Pakistan is a country full of life and prosperity yet it isn't often that
you see individuals or corporations do well for the society. My morning
drive to work is usually the same old monotonous routine with crazy traffic
and the loud sound of the continuous honking. But today my drive to work was
interesting as I continued towards my work place I noticed colorful images
and signs of the new Djuice campaign. For those who don't know what 1 am
talking about, yes it a brand off one of the telecom companies. The visuals
depict a sense that it is time to speak out. As the day went by the
impression that the outdoor campaign kept going through my mind so I decided
to look up the rest of the campaign on YouTube. Where I believe one can find
any and everything. A look at the commercial raised curiosity as to what
Telenor would do next. Is this just another one off social campaign by them?
On YouTube I happened to come by the making of the campaign where i believe
they have shown their brand ambassadors and management giving testimonials
about the step taken by them.

It was surprising to see that unlike their campaign on air their
testimonials seem to shine light on a very different agenda. A European
company talking about a "keera"? What? The campaign focuses on "Khamoshi ka
boycott" which to my understanding may be focused to remove the negatives in
the society whereas the making video suggests that one should come out and
speak their mind or do as they please and not care what anyone thinks. Much
to my dismay in today's world the younger generation has taken being
opinionated and open to another level altogether, we in our youth couldn't
even think of taking such a step as it was more important to respect our
elders and their decisions. The video focuses on a "keera "each one of us
may have, is that not reason enough to raise many eye brows? What was the
management thinking when they made this video? To me it is a politically
motivated decision which they have tried to show subliminally in their
campaign and by showing their focus on social norms they wish people
wouldn't realize what their hidden agenda really is. The timing of the
campaign raises a number of questions as well. In the recent months we have
witnessed the steps taken in the Arab world to try to make a difference, is
the management at Telenor trying to start the same here in Pakistan? Each
one of us knows that we are in a condition where anyone at anytime could get
up and maybe do something stupid with the false pretense that he or she may
be able to make a difference. Scenarios may be similar but the ground
reality here in Pakistan is very different and we must not mislead our
youth. This campaign may entice aggression within the youth especially the
way they have depicted people screaming at the end of their video portrays
aggression & frustration. We as kids were taught that such behavior was not
acceptable and that people who behave as hooligans would be looked down
upon. Another aspect that sparked curiosity was the inclusion of Shehzad Roy
who has openly been speaking against the political scenario in the country.
In his testimonial he mentions he can relate the being of this campaign with
the stance he takes within his music.

In the end 1 would like to ask all who read this article, are we so naive
that we can't see past this subliminally motivated message sent out by the
European company?

--
*Dr. Faryal Rehman*
Islamabad

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Asslam o Alikoujm, Please see a special video made by Media Cell IJT Lahore
on Raymond Davis issue and Protest by Pakistani Nation.
Also Forward the email. Also give your valuable comments.
JazakAllah
 
Youtube Link:
--
Regards:
Ahmad Shaheen
Incharge Media Cell Islami JAMIAT Talaba Lahore.

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Dear Media Colleagues,

 

I am sending you a Press Release on “Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Emergency Rural Road Rehabilitation Project” to be funded by JICA.

 

A loan agreement to this effect was signed today in Tokyo, Japan.  

 

Please see the attachment for the Press release and picture of the event.

 

We request your assistance in its reporting/publication in your esteemed channel/paper/magazine.

 

 

(Press Release)

 

JICA lends another soft loan for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

 

 

Tokyo, February 22: Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) will extend a soft loan worth 14.7 billion Yen (Approx 14.90 billion PKR) to the Government of Pakistan for the “Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Emergency Rural Road Rehabilitation Project”. An ODA Loan agreement to this effect was signed here today at Tokyo between Madam Sadako Ogata, President of JICA and Mr. Sibtain Fazal Halim, Secretary Economic Affairs Division of Pakistan. H.E Asif Ali Zardari, President of Islamic Republic of Pakistan and H.E Noato Kan, Prime Minister of Japan witnessed the signing ceremony. The funds for the project will be released after obtaining the legal opinion of Pakistan’s Federal Ministry of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs. The project will address early restoration from the flood disaster which has brought serious damages throughout the country in the recent months. With another Japanese ODA loan agreement up to 5 billion Yen for “Emergency Import Support Loan”, signed on January 21, 2011, the Japanese ODA loans of total 19.7 billion Yen will be extended to flood disaster restoration activities in Pakistan. Both ODA Loans are extended on soft terms with interest rate of 0.01 percent and repayment period of 40 years including grace period of 10 years.

 

 

In 2010, Pakistan witnessed the worst floods of its history after its birth in 1947. The floods submerged one-fifth of the country, claming 2,060 lives, rendering hundreds of thousand injured and homeless, washed away roads and bridges, destroyed standing crops and resulted in outbreak of deadly diseases inviting immediate attention and response. The Province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa amongst the other provinces of the country faced the colossal damage at the hands of the merciless flood waters. 

 

 

As a leading bilateral donor for Pakistan, JICA participated in the Damage and Needs Assessment (DNA) for the 2010 Pakistan floods, which was led by World Bank and Asian Development Bank. According to the DNA, while the total damages are estimated at more than 10 billion US dollars (around 820 billion yen), the medium and long-term reconstruction cost is estimated at about 8.9 billion US dollars (around 730 billion yen). The international community’s support has been strongly requested to assist such reconstruction activities. As a result of discussions with government of Pakistan, JICA identified two assistance projects, namely “Emergency Import Support Loan” for budgetary support; and “Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Emergency Rural Road Rehabilitation Project” for the restoration of flood damaged roads in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

 

 

With signing of this loan agreement, the pledges of USD500 million made by the government of Japan in Pakistan Development Forum held in November 2010 stands fulfilled. The funds will be released by the government of Japan through JICA and United Nations Agencies.

 

 

 

(The End)

 

 

With Regards,

 

 

<><><><><><><><><><><><><><> 

Muhammad Zubair (Mr.),

Administrative Officer (Public Relations),

JICA Pakistan Office, 4th Level,

Serena Business Complex, Ramna 5,

Kahayaba-e-Suharwardi, G-5/1,

Islamabad, Pakistan.

----------------------------------------

Phone: +92-51-9244500~07

Fax:+92-51-9244508

 

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Established as an independent administrative institution, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), aims to contribute to the promotion of international cooperation as well as the sound development of Japanese and global economy by supporting the socioeconomic development, recovery or economic stability of developing regions. The JICA Pakistan Office started its operations in 1983 at Islamabad. Currently, JICA is contributing to the development of Pakistan in sectors like Education, Health, Sanitation, Irrigation, Agriculture, Environment, Industries and Infrastructure with Technical Assistance, Grant Aid and Soft Loans. For details about JICA Pakistan Office, please visit www.jica.go.jp/pakistan/english 

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

 

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Radical Islamism & Jihad
21 Feb 2011, NewAgeIslam.Com
Pakistan's pandering to Islamic Extremism: Wikileaks revelations of a global cover-up

Skirting Failure

By Ajai Sahni

Editor, SAIR; Executive Director, Institute for Conflict Management

By Tushar Ranjan Mohanty

Research Assistant, Institute for Conflict Management

...if it weren't for nuclear weapons, Pakistan would be the Congo...

US State Department note published by Wikileaks

For far too long, Western powers – vigorously led by the US – have been party to a comprehensive cover-up, a pretence that has sought to minimize Pakistan's role in the active sponsorship and export of terrorism, and an effort to distract international attention from the country's failing institutions, to emphasise, instead, its acts of purported 'cooperation' with global counter-terrorism efforts.

This farce, and elements of the international community's real appraisal of Pakistan and the many players in the country, lay fully exposed with the Wikileaks disclosure of US diplomatic correspondence and confidential assessments in 2010. These have fully confirmed the continuing complicity of the Pakistani establishment in terrorism in the South Asian region and beyond; the corruption and mendacity of its various institutions of Government; the country's hurtling trajectory towards state failure; and the inescapable truth of the realities SAIR has repeatedly emphasized in the past.

In sharp contrast to frequent public declarations of faith in Pakistan's capacities to tide over its rising crises, one leaked diplomatic post thus reads, "Although we do not believe Pakistan is a failed state, we nonetheless recognize that the challenges it confronts are dire... The government is losing more and more territory every day to foreign and domestic militant groups; deteriorating law and order in turn is undermining economic recovery. The bureaucracy is settling into third-world mediocrity, as demonstrated by some corruption and a limited capacity to implement or articulate policy." Worse, individual leaders were deeply compromised. President Asif Ali Zardari, Sir Jock Stirrup, the then British Chief of Defence Staff told US diplomats, was a "numbskull", even as other senior British officials described Pakistan's President as incompetent and "highly corrupt". Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Kayani, is revealed to have plotted an 'informal coup' to dismiss the President. Hundreds of millions of dollars of US aid, earmarked for fighting militants, were being diverted. Crucially, then US ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, warned that no amount of US aid would change the Pakistan army's covert support for four major terrorist formations, the Afghan Taliban, the Haqqani group, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's fighters, and the Lashkar-e-Toiba: "...there is no chance that Pakistan will view enhanced assistance... as sufficient compensation for abandoning support to these groups". Moreover, extremism was "no longer restricted to the border area", and fighters were increasingly being recruited from the Punjab province, even as "the phenomenon is spreading into northern Sindh as well." Another post notes, "The bad news is that the militants increasingly are setting the agenda." Moreover, "The government's anti-terrorism strategy is based on 'dialogue, deterrence and development'; however, it lacks the military capacity to deter militants and the financial resources to develop the FATA and NWFP. Its historic fallback has been to play for time by conducting negotiations with militants, a disastrous tactic that only has made the extremists stronger." The country was facing "pending economic catastrophe." Then Special Advisor on AfPak, Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, in a May 29, 2009, note, observed that Pakistan was a centre for terrorist financing through Islamic charities. Despite a clear acceptance of these many aspects of the chaos that is Pakistan, the US remained helpless to counter these trends, since it saw itself as being trapped in a "co-dependent relationship" with Pakistan.

The Wikileaks revelations have now forced many of these issues out into the open, and British Prime Minister David Cameron, during a visit to India, stated unambiguously, on July 28, 2010, "We cannot tolerate in any sense the idea that [Pakistan] is allowed to look both ways and is able, in any way, to promote the export of terror, whether to India or whether to Afghanistan or anywhere else in the world." Despite vociferous Pakistani protestations, he refused to withdraw or dilute his observations.

The limited decline in and shifting patterns of terrorism-related fatalities and incidents over the past year offer poor consolation against this backdrop. Total fatalities have certainly dropped from the unnatural peak of 11,585 in 2009, to 7,435 in 2010, but are still higher than any preceding year, including 2008, when the figure stood at 6,715 [all data from the South Asia Terrorism Portal database; the figures are likely to be gross underestimates, since reportage from areas of conflict is poor, as authorities deny access to reporters, international observers and other independent institutions]. Civilian fatalities registered a 22 per cent drop between 2009 and 2010, while militant and Security Force (SF) fatalities declined by 54 and 37.5 per cent, respectively, essentially indicating that some of indiscriminate slaughters that were being engineered in the name of counter-terrorism, what some of the US State Department correspondence described as "ham handed military tactics, which included indiscriminate artillery bombardment" and "blind artillery and F-16 bombardments" which had displaced millions of innocent civilians from their target areas, particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), had been selectively scaled back in 2010.

Fatalities in Terrorist Violence in Pakistan: 2003- 2011

  Year

Civilians

Security Forces (SFs)

Terrorists

Total

2003

140

24

25

189

2004

435

184

244

863

2005

430

81

137

648

2006

608

325

538

1471

2007

1523

597

1479

3599

2008

2155

654

3906

6715

2009

2307

1011

8267

11585

2010

1796

469

5170

7435

2011*

226

98

384

708

Total

9620

3443

20150

33213

* Data till February 20, 2011, Source: SATP

Significantly, KP accounts for the overwhelming proportion of the dramatic drop in fatalities and violence, essentially indicating active disengagement between the SFs and extremists in this Province, as the total killed declined from 5,497 in 2009 to 1,202 in 2010. Terrorism related fatalities also fell in the Punjab, from 441 to 316 over the same period. However, FATA saw 5,408 killed in 2010, as against 5,304 in 2009; in Balochistan, fatalities rose from 277 to 347; while Sindh saw an increase from 66 to 162.

FATA has acquired particular significance for Islamabad, since the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which threatens the country with massive internal destabilization, has now substantially concentrated its forces in this Province. Pakistan's SFs have, consequently, focused overwhelming attention against this principal sanctuary of the TTP, even as they continue to studiously avoid any action against elements of the Afghan Taliban, the al Qaeda and the various India-directed groups that continue to be seen as serving the countries perceived 'strategic interests'. The SFs launched major operations in FATA through 2009-10, accounting for the mounting casualties, though the gains of extended operations in the South Waziristan Agency (SWA) and Orakzai Agency have, at best, been cosmetic. Even the limited pressure exerted on the terrorists will quickly dissipate unless operations are taken forward into the North Waziristan Agency (NWA), resulting in further escalation in the hinterland, at a time when Islamabad is struggling to contain terrorism in its core areas of Punjab and Sindh.

Balochistan continued to witness overwhelming and relentless military repression, human rights violations and excesses by intelligence and security agencies, with fatalities rising from 277 to 347. The increase was essentially in the civilian category, and included an increasing number of unexplained 'disappearances' engineered by the Intelligence agencies and SFs operating in the Province. SF and militant fatalities declined from 88 and 37 in 2009, to 59 and 14 in 2010.

 

2009

2010

Province

Civilians

SFs

Terrorists

Total

Civilians

SFs

Terrorists

Total

Balochistan

152

88

37

277

274

59

14

347

KP

1229

471

3797

5497

597

94

511

1202

FATA

636

350

4318

5304

542

262

4604

5408

Punjab

293

97

51

441

272

28

16

316

Sindh

49

3

14

66

111

26

25

162

Total

2359

1009

8217

11585

1796

469

5170

7435

 

Civilians also bore the brunt of terrorist-related fatalities in Punjab, though fatalities even in this category fell from 293 in 2009 to 272 in 2010. Nevertheless, an index of the inherent instability of the system was provided by the assassination on January 4, 2011, of Salman Taseer, the Governor of the Province, by his own bodyguard, with the possible foreknowledge of his entire security detail. Taseer had spoken repeatedly against Pakistan's oppressive and frequently abused blasphemy laws, and specifically against the death penalty on blasphemy charges awarded against a Christian woman, Asia Bibi. The unrepentant killer was greeted with widespread public applause and showered with rose petals on his first court appearance on January 5, 2011. The Taseer killing was also a worrying index of the growing religious extremism within the security establishment. On January 12, the Punjab Police recalled four Policemen from active duty and asked them to report to their respective District headquarters. Malik Mumtaz Qadri, Taseer's assassin, had revealed during interrogation that the four held "extreme religious views" and could strike at any time. Significantly, no religious leader or Imam was willing to read a prayer at Taseer's funeral, and a significant faction within the Pakistani Senate walked out during the Fateha (memorial prayer) for the slain Governor.

The Taseer assassination is only the latest and most dramatic manifestation of the passions and abuse that have flowed from Pakistan's blasphemy laws. Nevertheless, in the wake of the killing, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, under visible pressure from Islamist extremist parties, made it abundantly clear that the law would not be amended. Sherry Rehman, a former Information Minister, was pressured to withdraw a private member's bill pending in Parliament, seeking reforms in the blasphemy law. Rehman angrily declared, "Appeasement of extremism is a policy that will have its blowback", and is presently under death threats from extremist groups.

The cumulative 'blowback' of pandering to extremism and, indeed, actively supporting and encouraging it, has long been more than visible across Pakistan. In 2010, suicide bombings acquired an unprecedented lethality, with just 49 such attacks inflicting 1,167 fatalities, as against 76 such attacks in 2009, with a total of 949 fatalities. Figures compiled by the Federal Ministry of Interior show that a total of 3,433 Pakistanis had been killed in 215 incidents of suicide attacks across Pakistan, between July 2007 and July 2010.

Nor was there any respite from sectarian strife. Though the number of incidents fell from 106 in 2009 to 57 in 2010, total fatalities rose from 190 to 509. The Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) and the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP) remained the principal organisations responsible for the rise of sectarian violence, but it was their association with terrorist groups such as the TTP which has conferred increasing lethality on their operations..

Amidst growing radicalisation and rising terror, US pressure has increased along the borders with Afghanistan. US drone attacks have more than tripled since January 20, 2009, when Barack Obama took over the Presidency. A BBC report of July 24, 2010, indicated that there were 25 drone strikes between January 2008 and January 2009, in which slightly fewer than 200 people were killed. In the year 2010, SATP data recorded at least 90 attacks by US drones, killing more than 831 persons, as against 46 such attacks killing 536 in 2009. The annual report of the Conflict Monitoring Centre released on January 1, 2011 revealed that, while a total of 2,043 people, mostly civilians, were killed in US drone attacks during the preceding five years, 929 of those causalities were reported in FATA alone in 2010.

In reaction to the drone attacks as well as US backed military operations of Pakistan Army in tribal regions, the attacks on the NATO supply vehicles has increased from just eight in 2008 and 25 in 2009, to at least 99 in 2010. The most brazen among these was witnessed near the national capital, Islamabad, on June 8, 2010, when unidentified militants attacked and set ablaze a convoy of about 50 tankers and containers heading towards Peshawar, the provincial capital of KP, on the Motorway in the Sangjani area of Ternol. Four people were killed in the attack and another three were injured.

With cumulative evidence of Pakistani reluctance to act against major terrorist formations operating in Afghanistan, it is unsurprising that relations between Islamabad and Washington have come under increasing strain. On December 16, 2010, the Central Investigation Agency (CIA) station chief in Islamabad, Jonathan Banks, was forced to leave the country after his name was disclosed in a class-action lawsuit brought by Kareem Khan, a tribesman from the NWA, who sued the CIA over the deaths of his son and brother in a 2009 US missile strike. The diplomatic relation between the two countries fell to an all-time-low as it was suspected that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) leaked the CIA station chief's name. It was no coincidence that the lawsuit against the CIA station chief occurred shortly after the head of Pakistan's directorate, Lieutenant General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, was accused in a civil lawsuit for alleged involvement in the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai. The suit was brought in US District Court in Brooklyn by family members of the American rabbi killed alongside his wife in the 26/11 attacks.

The Raymond Davis episode has further strained US-Pakistan diplomatic relations. Davis, suspected to be an undercover spy, shot dead two persons on January 27, 2011, in Islamabad. Reports suggest that the two may have been ISI agents, though Davis claims he fired during an apparent robbery attempt. Pakistani officials have corroborated Davis' version of events and, according to their preliminary report, Davis appears to have acted in self-defense. But the matter has become mired in politics and Pakistani public sentiment, and Pakistan is refusing to accept the US plea of diplomatic immunity for Davis. At the time of writing, there is rising pressure from Washington for Davis' release, and indications that the US will use its massive financial aid to Pakistan as an irresistible lever in this case.

The Barack Obama's administration has proposed to Congress a total of USD 3.1 billion in its budget for economic and security assistance and diplomatic operations in Pakistan, for the fiscal year 2012, beginning October 1, 2011. Earlier, on January 27, 2011, President Barack Obama discussed ways of achieving US goals in Afghanistan and Pakistan with his top security and foreign policy advisors. There seems to be growing uneasiness in the US over the status of its AfPak policy, which many believe has failed to generate any positive impact.

Indeed, the continuing farce of the US AfPak policy, and the war of imminent flight the ISAF is seen to be fighting in Afghanistan, can only destabilize the region – and Pakistan in particular – even further. Islamabad remains unwilling to act consistently against a wide spectrum of Islamist terrorists and extremists – with the exception of the TTP and factions that operate within the country, even as stranglehold of radicalism strengthens over the country's institutions and chokes of the most incipient signs of reform. A significant proportion of foreign aid continues to be diverted to the extremist constituency in the country, even as this constituency continues to enjoy unfettered access to a wide range of independent financial sources. In December 2009, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton wrote, somewhat coyly, that "some ISI officials... continue to maintain ties with a wide array of extremist organisations, in particular the Taliban, LeT and other extremist organizations." The persistent ambivalence about the role of state institutions in promoting terrorism sourced from Pakistan is now no longer sustainable. Regrettably, the world, and the US in particular, is yet to respond unambiguously to the continuing adventurism of a nation that should have been declared rogue more than two decades ago.

Source: South Asia Intelligence Review [SAIR]

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