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Archive for category Pakistan-A Nation of Hope

Do not Discourage the Security Forces

                     

Do not Discourage the Security Forces

 

By

 

Sajjad Shaukat

             

          

 

Photo Courtesy:lubpak.com

 

 

nawaz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After accepting the demands of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the present government has decided to release some prisoners of the militant outfit in exchange of those Individuals who were kidnapped by the Taliban. But as part of its double game, the TTP has been employing shrewd tactics in order to distort the image of Pakistan’s intelligence agencies and the security forces through false propaganda. 

 

In this regard, the TTP claims that their families including women and children have been kept hostage by the Armed Forces are not only fake, misleading and baseless, but are also tarnishing the image of these forces.

 

Such propaganda gimmick tends to make an emotional appeal to the people to feel sympathetic and develop a sense of compassion for the TTP. On the other hand, thoughtless statements by political leaders, especially Professor Ibrahim of Jamat-e-Islami (JI), repeating TTP demands regarding women and children create false perceptions.

 

Unfortunately, print media including a report published by the daily, “Nawa-i-Waqt” on March 7, 2014, quoting Information Minister Pervez Rasheed said that Army will have to be included in dialogue process as some important matters, referring to women and children are known only to Army—are totally misleading and confusing. The very idea that Army is holding families of militants as hostages is negative and injurious for Army’s prestige. In fact, militants’ families (women and children) are not with Army.

 

Ignoring the moral codes of journalism, most of the media reporters, analysts and anchors have adopted negative techniques and unscrupulous practices in their coverage and reporting because they have developed the habit of challenging the prestige of sensitive institutions of the state such as Army, ISI and other law-enforcing agencies.

 

Since the Supreme Court of Pakistan took notice of various cases, without grasping realities, some politicians and media persons have manipulated every issue and case like the Memogate case, Mehrangate verdict, NRO case, missing persons’ case, law and order situation in Karachi and Balochistan, undecided military operation in North Waziristan, incident of Malala Yousafzai etc., to malign country’s key security intuitions, and to create a rift between Pak Army and general masses. In this context, the leaders of Jamat-i-Islami and PTI have perennially been criticising the Pak Army and ISI in one way or the other, so as to increase their vote bank by misguiding the common men. While our media anchors and so-called human rights groups also disrepute country’s security agencies by exploit one or the other issue. In these terms, political leaders become unintentional victim—benefiting the external plotters, while some of our media commentators are on the payroll of anti-Pakistan powers.

 

Let us take the example of the missing persons. While anti-Pakistan foreign elements have accelerated their conspiracy against Pakistan to complete their hidden agenda by supporting subversive attacks inside the country through their affiliated militant groups, especially the TTP, but by showing unrealistic approach, Pakistan’s NGOs, human rights organisations and media started a deliberate campaign against country’s law-enforcing agencies, ISI and Pak Army about the disappeared persons.

 

But, fact of the matter is that majority of the missing persons have been killed in bomb blasts, target killings, ethnic and sectarian violence in various places of Pakistan, arranged by the foreign-assisted militant outfits, particularly TTP. In case of Balochistan, everyone knows that Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and another group, Jundollah (God’s soldiers) which have been fighting for secession of the province gets logistic support anti-Pakistan secret agencies.  These terrorists abducted and killed many innocent people and the security personnel in the province, while claiming responsibility in this respect. And since 2001, a majority of Pakistanis also left for Afghanistan for Jehad purposes, without informing their families, while many people joined the Jahadi groups.

 

On the one side, Pakistan’s Armed Forces are engaged in tribal areas, and the Rangers in Karachi. These security forces are coping with the external-backed terrorists, on the other, due to the pre-information of the ISI; Pakistan’s law-enforcing agencies have thwarted many terror attempts of the insurgents through pre-arrests, discovery of weapons and huge explosive material, suicide jackets etc.

 

It is owing to a wave of ‘pessimistic emotionalism’ instigated by the negative media criticism, pseudo-intellectuals and political activists—stereotypes and prejudices have been created by them against the Armed Forces in such a way that the people should set aside innumerable services and sacrifices of the armed forces, as noted in relation to the Swat and Malakand military operations—resettlement of the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), floods, desilting of canals (Bhal Safai)—particularly during the Earthquake of 2005, entailing restoration of law and order on many occasions. In the recent past, armed forces were in the frontline for people-salvage from areas of earthquake which hit Balochistan. Since the independence of Pakistan, military personnel saved the countless helpless people by sacrificing their own lives.

 

It is mentionable that during the previous regime of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, when WAPDA was going to be bankrupted, he had invited the army to manage its affairs. By collecting the electricity bills impartially, even from the influential persons, army’s personnel had saved WAPDA from bankruptcy.

 

It is notable that during the recent flood in Balochistan, the emotional episodes and heart-shaking stories, covering tragic scenes of rescue missions undertaken by troops of Pak Army are still haunting us all.

 

Similarly, everyone knows that drought in Tharparkar in Sindh, which was going on for the last three years, has been worsened recently to a dangerous level, raising the death toll of starving children. It has adequately exposed the real worth of the rulers, uncovering their verbal assertions to reach the poor masses in order to save their lives. But Pak Army quickly reached out to victims of the famine with rations, medicines and clothes. Teams of dedicated doctors and specialists established camped in the deserts and offered quality services to save lives.

 

Besides, army is called in aid of civil power to conduct counter-insurgency operations and maintain order. And countless nation-building projects undertaken by the armed forces speak of their commitment and devotion towards national cause and sense of duty. Soldiers have done great service in the uplift of people of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa, Balochistan, Gigit-Baltistan, and other far-flung areas of Pakistan by completing development works well in time. They deserve appreciation for all these good deeds.

 

As regards deliberate criticism, it is easier to engage in a censure and a disparaging discussion, while sitting in a cool-air-conditioned environment away from operational areas where bullet, bombs, rockets, suicidal attacks and terrorists dictate the rules of business. But actual participation in such operations demands strong mettle. Our soldiers can face the enemy under adverse environment, but they cannot digest the comments directed against them by their own media anchors, writers and politicians.

 

However, TTP’s emotional appeal about their women and children is, in fact, part of propaganda techniques, designed to gain sympathies and develop a sense of compassion for the militants by damaging the prestige of Armed Forces.

 

Print media must maintain a positive approach in defending own Armed Forces. Their media reports must not dispute the reputation of Pak Army.

 

Media must realize that quoting Information Minister in publishing incorrect and skewed reports may create sensation, but it will be at the cost prestige and image of Pak Army. At the same time, it also glorifies the cause of the militants, particular of the TTP, who are involved in criminal acts of violence under the pretext of peace dialogue.

 

To counter such propaganda, one needs additional media efforts with supporting themes that there is no truth in such propaganda, particularly in wake of peace talks between the government and the TTP.

 

So, instead of discouraging our security forces like Armed Forces, ISI and law-enforcing agencies through false propaganda, our media and other similar entities must encourage these soldiers including security personnel who are actively engaged in fighting the war against terrorism. Media must itself realize and also provide true information to the general masses. Their anchors and commentators must indicate that while facing the enemy along borders, our soldiers are committed in counter-insurgency operations, fighting the menace of terrorism—and engaged in rescue missions like flood relief and earthquake-salvage duties. Thus, they are doing a great service to the nation. They deserve admiration and the nation must not hesitate in boosting their morale by encouraging them. In this respect, positive media projections will enable the armed forces to maintain their real potential and deliver at an opportune time. Otherwise, negative criticism will help the enemy to achieve its goals of demoralizing our armed forces and reducing the combat efficiency of the soldiers.

 

Email: [email protected]

 

 

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COMMENTS: PAKISTANIS LIVID WITH ANGER WITH KHAJA ASIF, A PAKISTANI KASHMIRI BIRADARI GHADAAR

GHADAAR SHOWCASE

 

 

CORRUPT  DEFENSE MINISTER OF INDIA

 


                        Khaja Sira Asif 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
The descendant of MIR JAFFAR of Bhopal. 


 
RIDICULES PAKISTAN ARMED FORCES ONLY FOR BEING LOYAL TO THEIR COUNTRY,
JUST FORGETTING SACRIFICES MADE BY OUR FORCES FOR THEIR HOMELAND.
 
                    SHAME ON YOU KHAJA

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Nawaz Sharif vs Army : Is it a déjà vu moment for Pakistan?

Nawaz Sharif vs Army : Is it a déjà vu moment for Pakistan?

Islamabad : Pakistan | Apr 08, 2014 at 3:16 AM PDT

 H. Saqib 
H. Saqib is based in Rāwalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan, and is a Reporter for Allvoices.

 

Courtesy: Banner from Siasat

In Pakistan, history is repeating itself again. It’s a déjà vu moment and the Pakistanis are watching the unfolding events with their fingers crossed.Whatever is happening proves one cardinal rule i.e. mediocre leadership, with focus on personal vendetta and narrow political interests, cannot grow. Only yesterday, a journalist predicted that Nawaz Sharif was planning to make Jehangir Karamat out of his hand-picked army chief, Gen Raheel Sharif.

 

Jehangir Karamat was the army chief when power-drunk Nawaz Sharif, encouraged by cronies and close relatives, sacked him for no reason. He wanted to demonstrate, in Lahori-Kashmiri style, his contempt for the most power institution of the State, an institution which made the mistake of making a politician out of him. He then appointed Musharraf and when the latter was in the middle of his tenure, and his home-bound international flight, Sharif struck again and dismissed him. The rest is history.

 

Not only army chiefs, Sharif has a history of seeking confrontation with other institutions, president and the chief justice, so much so that he had the Supreme Court attacked and vandalized in 1997 to deal with a top judge who was adamant at prosecuting him for contempt. The judge had to go as did the president who felt humiliated.

 

When Sharif was sworn-in as a third-time prime minister, people genuinely expected that after having spent fourteen years in political wilderness, he would have attained maturity and would demonstrate some semblance of statesmanship. He proved everyone wrong and with less than a year in office, he started daring the armed forces through different means, and through more mediocre political nobodies. He unilaterally decided to enter into dialogue with terrorists who have blood of 70,000 Pakistanis on their hands. He gave them concessions; the most disgusting of these was surrendering the sovereignty of the State and giving them their much desired recognition of a stakeholder of peace in Pakistan. He ordered unilateral release of hardened terrorists and has promised to release more.

 

As if this was not enough, he initiated legal proceedings against Musharraf to get even with him at the moment when his government had utterly failed to deal with terrorist attacks on the eve of Aashura. Apart from the fact that Musharraf trial is selective, smacks vendetta and has become laughable, his team started bashing army; an army which is at war. Those laying down their lives for the defense of the country were upset and apprehensive at all these moves. They were genuinely fearful that at the time when they are offering supreme sacrifices, their prime minister was busy stabbing them in the back. It was at this moment that army chief had to pacify his soldiers saying army would protect its honor and prestige at all costs.

 

Was this a veiled warning? Will Sharif do some damage control or will he repeat what he has already been doing? A part of the media is busy creating further misunderstanding between him and army and painting Gen Raheel as a villain. The very same media is already busy in army-bashing on one pretext or the other.

For Pakistanis, it’s a déjà vu moment again

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A Capital with worrying sounds, whispered clamour, buzzing rumours

A Capital with worrying sounds, whispered clamour, buzzing rumours

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ISLAMABAD: This capital city is buzzing with all kinds of news, rumours, speculation, wild conspiracy theories, whispered warnings, big boasts, all at the same time. In all drawing rooms and cool lawns and terraces of the palatial homes spread inside the city, Chak Shahzad, Bani Gala and all the way to Murree, curious news and info hunters are gathering every night to update on what is happening and what may happen, on a day-to-day basis.
 
Arriving here after almost a year and for the first time since the Nawaz government came in, the timing could not have been better for a newsman who is desperate to have the feel and pulse of the power corridors; how confident are the rulers; how comfortable are the others; what plans are being made; what attacks and counter attacks may be possible. 
 
The first impression is that the media it seems has become a focal point and I was almost frightened to realise that some of us are almost behaving or have even become power players.
 
The day I arrived there was a marriage party in the hotel I was staying in and when I came down in the lobby, almost every body who is any body in the country was rushing to attend. I met so many old friends and acquaintances in one hour that may not have been possible in weeks. The army chief, chairman joint chiefs of staff, ISI chief, several ex-ISI chiefs, at least three ex-prime ministers, many ex-CMs, scores of ministers from all parties, politicians, businessmen and bureaucrats of the highest level, allwere there. I only missed Mian Nawaz Sharif, some of his high profile leaders and Imran Khan.
 
But what frightened me more was that the issues grabbing attention of all were not what Pakistan needs to focus at this critical environment, both internal/regional and international.For instance the Musharraf case took the most time. The buzz I heard from the military side was that a script had been written after a well-thought-out plan and that included the admission of Mama Musharraf in a Sharjah hospital. 
 
Since the khakis were feeling embarrassed with the unfortunate transformation of their prized hospital into a 5-star hotel for just one guest and the growing unrest in the rank and file about Mushy’s fate, the chief in Pindi had taken upon himself that he will “handle the matter”. The script included details to the last point, what would happen and where, and all sides, repeat all sides were on board. Everything went as planned but someone blinked at the fag end when the matter would have ended as everyone had agreed. It caused a lot of nervousness.
 
Hawks on both sides took over and while the khakis showed their concerns by asking for urgent consultations with the PM and flew to the PM house in a chopper with some commanders, the PML side took to the media and blasted Mush. A grim tug-of-war continued with positions getting stiff by the hour. The ultimate confirmation of the psy-games came just a day later when Mush was slipped out of the AFIC in the early hours of the new day, without even the local police being informed. 
 
Someone had taken the decision to carry out the shift on his own authority. A symbolic explosion also took place after the event, may be just as a reminder. In an unprecedented move Mush’s farmhouse was declared as a sub-hospital, sort of a sub-jail under army control.
 
The Musharraf saga is a work in progress and both issues of principle and egos are driving the events. Government leaders concede that Mian Sahib is the biggest hawk and is not in a mood to compromise. That is seen by many as an ego issue. But the other side and many think tank type, retired and even serving, people think it is more important and getting serious by the day, rather by the hour. 
 
One four-star ex-bureaucrat, who says he had predicted four previous coup d’etats by the army, smells somewhat familiar fumes. A four-star ex-khaki thinks the episode of General Jahangir Karamat could be repeated if things are not controlled at this stage. “A chief with diminished respect in his cadres and ranks will find it hard to fight the real enemies within and outside,” he argues.
 
Even friendly countries have quietly suggested to Islamabad that this issue should be “handled with care”. “I know that Saudi Arabia, UAE, China, US and even Turkey’s Erdogan have given their sincere advice on this issue,” the four-star revealed. He even stated that Erdogan cautioned Mian Nawaz Sharif not to follow the Turkish example, as Pakistan was not yet ready for that experiment. 
 
A US diplomat had to break up a juicy dinner with a minister suddenly to inform his government that Mush had been stopped from going away. It was such a key development for him, meaning that Washington too was expecting something different.
 
Leaving Musharraf aside, what bothers me more is the apparent insensitivity to the growing threats all around the country which need some sane, experienced to the hilt people to sit and plan for the loaded freight trains that are heading towards us from all sides.
 
A top bureaucrat of the Track-2 type explained that Afghanistan is a big question mark and Pakistani political leadership and the army have to be on the same page with well thought out plans and strategies to meet any situation.
 Iran he said had warned us on problems they were facing from our side.


 India was moving into the Modi mode, which means more use of muscle and hustle. “Please don’t invite Modi if he wins on his first day,” the expert advised the Sharif government. “We embarrassed ourselves enough with invitations to Manmohan Singh who would never have come anyway.”
 
But another expert in foreign relations who was watching the trilateral meeting between US, China and Pakistan on Afghanistan, held in China recently, gave a very grave picture. He said China had asked Pakistan to clear its uncontrolled areas from the elements and fighters who were attacking China. “Unless this is done, all these big talks of North-South corridors, motorways, dams and what not, will never materialise. The Chinese are damn serious about this,” the diplomat said.
 
Likewise, he said, the 12-member US team, (including top State Department oldies and current guys and diplomats who have stayed in Pakistan) in the China Track-2 talks and the Chinese Foreign Ministry-sponsored team pressed on Pakistan that India will have to be an actor on the Afghan stage. The Iranians have to be handled properly. The Qatar-Saudi infighting requires men who know how to duck such flying arrows.
 
So when I look at the team handling these very grave matters of national and security consequences for the country it gives me shudders. The way the defence minister of the country speaks for hours about a retired and fallen general may be good politics for him and his party, but I never heard him talk about the scenario developing in Afghanistan, Iran, China, India and in places where Pakistan’s defence faces serious challenges. In fact we have no fulltime defence minister.
 
Likewise the foreign ministry people are fighting their turf wars, three are visible, instead of focusing on what should be the short, medium and long-term strategy. Some baboos may be doing the homework quietly but that may be all.
 
When I put this serious question to a four-star expert in military matters and whether his side was prepared for all these grave challenges, his responses were also depressing. “Our new leadership also has to learn a lot as there may be lack of experience in these matters of international relations, strategic thinking and forward looking visions.”
 
“The problem is that those who have experience and know-how and who can handle these matters do not have any clout with the government or in the corridors of power,” he said. “Those who have the clout don’t know a thing about these matters.”
 
So the growing gulf between the political and military establishment is a matter of serious concern and God knows who and how this will be handled.
 
One suggestion was that we should immediately have a foreign minister but on top of that we must have a national security adviser who knows the ins and outs of international diplomacy; who can educate the political rulers, talk to world leaders and also calm down the khakis when needed. “Not another Husain Haqqani,” a four-star warned.

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A giant art installation targets predator drone operators

1 Samuel 26:10
As surely as the LORD lives,” he said, “the LORD himself will strike him, or his time will come and he will die, or he will go into battle and perish.

 
A giant art installation targets predator drone operators
 
Inline image 1
 
In military slang, Predator drone operators often refer to kills as ‘bug splats’, since viewing the body through a grainy video image gives the sense of an insect being crushed.
 
To challenge this insensitivity as well as raise awareness of civilian casualties, an artist collective installed a massive portrait facing up in the heavily bombed Khyber Pukhtoonkhwa region of Pakistan, where drone attacks regularly occur. Now, when viewed by a drone camera, what an operator sees on his screen is not an anonymous dot on the landscape, but an innocent child victim’s face.
 
Inline image 2
 
The installation is also designed to be captured by satellites in order to make it a permanent part of the landscape on online mapping sites.
 
The project is a collaboration of artists who made use of the French artist JR’s ‘Inside Out’ movement. Reprieve/Foundation for Fundamental Rights helped launch the effort which has been released with the hashtag #NotABugSplat
 
Inline image 3
Children gather around the installation
 
Inline image 4
Ground view of the gigantic poster of the child victim.
 
 
The child featured in the poster is nameless, but according to FFR, lost both her parents and two young siblings in a drone attack. 
 
The group of artists traveled inside KPK province and, with the assistance of highly enthusiastic locals, unrolled the poster amongst mud huts and farms. It is their hope that this will create empathy and introspection amongst drone operators, and will create dialogue amongst policy makers, eventually leading to decisions that will save innocent lives.
 
 
 
 
 
Drone Art Project Hopes To Make Pilots Think Twice Before They Shoot
 
The Huffington Post  
Apr/07/2014
 
By giving a face to the victims of drone strikes abroad, a powerful new art project is forcing U.S. drone pilots and policy makers to ponder the deadly consequences of one of America’s key counterterrorism programs. Two weeks ago, artists gathered in a rural community of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province to unveil a gigantic portrait of a local child whose parents and siblings were allegedly killed by missiles fired from a U.S. drone.
 
The installation can be seen from the cameras of drones that are known to fly over the region and is called #NotABugSplat, in reference to the slang used by the military for a man killed in a drone strike. This type of dehumanization of war is exactly what the project is trying to rally against. As the artists explain on their website, it is their hope the project “will create empathy and introspection amongst drone operators, and will create dialogue amongst policy makers.”
 
While the visage of a Pakistani child is front and center to the project, the artists behind it have chosen to remain largely faceless, referring to themselves simply as an artist collective in Pakistan and the U.S., who made use of the French artist JR’s Inside Out movement. The exact location of the installation is also unknown, as the media spokesman for the group has previously declined to specify its whereabouts out of concern for the safety of the locals.
 
#NotABugSplat is one of many projects that attempt to raise awareness of what has been a deadly element of President Barack Obama’s light-footprint foreign policy. U.S. drone strikes are believed to have killed over 2,400 people in the past five years. The strikes are an incredibly contentious issue in countries such as Yemen and Pakistan, with protests over the killing of civilians and violation of national sovereignty abound.
 
UPDATE Tuesday April 8: In a statement to The Huffington Post, French artist JR described the #NotABugSplat installation as a “fantastic use of the Inside Out Project.”
 
“For the past 3 years, with Inside Out, people have been using art and their faces to express a statement – we have sent over 200,000 posters in more than 110 countries,” JR said. “In this case the local artists were very courageous and achieved an incredible outcome in order to raise awareness on civilian casualties made by the use of drones in Pakistan. They definitely managed to express a statement in a powerful manner,” he added. 
 

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