 24-year-old Humaira Bachal – whose incessant efforts, spanning over a period of 12 years, they have witnessed, opposed but ultimately welcomed.

A long journey

Bachal’s journey started back in 2001, when she was merely a grade six student. Along with her sister and three friends, she took up teaching the neighbourhood children at her house on her own expense. At that time, her higher education was at stake in the face of stiff resistance from the elders of the family, whom she grew up with in the feudal setting of Tando Hafiz Shah in Thatta district. Bachal’s father moved with his family to Karachi and settled in Mawach Goth but could hardly break free from his family traditions.

Humaira Bachal, 24, has finally succeeded in opening up Dream Model School in Mawach Goth. She had been pursuing this dream for the past six years. The school is open to both girls and boys. PHOTO: ATHAR KHAN/EXPRESS

Mawach Goth comprises different communities, who cumulatively shaped a culture, which Bachal believed was not any different from that of rural Sindh. “Going out for girls even for the purpose of education was considered a taboo. The lone public school in the locality was not functioning as parents did not want to spend money on even educating the boys.”

In this setting, she mustered the courage to take responsibility of the education of other girls. An incident that cemented her determination was when she witnessed the tragic death of her cousin’s eight-month-old son. “The child turned blue one day and everybody believed the mother had killed him,” she recalled. “She had given the child an anti-fever syrup which expired around two years ago as she could not read.”

By the time Bachal got her Matriculation in 2004, she decided to expand her small home-school to a bigger premises. “It was certainly odd for  the elders that a 15-year-old girl was asking them for a place to educate others.”

Finally, they managed to acquire a two-room place at Rs1,000 monthly rent , which they paid for from their pocket money until 2007, when Shirkat Gah- a women’s rights organisation- took notice.

“The school managed to survive due to the books collected from public schools in nearby areas. We also organised door-to-door campaigns to counsel parents,” said Bachal. “On one particular instance, some people got so infuriated that they pelted stones at our school.”

Inspired by the title of a Shirkat Gah documentary, the makeshift school finally got a name in 2009 with Bachal also establishing Dream Foundation Trust through which she intends to focus on 114 similar slum settlements located across Keamari.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 15th, 2013.

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Gen.George Patton’s Speech Before Normandy Landing: Replace the Word America with Pakistan

PATTON’S ADDRESS TO THE THIRD ARMY, 1944.
(Before the Normandy landings) {replace the word America with Pakistan, and you have it right}!
 

 
Be seated.
No bastard has ever won a war by dying for his country. He’s won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country.
Men, all this stuff you hear about America not wanting to fight, wanting to stay out of the war, is a lot of bullshit. Americans love to fight. All real Americans love the sting and clash of battle. When you were kids, you all admired the champion marble shooter, the fastest runner, the big-league ball players and the toughest boxers. Americans love a winner and will not tolerate a loser. Americans play to win all the time. That’s why Americans have never lost and will never lose a war. The very thought of losing is hateful to Americans. Battle is the most significant competitions in which a man can indulge. It brings out all that is best and it removes all that is base.

You are not all going to die. Only two percent of you right here today would be killed in a major battle. Every man is scared in his first action. If he says he’s not, he’s a goddamn liar. But the real hero is the man who fights even though he’s scared. Some men will get over their fright in a minute under fire, some take an hour, and for some it takes days. But the real man never lets his fear of death overpower his honor, his sense of duty to his country, and his innate manhood.

All through your army career you men have bitched about what you call ‘this chicken-shit drilling.‘ That is all for a purpose—to ensure instant obedience to orders and to create constant alertness. This must be bred into every soldier. I don’t give a fuck for a man who is not always on his toes. But the drilling has made veterans of all you men. You are ready! A man has to be alert all the time if he expects to keep on breathing. If not, some German son-of-a-bitch will sneak up behind him and beat him to death with a sock full of shit. There are four hundred neatly marked graves in Sicily, all because one man went to sleep on the job—but they are German graves, because we caught the bastard asleep before his officer did.

An army is a team. It lives, eats, sleeps, and fights as a team. This individual hero stuff is bullshit. The bilious bastards who write that stuff for the SaturdayEvening Post don’t know any more about real battle than they do about fucking. And we have the best team—we have the finest food and equipment, the best spirit and the best men in the world. Why, by God, I actually pity these poor bastards we’re going up against.

All the real heroes are not storybook combat fighters. Every single man in the army plays a vital role. So don’t ever let up. Don’t ever think that your job is unimportant. What if every truck driver decided that he didn’t like the whine of the shells and turned yellow and jumped headlong into a ditch? That cowardly bastard could say to himself, ‘Hell, they won’t miss me, just one man in thousands.’ What if every man said that? Where in the hell would we be then? No, thank God, Americans don’t say that. Every man does his job. Every man is important. The ordnance men are needed to supply the guns, the quartermaster is needed to bring up the food and clothes for us because where we are going there isn’t a hell of a lot to steal. Every last damn man in the mess hall, even the one who boils the water to keep us from getting the GI shits, has a job to do.

Each man must think not only of himself, but think of his buddy fighting alongside him. We don’t want yellow cowards in the army. They should be killed off like flies. If not, they will go back home after the war, goddamn cowards, and breed more cowards. The brave men will breed more brave men. Kill off the goddamn cowards and we’ll have a nation of brave men.

One of the bravest men I saw in the African campaign was on a telegraph pole in the midst of furious fire while we were moving toward Tunis. I stopped and asked him what the hell he was doing up there. He answered, ‘Fixing the wire, sir.’ ‘Isn’t it a little unhealthy up there right now?’ I asked. ‘Yes sir, but this goddamn wire has got to be fixed.’ I asked, ‘Don’t those planes strafing the road bother you?’ And he answered, ‘No sir, but you sure as hell do.’ Now, there was a real soldier. A real man. A man who devoted all he had to his duty, no matter how great the odds, no matter how seemingly insignificant his duty appeared at the time.

And you should have seen the trucks on the road to Gabès. Those drivers were magnificent. All day and all night they crawled along those son-of-a-bitch roads, never stopping, never deviating from their course with shells bursting all around them. Many of the men drove over 40 consecutive hours. We got through on good old American guts. These were not combat men. But they were soldiers with a job to do. They were part of a team. Without them the fight would have been lost.

Sure, we all want to go home. We want to get this war over with. But you can’t win a war lying down. The quickest way to get it over with is to get the bastards who started it. We want to get the hell over there and clean the goddamn thing up, and then get at those purple-pissing Japs. The quicker they are whipped, the quicker we go home. The shortest way home is through Berlin and Tokyo. So keep moving. And when we get to Berlin, I am personally going to shoot that paper-hanging son-of-a-bitch Hitler.

When a man is lying in a shell hole, if he just stays there all day, a Boche will get him eventually. The hell with that. My men don’t dig foxholes. Foxholes only slow up an offensive. Keep moving. We’ll win this war, but we’ll win it only by fighting and showing the Germans that we’ve got more guts than they have or ever will have. We’re not just going to shoot the bastards, we’re going to rip out their living goddamned guts and use them to grease the treads of our tanks. We’re going to murder those lousy Hun cocksuckers by the bushel-fucking-basket.

Some of you men are wondering whether or not you’ll chicken out under fire. Don’t worry about it. I can assure you that you’ll all do your duty. War is a bloody business, a killing business. The Nazis are the enemy. Wade into them, spill their blood or they will spill yours. Shoot them in the guts. Rip open their belly. When shells are hitting all around you and you wipe the dirt from your face and you realize that it’s not dirt, it’s the blood and gut of what was once your best friend, you’ll know what to do.

I don’t want any messages saying ‘I’m holding my position.’ We’re not holding a goddamned thing. We’re advancing constantly and we’re not interested in holding anything except the enemy’s balls. We’re going to hold him by his balls and we’re going to kick him in the ass; twist his balls and kick the living shit out of him all the time. Our plan of operation is to advance and keep on advancing. We’re going to go through the enemy like shit through a tinhorn.

There will be some complaints that we’re pushing our people too hard. I don’t give a damn about such complaints. I believe that an ounce of sweat will save a gallon of blood. The harder we push, the more Germans we kill. The more Germans we kill, the fewer of our men will be killed. Pushing harder means fewer casualties. I want you all to remember that. My men don’t surrender. I don’t want to hear of any soldier under my command being captured unless he is hit. Even if you are hit, you can still fight. That’s not just bullshit either. I want men like the lieutenant in Libya who, with a Luger against his chest, swept aside the gun with his hand, jerked his helmet off with the other and busted the hell out of the Boche with the helmet. Then he picked up the gun and he killed another German. All this time the man had a bullet through his lung. That’s a man for you!

Don’t forget, you don’t know I’m here at all. No word of that fact is to be mentioned in any letters. The world is not supposed to know what the hell they did with me. I’m not supposed to be commanding this army. I’m not even supposed to be in England. Let the first bastards to find out be the goddamned Germans. Some day, I want them to rise up on their piss-soaked hind legs and howl ‘Ach! It’s the goddamned Third Army and that son-of-a-bitch Patton again!’

Then there’s one thing you men will be able to say when this war is over and you get back home. Thirty years from now when you’re sitting by your fireside with your grandson on your knee and he asks, ‘What did you do in the great World War Two?’ You won’t have to cough and say, ‘Well, your granddaddy shoveled shit in Louisiana.’ No sir, you can look him straight in the eye and say ‘Son, your granddaddy rode with the great Third Army and a son-of-a-goddamned-bitch named George Patton!

All right, you sons of bitches. You know how I feel. I’ll be proud to lead you wonderful guys in battle any time, anywhere. That’s all.

 

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