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Pakistan can survive latest chaos: analysts

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Pakistan can survive latest chaos: analysts

ISLAMABAD (December 31 2007): Born from chaos and bloodshed, and still steeped in turmoil 60 years on, Pakistan has repeatedly defied predictions that the centre of the world's only nuclear-armed Islamic nation cannot hold.

While Benazir Bhutto's assassination has renewed fears Pakistan will become another failed state with a destiny determined by bombs instead of ballots, analysts say it has been down this road before - and survived. Pakistan is accustomed to seeing its political leaders meet a violent end, to be followed by claims civil war is at hand, and a kind of internal war has been part of the national fabric since its birth in 1947, they say.

Carved out of the rump of the British empire to give Muslims their own homeland with the partition of India, even the nation's founding was soaked in blood, with one million killed during the largest migration in human history.

"Pakistan was constructed as a contradiction, a homeland for Muslims that called itself a secular state. That is something Pakistanis have not come to terms with," said Marie Lall, an expert at British think-tank Chatham House.

"But because there is a problem with the basis for the creation of Pakistan, that does not mean it is destined to be a failed state," she told AFP. Often seen now as little more than a breeding ground for militancy, Pakistan is a complex mass of tribes and peoples where even the all-powerful military has come to believe that setbacks today do not mean failure tomorrow.

The army, rulers of the country for more than half its existence, had to step in almost at the beginning, following a 1948 conflict with India over occupied Kashmir that set off decades of strife.

Since then, Pakistan has lived through war and assassination, turmoil and the "war on terror" - even the loss of East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, in 1971, which is widely seen as the most traumatic moment in its history. "The geo-strategic circumstances, the Cold War, the Afghan jihad, nuclearisation and 9/11 kept feeding the army," said retired general and analyst Talat Masood.

Military dictator Zia-ul Haq's support for the war against the 1979 Soviet occupation of neighbouring Afghanistan emerged as the defining policy of this nation of 160 million people for the following three decades.

The devout Islamic fighters trained by intelligence agencies to battle the Red Army later became the holy warriors fighting for Taliban in Afghanistan, and the al Qaeda militants behind a global jihad. While the remote and lawless tribal areas along the Afghan border are now the focus of an international campaign against that jihad, Pakistan faces other divisions that are internal but no less intense, analysts say.

There is ethnic discord between Punjabis, Sindhis and Pashtuns. Slain opposition leader Benazir was a Sindhi, and her community was up in arms at her murder in the city of Rawalpindi, the heart of the Punjabi-dominated military establishment.

The slogans chanted by her angry supporters in her Sindhi heartland Saturday after her killing seemed to sum up those deep-rooted tensions. "Hate Musharraf!" they cried. "Hate Pakistan!" The country has also seen nationalist uprisings by the Baloch population in the south-west, which have twice been brutally suppressed by the army - the last time in 2006.

"A civil war happens when there are organised groups on two sides working against each other, and we don't see such groups," political analyst Shafqat Mahmood told AFP. "But a failed state is a crisis of governance, and we do have a crisis of governance," he said.

"We are not destined to fail. We are failing because we are not recognising the base of our new nationhood has to be democracy." Masood, the former general, said Pakistan was not close to coming apart, but warned that much would depend on how Musharraf's government investigates Benzir's death, and whether it conducts free and fair elections.

The international community wants answers to those questions, but Chatham House's Lall said foreign meddling - including US pressure to crack down on Islamic militants who are part and parcel of Pakistan - had hurt the country most of all. "Pakistan has never been given the chance to develop its own foreign policy," she said. "That is its biggest problem."

Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]
 
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Of course we will. We have been through tougher times but we made it out.
PAKISTAN ZINDABAD!
 
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We can manage all these crisis and we will.

Although my heart simply cries over the amount of physical, human and monetary damage done in the last 3 days of violence.

May Allah bring this nation a success amen.
 
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InshAllah we will come out of the other side of the tunnel fully ambitious and determined to take steps to make this country a better place to live. :pakistan::pakistan: Bloodshed and violence may be in our blood and call us terrorists, suicide bombers or whatever. Foreigners will also have misunderstanding about us. :pakistan::pakistan::bounce::bounce::yahoo::yahoo:
 
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great article
Like they say what doesn't kill us only makes us stronger we're going throught life lessons pakistan will survive,learn and come out a better country.
 
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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) -- On the day she died, Benazir Bhutto planned to hand over to visiting U.S. lawmakers a report accusing Pakistan's intelligence services of a plot to rig parliamentary elections, sources close to the slain former Pakistani prime minister told CNN Tuesday.


Rep. Patrick Kennedy and Rep. Arlen Specter were scheduled to meet with Bhutto on the day she died.

A top Bhutto aide who helped write the report showed a copy to CNN.

"Where an opposing candidate is strong in an area, they [supporters of President Pervez Musharraf ] have planned to create a conflict at the polling station, even killing people if necessary, to stop polls at least three to four hours," the document says.

The report also accused the government of planning to tamper with ballots and voter lists, intimidate opposition candidates and misuse U.S.-made equipment to monitor communications of opponents.

"Ninety percent of the equipment that the USA gave the government of Pakistan to fight terrorism is being used to monitor and to keep a check on their political opponents," the report says. Watch the controversy surrounding Pakistan elections »

The Pakistani government denied the allegations, with two Pakistani diplomatic sources calling the report "baseless." Rashid Qureshi, a spokesman for Musharraf, called the accusations "ridiculous" and said the election will be "free, fair and transparent."

"I think they are just a pack of lies," he said.

One Bhutto source said the document was compiled at her request and said the information came from sources inside the police and intelligence services.

The election had been scheduled for January 8, but in the wake of Bhutto's assassination, the Election Commission is expected to announce Wednesday that it will delay the vote at least four weeks into February, sources at the commission said.

Sen. Latif Khosa, who helped put the report together, accused the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence of operating a rigging cell from a safe house in the capital, Islamabad. The goal, he said, is to change voting results electronically on election day.

"The ISI has set up a mega-computer system where they can hack any computer in Pakistan and connect with the Election Commission," he said.

Media outlets in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh have run reports alleging that retired Brig. Gen. Ejaz Shah -- formerly an Inter-Services Intelligence officer and now head of the civilian Intelligence Bureau -- is involved in the vote rigging plans.

Shah's name also turned up in a letter Bhutto wrote to Musharraf after the first attempt on her life on October 18, when she returned to Pakistan after eight years in exile, Pakistani media reported. In the letter, the media reported, Shah was one of four Pakistani officials Bhutto named as people who wanted her dead.

The Pakistan government has denied those allegations as well.

Khosa said he could make no link between Bhutto's assassination and the report. Some terrorism experts also said there was no reason to believe Bhutto was killed because of the report, agreeing with Pakistani government contentions that al Qaeda was responsible for her death.

Link:
Sources: Bhutto was to give U.S. lawmakers vote-rigging report - CNN.com

:taz:

Let the Chaos Begin .... US trying harder No?.
 
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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) -- Pakistan's Interior Ministry backtracked Tuesday on its statement that Benazir Bhutto died because she hit her head on a sunroof latch during a shooting and bomb attack.

The two suspects (circled) who the Pakistan government believe were involved in Bhutto's assassination.

Interior Ministry spokesman Javed Iqbal Cheema told CNN the ministry will wait for the findings from forensic investigators before making a conclusion about her cause of death.

Cheema said he based his statement Friday about the sunroof latch "on the initial investigations and the reports by the medical doctors" who treated her at Rawalpindi General Hospital.

"I was just narrating the facts, you know, and nothing less nothing more," Cheema said.

"There's no intention to conceal anything from the people of Pakistan," an Interior Ministry news release said.

The reward offer, which appeared with photographs of the dead suspects, said that "the person identifying these terrorists will be awarded a cash prize of 5 million rupees (about $81,400) and his identity will also be kept confidential" -- a total reward available of 10 million.

"The response from the public has been nil so far," Punjab spokesman Ashfaq Gondal said Tuesday afternoon.

Athar Minallah, a lawyer on the board that manages Rawalpindi General Hospital, told CNN Monday that doctors did not make the statements attributed to them by the government.

The medical report -- obtained by CNN from Minallah -- made no mention of the sunroof latch and listed the cause of death as "Open head injury with depressed skull fracture, leading to Cardiopulmonary arrest." Read Bhutto's full medical report

Pakistan's Interior Ministry said Thursday it was from a bullet or shrapnel wound, but then it announced a day later that Bhutto died from a skull fracture suffered when she fell or ducked into the car as a result of the shots or the explosion and crashed her head into a sunroof latch.

Bhutto's family and political party maintain that the government is lying, and insist she died from gunshot wounds.

Several videos show a gunman firing a pistol toward her just moments before a bomb detonated nearby as she left a rally.

The U-turn on the sunroof claims will only heighten speculation as to the exact cause of Bhutto's death.

Minallah issued an open letter Monday and released the doctors' clinical notes to distance them from the government statement.

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In the letter, Minallah said the doctors "suggested to the officials to perform an autopsy," but that Saud "did not agree." He noted that under the law, police investigators have "exclusive responsibility" in deciding to have an autopsy.

Minallah told CNN that he was speaking out because the doctors at the hospital were "threatened."

"They are government servants who cannot speak; I am not," he said. He did not elaborate on the threats against the doctors.

He said the lack of an autopsy has created "a perception that there is some kind of cover-up, though I might not believe in that theory."

"There is a state within the state, and that state within the state does not want itself to be held accountable," Minallah said.

The three-page medical report, which was signed by seven doctors, described Bhutto's head wound, but it did not conclude what caused it. It noted that X-ray images were made after she was declared dead.

The wound was described as an irregular oval of about 5 centimeters by 3 centimeters above her right ear. "Sharp bones edges were felt in the wound," it read. "No foreign body was felt in the wound."

Rawalpindi's police chief was accused Monday of stopping doctors at the hospital where Bhutto died from conducting an autopsy.

It was a violation of Pakistani criminal law and prevented a medical conclusion about what killed the former prime minister, said Minallah.

However, the police chief involved, Aziz Saud, told CNN that he suggested an autopsy be done -- but that Bhutto's husband objected.

Cheema said the government had no objection to Bhutto's body being exhumed for an autopsy if the family requested it.

Her widower,Asif Ali Zardari, has said the family was against exhumation because it did not trust the government.

Minallah said the family could not have prevented an autopsy at the hospital without getting an order from a judge.

The revelations about the exact cause of Bhutto's death came after new videotape of her assassination emerged, showing her slumping just after gunshots rang out.

The tape provided the clearest view yet of the attack and appeared to show that Bhutto was shot. That would contradict the Pakistan government's account.

A previously released videotape showed a man at the right of her vehicle raising a gun, pointing it toward Bhutto, who was standing in her car with her upper body through the sunroof. He fired three shots, then there was an explosion.

In the video that emerged on Sunday, Bhutto was standing, and her hair and scarf appeared to move, perhaps from the bullet. Bhutto fell into the car, then came the blast. Watch new tape showing apparent gunman »

These images seem to support the theory that Bhutto died at the hands of a shooter before a bomb was detonated, killing another 23 people.

Bhutto's husband, in an interview with CNN's Wolf Blitzer Monday, called for an international investigation into his wife's death, saying the new video proves the Pakistani government "has been trying to muddy the water from the first day." See the likely sequence of events »

"Everything is now very clear that she was shot," Asif Ali Zardari said.

Zardari also called on the U.S. government to push for an international probe. "I want them to help me find out who killed my wife, the mother of my children," he said of the Bush administration.

The reward offer announced: "The public is hereby informed that the two individuals in the above photograph are the accused terrorists involved in the Liaqat Bagh, Rawalpindi Terror Attack, which resulted in the death of the Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto and others." 'Mohtarma' is a title of respect in the Urdu language.


"The person identifying these terrorists will be awarded a cash prize of 5 million rupees (about $81,400) and his identity will also be kept confidential," said Punjab Chief Minister Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi -- a total reward available of 10 million.

"The response from the public has been nil so far," Punjab spokesman Ashfaq Gondal said Tuesday afternoon.


 
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Inshallah we will fight through this and make it through with the grace of Allah !! death to the one's that are trying to destroy our country. I hope its a good year for PAK and for all of us cheers!!!!!!!!
 
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Implying Something ! ;)

Yes.

Apparently, you have not understood the meaning.

It means there is no question of a "can".

Pakistan WILL survive this crisis.

As any other nation, it has the resilience to absorb the crisis!

Are you of the opinion that Pakistan cannot absorb the crisis?

I fail to understand your belligerence/ suspicion about my earlier post where I have been categorical that Pakistan will absorb the crisis!

Or are you implying something? ;)
 
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Yes.

Apparently, you have not understood the meaning.

It means there is no question of a "can".

Pakistan WILL survive this crisis.

As any other nation, it has the resilience to absorb the crisis!

Are you of the opinion that Pakistan cannot absorb the crisis?

I fail to understand your belligerence/ suspicion about my earlier post where I have been categorical that Pakistan will absorb the crisis!

Or are you implying something? ;)

To be suspecious is the requirement of time!

and from India!

Always ! ;)
 
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