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Apart from all this the letters section of most newspapers are full of condemnation for Mush and MQM
President Pervez Musharraf has said that uniform has now become his skin and he could not separate himself from it.
In an interview to British news agency Musharraf said that he had assumed the presidential office due to the conditions of the country.
The military had not entered Pakistani politics of its own will but was invited to tend civil administration, replying a question Musharraf said.
The armed forces had consolidated Pakistan but the opposition was now creating negative propaganda against them.
The presence of the army in various institutions was rightful, Musharraf said, adding that 'when politicians do not know how to run the country's affairs then the army has no choice but to just step in and put things right.'
But he stressed his belief in democracy and said he wanted to take the opposition along in decision-making but that it was more interested in staging protest rallies.
Turning to the current judicial crisis over, Musharraf said he would wait for and respect the verdict of the full Supreme Court bench on the matter.
But Musharraf did not answer when asked if he would reinstate the judge if he were vindicated of charges.
http://thenews.com.pk/updates.asp?id=22919
niaz said:I am constantly amused at the political bias of certain posts. What are we talking about; reference against the Chief Justice or removal of Musharraf ??. It appears that a lot care nothing about justice as long Musharraf is toppled.
niaz said:Let us for a moment assume that Chief Justice is an 'angel' wronged by the demon Musharraf. Musharraf has taken a legal step and filed a reference against the Chief Justice. Even the honourable Interceptor would agree that no one is above the law. Why not take let the legal system take its course??. At least wait till a decision comes and if it appears that justices has not been done then take to streets.
niaz said:What has been happening instead is that all political parties have used this heaven sent opportunity to try to bring down the government.
niaz said:Dear Interceptor, obviously you are a peoples party man as evident from your choice of ZAB photograh as your emblem; why do you want to to bring down the government when elections are only a few months away. Do you fear that PPP is not popular enough to win a majority??
niaz said:Please consider the possible scenario in the event Musharraf is ousted at this moment. How will it benefit PPP and Benazir. I maintain that only people that will benefit will be the mullahs and MMA is against every thing PPP stands for. Firstly PPP is liberal in its outlook. Secondly how will Mullah accept a women as Premier once again. What will be the position of current Chief Justice. Is he a PPP man???.
niaz said:I am not greatly fond of Musharraf and believe he is past his 'Shelf Life'. But why not bargain with him to gain power as PPP was doing until recently. Musharraf was openly telling Pakistanis that if you like me then vote for liberal parties. Who are the liberals if not PPP and MQM. Why this rush to de-stabilise the governemnt and cause billions of dollars worth of damage???
niaz said:May be you think that you leaders are so good that every one should stand aside for them. Other people think the same about their leaders. IMO prudence demands that any thing is better than chaos. However, MMA, Muslim League ( N) and even PPP seem to be on a course which implies that they would rather see Pakistan go to the dogs but would not tolerate Musharraf. It happened twice before, in 1968 when Yahya Khan took over and again in 1976 when Zia ul Haq took over. How will that help your favourite Chair Person. Traditionally Army has been allies of the right wing parties which PPP is not but MMA is.
Who says that the wise learn from past mistakes ??.
Terrorists Attack The Court And The Citizens In Orgy Of Bloodletting
Monday May 28, 2007
Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto
In the history of our country, May 12, 2007 will go down as one of the darkest days. On the terrible day, peaceful protestors exercising their constitutional right to freedom of movement were proceeding towards the airport when suspected members of the ruling coalition known as the MQM ambushed them.
According to participants in the rally to receive Chief Justice Ifthikar Chaudhry, suspected MQM terrorists took over the road from Sharae Faisal to Malir. Regrettably, elements of the Police and Rangers reportedly providing cover to the MQM terrorists who were firing to kill and injure PPP and ANP supporters. Those supporters were besieged when four buses and trucks on Karachi's main road Shahrah e Faisal was blocked. Prepositioned terrorists on bridges and elsewhere began firing on them.
The Judiciary needs to identify the terrorist elements and those members of law enforcement who are suspected of colluding with them through a suo moto inquiry. Further to check the veracity of the allegation that this cover was being provided to the terrorists on the directives of an un-elected Advisor of the Chief Minister Sindh.
This was not the first time that a rally was disrupted. Earlier in 2005 when Senator Zardari returned to Pakistan, thousands of people were arrested, baton charged, tear gassed and railways, buses, cars etc stopped or impounded.
No one took notice then. The neglect to take notice then simply emboldened the supporters of state terrorism. Consequently much worse happened on May 12, 2007 when the dogs of death were let loose to shed the blood of innocents in Karachi. That blood now calls out to our collective conscience to demonstrate the will to stop the bedlam or risk terrorists slowly taking over different parts of our country.
It appears that instead of the writ of government providing safety and security to the citizens, different parts of the country have been parcelled out to different mafias, terrorists, thugs and hoodlums by the present regime. The tribal areas have been more or less conceded to the pro Taliban forces while the regime signs a peace treaty with them. In return they take the law into their own hands murdering those who think differently to them while law enforcement is a silent spectator.
In Tank, Bannu and Malakand different groups of terrorists have been conceded territory and intimidate the population taking the law into their own hands. The Police stand by.
Parts of the capital Islamabad has been conceded to the extremists led by the Imam of Lal Masjid. Here, hiding under the name of religion, they grab land, kidnap citizens, including policemen with impunity, patrol the streets intimidating women and threaten barbers, beauticians and those belonging to the entertainment industry while the police once again stand as bystanders.
The Pakistan Peoples Party believes the country has a right to know why the Karachi Police were largely disarmed on May 12, 2007 and on whose orders. Those brutally killed now number forty two. The Judiciary should take suo moto notice to save itself, to save innocents and to save the country. Unless the Higher Judiciary intervenes much worse will happen the next time round. Terrorists are encouraged when the state fails to act against them.
The shocking part of the episode is that even Honourable members of the Higher Judiciary were not spared. It is astonishing to hear that the Corp Commander failed to respond to a court summons on security grounds.
Given the number of men the Corp Commander has under him it is difficult to accept that the army could not have taken him securely to the High Court where the judiciary was trying to come to the assistance of the dead and the dying. The situation was reminiscent of in Dacca before the army operation of 1970 where the Mukhti Bahini took control of the streets and terrorized citizens.
Senior members of the Bar who have served justice for decades were forced to flee and take shelter. Fire was set to a part of the Bar itself. Undoubtedly the constitutional machinery of government irretrievably broke down as outlined under the Constitution.
Democratic governments were overthrow in the past on fallacious grounds of an irretrievable breakdown of the constitutional machinery. However, the grounds now are real for the machinery of government collapsed on May 12, 2007. The Inspector General Police is reported to have told the Judiciary that he was "helpless" to stop the bloodshed and mayhem, which apparently had political cover and collusion.
This raises the very serious spectre of whether the country can afford a government that colludes in murder attempts and refuses to file criminal cases by those who are murdered or victims of murder attempts. Unfortunately this is what is happening with the entire government protecting criminal elements not just on the massive scale of May 12, 2007 but in several incidents even earlier. This proves that unless someone acts there is no one to stop the growing anarchy over which the present regime presides. The only institution that offers some hope while others around collapse is the judiciary. It is therefore the hope of the Nation that the judiciary will act to intervene and save the Nation from terrorism and dictatorship.
Therefore the Pakistan Peoples Party asks the Judiciary to come to the aid of the citizens in accordance with the Constitution and take suo moto notice of the events of May 12, 2007. The least that can be done to restore public confidence following the irretrievable breakdown of the constitutional machinery is to hold a suo moto inquiry into those who colluded or conspired in the murder and arson that stained the streets of Karachi scarlet on one of the blackest days of Pakistan's history.
http://www.paktribune.com/news/index.shtml?179464
NEO said:For Bibi's fans...latest article.
UK paper blames MQM for May 12 carnage
Muttahida Qaumi Movement chief Altaf Hussain is facing the danger of being tried in the UK courts over terrorism charges after the British media declared on Saturday that the MQM is run like the mafia from an office block in London amid accusations that the party had planned (the May 12) carnage which left 42 dead.
This was declared in the findings of an investigative report of The Guardian. The MQM chief refused to meet its reporter when he tried to get his version on all these charges. His refusal strengthened the British media's view that the MQM is run like the mafia and whatever was being said about the party in Pakistan carried a lot of weight.
On the eve of arrival of Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan in London to file cases against the MQM chief, the UK media also splashed his demand that Altaf should face anti-terror charges.
The Daily Telegraph was the first paper to run a four-column front page story against Altaf, headlined, Running Karachi from London. The Guardian had assigned two of its reporters to investigate charges against the MQM and its chief Altaf Hussain. One of them went to Karachi and the other visited the MQM's London office to meet Altaf in his party office. The first reporter visited Altaf's residence in Karachi and found only one telephone operator running the house. The second reporter was shown only certain rooms of the MQM office in London and told that Altaf Bhai was not available to meet him.
According to The Guardian, outside may be Karachi but inside the discreetly guarded room all minds are focused on London. The clock is set to British summer time and a pair of telephones connect to an office 5,000 miles away, from where a controversial leader runs his political empire.
Altaf Hussain leads the Muttahida Qaumi Movement -- a powerful, popular and, critics say, thuggish political force that has a vice-like grip on Karachi. At "Nine Zero", the party headquarters in Karachi, his presence looms large. A giant poster hangs over the entrance and reverential acolytes speak of "Altaf Bhai". But the great leader is missing.
The Guardian writes that for the past 16 years, Altaf has lived in self-imposed exile in the UK, first as an asylum seeker and now as a British citizen. Based in an office block on Edgware High Street in north London he rules by phone, directing his closest lieutenants in long, late-night conversations. But in Pakistan that arrangement has become a matter of controversy -- one about to land at the British government's door.
The Guardian said cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan arrived in London to try to have Altaf prosecuted under British anti-terror laws. Three weeks ago gunmen opened fire on a rally in support of Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, triggering a day of bloodshed that left 42 people dead. Imran -- as well as lawyers, human rights activists and opposition parties -- accuse Altaf of orchestrating the carnage from his sofa in London.
"The whole thing was planned. No British citizen is allowed to sit in London and direct terrorist operations abroad. So why should Altaf Hussain?" said Imran Khan who described the MQM as a fascist movement run by criminals. "If Pakistan has to arrest al-Qaeda operatives, then Britain has an obligation to pick up Altaf," added Imran, who plans to bring a petition to Downing Street. "There's a war on terror going on but here we have Pakistan's No 1 terrorist being given sanctuary by the British government," he said.
The MQM denies the charges, and insists it was the victim and not the perpetrator of May 12. The party says 13 of its own activists were among the dead, and last week it produced a video from May 12 showing apparent supporters of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) firing their guns in the air. "This is a conspiracy against us. Our decision to hold a rally on May 12 may be open to criticism, but we were not involved in armed attacks," said Dr Farooq Sattar, deputy convener of the MQM's Rabita Committee.
But Altaf has little to say. At the MQM's International Secretariat on Edgware High Street -- a red brick office block opposite a supermarket -- a party official said the leader was not available for comment. But he was happy to show the Guardian around the offices, which he confirmed was Altaf's London headquarters, and he vowed to repel any court action by Imran.
The fight is getting personal. Back in Karachi, graffiti slurs against Imran appeared on walls and the MQM-dominated local government has banned him from the city for one month. The report said the MQM was founded in 1984 by Altaf, a former Chicago cab driver, and won broad support among the Mohajirs. The party prided itself on its well-oiled machine and its secular, liberal outlook. But since May 12 the party's aspirations of becoming a national force lie in shreds, and there are worrying echoes of past tactics.
On Tuesday, three Karachi journalists with foreign news agencies found unmarked envelopes containing a single bullet on their car windscreens. Two of them had earlier been denounced as anti-Mohajir by the MQM-linked Muhajir Rabita Council.
The Guardian asks, "Will Mr Hussain ever come home?" At Nine Zero, where beefy young men with baseball caps stand guard, there is little sign. "We do not want him to come back to Karachi; it is too dangerous here," said parliamentarian Faisal Subzwari. But there is always hope. A few doors down Altaf's deserted terraced house is waiting, protected by blast proof metal shutters. For now, though, it has just one occupant -- a 24-hour telephone operator.
http://thenews.com.pk/top_story_detail.asp?Id=8280
Chaudhry Aitzaz Ahsan, lead counsel for the chief justice, told a press conference after being asked to leave Karachi, that in future we may need a visa to enter Karachi. He was not far off the point. A day earlier, MQM MNA Nawab Mirza had told a TV channel that Pakistan is everybody's but Karachi is ours. He claimed that Karachi is the biggest vote-bank of the party and that it would not allow anybody to disturb its number one position in Karachi. A prominent MQM leader has said that the chief justice and his lawyers are welcome to Karachi but the lawyers' rally should be without politicians. We can say that the chief justice and his lawyers have been granted conditional 'visa' to visit Karachi.
http://www.thenews.com.pk/editorial_detail.asp?id=56531