Mustafa Qadri

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Pakistan journalists speaking tour of London Oct 11-15

October 7th, 2010 · No Comments

Pakistan & its crises: a journalist’s perspective Chatham House 6-7pm Monday October 11 Pakistan, its journalists and the stories the West forgets School of Oriental & African Studies 6-8pm Wednesday October 13 Brunei Theatre, Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG Pakistan’s journalists – lifting the lid Guardian Foundation, 7pm Friday October 15 Kings Place [...]

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Empty diplomacy in Afghanistan

February 8th, 2010 · No Comments

Negotiating with the Taliban is too little, too late – western allies need to fix the socioeconomic mess started long before 9/11

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Monday 8 February 2010 08.00 GMT

Memory spans are short in modern politics, but even by those standards the relative ease with which the discourse on Afghanistan has shifted from fighting the Taliban to negotiating with them is remarkable.

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Afghanistan — The Exit Fee

February 1st, 2010 · No Comments

Getting out of Afghanistan won’t be cheap. Mustafa Qadri takes a look at the West’s new hope for a solution to its Afghanistan problem

After much anticipation, Western leaders have finally put some meat on their previously bare-bones proposals for stabilising Afghanistan over the next few years. The short story is that President Obama is sticking to the plan he outlined in his speech at West Point last year, whereby he intends to hand responsibility for the country’s governance and security back to the Afghan authorities over a five-year period starting from 2011.

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Can Zardari cling to power in Pakistan?

January 27th, 2010 · No Comments

Faced with terrorism, a flagging economy and a raft of potential lawsuits, how long can Pakistan’s president survive?

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 27 January 2010 15.10 GMT

With his chequered past and unlikely rise to the top, it is understandable that Asif Ali Zardari has faced constant calls to resign ever since becoming president of Pakistan two years ago. The central focus of the grievances has been Pakistan’s supreme court where a raft of charges have been submitted against Zardari and most of the senior leaders of the ruling Pakistan Peoples party by a motley mix of political parties, private citizens, and the court itself.

But in the glasshouse that is Pakistani politics the risk is that perceptions of judicial independence will be shattered by all the stone throwing. To understand the fracas it is necessary to consider recent history. After public pressure forced the Zardari government to reinstate Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, there was widespread celebration that at last Pakistan had found one institution that was above the cronyism that has plagued political life here.

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Who Is Behind The Violence In Pakistan?

December 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

Already ravaged by high inflation, massive energy shortages and political turmoil, Pakistan has been shocked by bombings in most of its major cities, writes Mustafa Qadri

Pakistan is enduring the most brutal spate of political violence since the Punjab-dominated Army was implicated in mass slaughter in 1971. Despite military victories in large swathes of the tribal areas that are home to the Taliban, Pakistan’s major cities have been rocked by an escalating series of violent events that, according to one estimate, have claimed 544 lives in a little under three months.

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Who’d be a hack in Swat?

December 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Journalism is a dangerous profession in Pakistan. But a vibrant, relatively free press still exists in this volatile country

For as long as anyone cares to remember, journalism has been a dangerous profession in Pakistan. Although of late much of the attention has focused on the risks to foreign journalists, the situation for local reporters is equally, if not more, parlous.

First consider that virtually all the on-the-ground news you read from Pakistan, especially from conflict zones, has been gathered by a local reporter under considerable personal risk. That is certainly the case for journalists working in the northwest frontier where the Taliban are most active. “I [do some] work for Voice of America,” one veteran reporter, who requested anonymity, told me in the safety of a hotel room in Islamabad. “Even now, I do not tell [the Taliban he interviews] that. It would mean certain death.”

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Pakistan is losing this great game

December 11th, 2009 · No Comments

Barack Obama’s surge in Afghanistan worries Pakistan – when the US leaves, it will still have to deal with the Taliban

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Friday 11 December 2009 16:00 GMT

There is more to President Obama’s policy shift in central Asia than more boots in Afghanistan. For Pakistan it represents an escalation of US drone strikes in the tribal areas and continued pressure on its army to immediately engage the Taliban and al-Qaida despite the practical complexities of the task.

The fundamental problem for Pakistan is that Obama’s acceleration of the war against the Taliban has been calculated largely on the basis of domestic US political demands and not those of the region, let alone Pakistan. Already under intense pressure at home from the financial crisis and the unpopularity of the US presence in Afghanistan, Obama must deliver some semblance of victory before he bids for a second term as commander-in-chief in 2012.

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The other battle for Pakistan

December 5th, 2009 · No Comments

Now that an amnesty providing immunity to thousands has expired, Pakistan’s supreme court has the chance to showcase its merits

· Mustafa Qadri
· guardian.co.uk, Saturday 5 December 2009 18.00 GMT

It may be more a matter of wits than weapons, but the battle for control of Pakistan’s executive branch of government is as significant for the country as the war against the Taliban. Resolving this latest crisis, the fiercest tussle over the stewardship of the country since Pervez Musharraf was ousted from the presidency in August 2008, will determine the future of Pakistan’s parliamentary democracy for many years to come.

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Should He Stay Or Should He Go?

December 4th, 2009 · No Comments

A troop surge AND a withdrawal by July 2011? Despite the fuss, Obama’s Afghanistan speech marks very little in the way of new policy, writes Mustafa Qadri

“Unlike Vietnam, we are not facing a broad-based popular insurgency.” Those were President Obama’s confident words as he announced a major US troop surge into Afghanistan earlier this week.

The US may have entered Afghanistan to clean out what was believed to be the key haven for the international terrorist network known as al Qaeda. But in the intervening eight years, America’s main opponents in the deserts and towns of Afghanistan have been the young men of rural Kandahar, Uruzgan, Helmand and so many other areas fighting not for global jihad but for independence from foreign interference. There are key differences between the war in Afghanistan and that in Vietnam — but a lack of a broad-based popular insurgency is not one of them.

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Make No Mistake, Pakistan Is At War

November 27th, 2009 · No Comments

Amid daily suicide attacks, the Pakistan Army is closing in on Taliban strongholds — and this time they seem to have the support of the Pakistani people, reports Mustafa Qadri from Islamabad

Pakistan’s once sleepy capital Islamabad has been transformed into something of a fortress, with checkpoints, cement barriers and police dotting the tree-lined streets. There is no doubt about it: Pakistan is at war, and the signs are everywhere. As of last week, the police alone say they have prevented 67 individuals from carrying out suicide attacks, most recently in a dramatic confrontation at a barricade in Islamabad.

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Pakistan’s conspiracy cottage industry

November 15th, 2009 · No Comments

Blame for the recent spate of bombings is being laid at the door of foreign powers by many ordinary Pakistanis. Why?

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 15 November 2009 12.00 GMT

Although the Taliban have openly claimed responsibility for the recent epidemic of suicide bombings against civilian targets in Peshawar and Islamabad, many Pakistanis appear convinced that the real culprits are India or the United States.

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A humanist in Islamabad

November 9th, 2009 · No Comments

Leading Pakistani humanist and anti-nuclear scientist Pervez Hoodbhoy gives Mustafa Qadri his take on the current crises facing his country

For three decades Pervez Hoodbhoy, professor of Physics at Qaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad, has been promoting science and humanism in Pakistan. His was one of the earliest voices to sound the alarm on the perils of developing nuclear weapons, and on the danger posed by the country’s deepening religious intolerance — issues that have gone on to damage the country’s reputation. His respected scientific work has been published widely, but in 2001 when the Pakistani Government wanted to present him with a national award, Hoodbhoy refused it, saying that Pakistan’s misuse of such awards had eroded their own credibility. Recently I spoke to Professor Hoodbhoy about science, Islam and the challenges facing Pakistan.

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Long Journey Back to Heaven

November 3rd, 2009 · No Comments

The Diplomat’s Pakistan correspondent, Mustafa Qadri, meets refugees from the conflict in Pakistan’s Swat Valley and finds anger, trepidation and hope as they return home after this summer’s counter-Taliban military offensive.

Travelling along the road leading to the Swat valley is a memorable experience. As the narrow dual carriageway snakes around impossibly steep mountain ranges, the breathtaking vista of snow-capped peaks come into view as they loom over an emerald green valley pierced by the Swat River. It looks too perfect to be natural.

‘The beauty of Swat is unmatched in the world,’ says Ashraf, a Swati villager and journalist who agreed to take me to the region. When I ask if anyone maintains the near perfectly manicured grasslands and pine forests he laughs and shakes his head. Described in local poetry as heaven on earth, for centuries Swat has been home to saints and soothsayers–first those hailing from Hindu and Buddhist traditions, and in more recent centuries mystical Sufi Islam.

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Pakistan’s ombudsman tackles injustice and unaccountability

October 29th, 2009 · No Comments

by Mustafa Qadri

29 October 2009

Karachi, Pakistan – Access to justice is a major concern in Pakistan. Pakistan was ranked 134 in the world, lower than Rwanda and Libya, in the 2008 annual Corruption Perception Index released by Transparency International. In fact, one reason some communities in the North West Frontier Province cautiously welcomed the Taliban was the promise of a more efficient, less corrupt justice system.

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Is The Misery Ending Or Just Beginning?

October 23rd, 2009 · No Comments

As Pakistan’s new campaign in Waziristan gears up, Mustafa Qadri examines the cost of the war for the increasingly dislocated civilian population

There was a time not so long ago when the violence emanating from Pakistan had a mythical quality. In no region of this troubled country has the hyperbole of terrorism been so thoroughly lathered than South Waziristan, the tribal agency bordering Afghanistan where, since last weekend, Pakistan’s army has been waging a massive campaign against the Taliban’s most robust stronghold.

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Pakistan’s American aid dilemma

October 21st, 2009 · No Comments

The US has promised Pakistan $7.5bn of aid over five years – if it agrees to oversight of its most sensitive security issues

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 21 October 2009 20:00 BST

You would think that the citizens of a developing country promised $7.5bn over five years would be dancing in the streets. Instead, last week’s approval of the Enhanced Partnership with Pakistan Act, formerly the Kerry-Lugar bill, by Congress met with widespread howls of condemnation in Pakistan.

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The war to end Pakistan’s woes?

October 20th, 2009 · No Comments

In the Pakistani army’s offensive against the Taliban in South Waziristan, the line between victims and villains remains unclear

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 20 October 2009 16.30 BST

The Pakistan army’s invasion of the Taliban stronghold of South Waziristan this week brings few surprises. For years observers in Washington and Brussels have been pressing for an assault on this scale. The army says its aims in Operation Rah-e-Nijat (“Road out of Misery”) are to finally eliminate the main sanctuary for the Taliban and al-Qaida in Pakistan and, according to army chief Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, the foreign and local “elements” that given them succour.

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Pakistan’s awkward healing process

October 9th, 2009 · No Comments

The proposed truth and reconciliation commission is a fine idea. But a lack of historical distance will make it politically thorny

Grievance is at the heart of Pakistani politics. Almost all of the elites that dominate political life here have faced the deprivations – poverty, harassment, imprisonment or exile – experienced by the ordinary citizen at some point in their lives. When at the height of their strength, the powerful always invoke the myriad injustices that plague the common citizen to rally popular support.

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The Names The News Forgets

October 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Few people take more risks than the locals who help foreign correspondents in conflict zones, writes Mustafa Qadri. So why don’t the Western media give credit to their fixers?

Investigative journalism can be a dangerous profession because, by its very nature, it seeks to uncover the lies and scandals that someone, somewhere, is trying to suppress. As work descriptions go, few civilians face as many life-threatening situations as those who aid foreign investigative reporters in conflict zones.

Generally known in the profession as “fixers” — but very often respected local journalists in their own right — these brave reporters are asked to arrange anything and everything required by a foreign media outlet: from interviews with hostile governments and militants in hiding, to transportation and accommodation. They risk their lives not only by working in dangerous situations but by virtue of fact that, being citizens of developing nations, the western media outlets that employ them generally place little value on their lives.

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Israel Accused Of War Crimes

September 18th, 2009 · No Comments

It’s unlikely Richard Goldstone’s report into the Gaza bombings will result in ICC prosecutions but it may mark a turning point in the conflict, writes Mustafa Qadri

This week the United Nations released an explosive report on Israel’s invasion of the Gaza Strip in late December last year. It finds both Israel and armed Palestinian groups guilty of war crimes and, potentially, of crimes against humanity. Over 1400 mostly civilian Palestinians (including over 300 children) and 13 Israeli (including nine soldiers) were killed during Israel’s massive invasion of the Gaza Strip, the most densely populated region on the planet.

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A very Indian insurgency

September 16th, 2009 · No Comments

The greatest militant threat facing India comes not from the Islamists who attacked Mumbai but Naxalite Maoist rebels

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 16 September 2009 09.00 BST

Last November’s fedayeen-style attacks on Mumbai may have reminded the world that India was not immune to terrorism. But few outside the subcontinent are aware that the greatest source of militancy in this diverse country comes not from Islamists but Maoists.

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A Generation Lost To War

September 15th, 2009 · No Comments

Suicide attacks have become so common in Pakistan that they often don’t even make the Western press. Mustafa Qadri meets the father of a suicide bomber in the country’s North West Frontier Province

Darra Adam Khel, just south of Peshawar in the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan, has always been a dangerous transit zone between Afghanistan, Peshawar, and the southern most regions of Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas. Until recently it was also part of the Taliban heartland.

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“Make Mincemeat Of The Christians!”

September 4th, 2009 · No Comments

Last month’s attack on a Pakistani Christian community by a mob of Sunni Muslims is a worrying development in a country that purports to fight extremism, writes Mustafa Qadri

“Make mincemeat of the Christians” blared the mosque loudspeakers.

This was not the Taliban speaking, nor was it in the frontier of Pakistan along the Afghan border. The setting was the Christian Colony of Gojra in rural Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous and powerful province.

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From dictators to fugitives

August 30th, 2009 · No Comments

The knives are out when dictators fall from power, but the politics of retribution is rarely clean or cathartic

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 30 August 2009 17,00 BST

The tables turn quickly in politics, but for dictators the shift from all-powerful to powerless can be rather sudden. Over a period of 12 months, the last Shah of Iran went from feared dictator to refugee who struggled to find asylum in three different continents (including the US, his one-time staunchest supporter).

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After Freedom’s Dawn: A Snapshot of Pakistan and Its People

August 29th, 2009 · No Comments

By Mustafa Qadri Mustafa Qadri is our Middle East and South Asia correspondent and has been based in Pakistan for two years. In this slideshow, he talks about some of the people he has met in his travels Over the past two years Mustafa Qadri has travelled widely throughout Pakistan. In this time he has [...]

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Faces of Pakistan

August 25th, 2009 · No Comments

This month Pakistan celebrates Independence Day. In 1947 Pakistan became the first post-colonial nation in the world but the journey has not been easy. This week Pakistani police arrested 13 militants suspected of plotting to bomb targets in the Punjab. After 62 years as an independent nation, challenges ranging from extremism to energy shortages mean [...]

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Afghan Election Backfires On NATO

August 25th, 2009 · No Comments

If the West needed a credible election in Afghanistan to help prove that its war there is a good idea, it sure didn’t get it, writes Mustafa Qadri

In the wake of last week’s seriously flawed election in Afghanistan, NATO staff have expressed their “desperation” to pull out of the country.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, an analyst with close contacts inside NATO headquarters in Brussels cited plunging domestic support within member countries for the war, as well as the worsening violence inside Afghanistan as factors contributing to their desire to end military involvement.

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Poetry confronts the Taliban in Pakistan

August 24th, 2009 · No Comments

Mustafa Qadri

Last Updated: Mon, 24 Aug 2009 12:24:00 +1000

People in a Pakistani frontier region threatened by the Taliban are trying to preserve a culture rich in poetry and dance from religious extremism.

The culture of the ethnic Pashtun peoples often delights in worldly pleasures – like sex and alcohol – considered un-Islamic by religious conservatives.

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Anti-Taliban groups in Pakistan resist cultural crackdown

August 24th, 2009 · No Comments

Much of Afghanistan’s Pashtun-dominated south and east has been tense during for the recent presidential elections, but just over the border in Pakistan, outside Peshawar, the battle rages for cultural control of the community. The Taliban are trying to outlaw traditional poetry and dance, which they consider un-Islamic.

Presenter:Mustafa Qadri
Speaker: Fazal Maula, Peshawar-based non-government organisation

QADRI: Following my travels through northwestern Pakistan where millions fled the war against the Taliban, I met members of an anti-Taliban lashkar or army in the tribal district of Badaber. To describe Badaber as an outpost would be something of an understatement. Both the Taliban and government security forces have wrestled for control of this vitally strategic tribal region. Fazal Maula from a local non-government organisation explains.

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Intolerance is sweeping across Pakistan

August 24th, 2009 · No Comments

Communal stability is at risk as the rollout of Zia ul-Haq’s Islamisation continues unabated

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Monday 24 August 2009 10:00 BST

In decades past, the town mullahs decried the use of megaphones during the call to prayer. Now they have embraced the technology in Pakistan. In every city the loud blare of the muezzin echoes throughout the streets, although they rarely call out in unison. For centuries Muslims have bickered over prayer times, and much else.

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Making Peace With Jinnah’s Ghost

August 17th, 2009 · No Comments

As Pakistan celebrates Independence Day, Mustafa Qadri looks at the country’s unstable beginnings, troubled history and the miracle of its continued existence

“The religious bigot considers me an infidel
And the infidel deems me to be a Muslim!”

With these immortal words, Pakistan’s national poet Mohammad Iqbal captured the eternal quandary that is Pakistan.

The nation created for the subcontinent’s Muslims has always struggle to define itself — is it meant to be an Islamic state or a state for Indian Muslims?

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Reforming Pakistan’s Madrassas

August 15th, 2009 · 1 Comment

In recent years. there have been increasing attempts to reform Pakistan’s much-maligned religious schools, known as madrassas. At a conference in Islamabad, WPR contributor Mustafa Qadri spoke to religious scholars and teachers about their attempts to broaden the pedagogical scope of Pakistan’s seminaries. The program, funded by the International Center for Religion and Diplomacy, based [...]

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The secrets of Pakistan’s survival

August 14th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan has seen rapid change and frequent conflict in its 62 years. Its resilience is a testament to its people

· Mustafa Qadri

· guardian.co.uk, Friday 14 August 2009 19:00 BST

Karachi’s Saddar Town is the frenetic heart of Pakistan’s commercial capital. A retail hub where anything and everything from cameras to salwar kameez can be purchased, it was once the economic gateway into the northern reaches of British India. That legacy is still visible in Saddar’s fading colonial terraces, but the intricate wooden shutters are mostly gone and the Victorian entrances have been converted into street stalls. Today most are too busy trying to survive to notice the heritage.

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US fuels Asian arms race

August 8th, 2009 · No Comments

India was once a bulwark against cold war militarism – but now, under US influence, it is buying weapons at an alarming rate

Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk Saturday 8 August 2009 15.00 BST

“We both seek a more secure world for our citizens,” wrote US secretary of state Hillary Clinton on the eve of her recent visit to India last month.

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US At Centre Of South Asian Arms Race

August 7th, 2009 · No Comments

The United States is playing a dangerous game of roulette with India and Pakistan, writes Mustafa Qadri

When it comes to US policy in South Asia, it’s a case of do as we say, not as we do. Consider, to begin with, the rhetoric.

The Obama White House has gone to great lengths to demand that Pakistan end its support for militants targeting India. It wants the Pakistan Army to end its “obsession” with India-inspired oblivion by moving its large reserves from the Indian border to engage the Taliban and al Qaeda on the eastern frontier. Most of Pakistan’s active armed forces are located on the tense border with India where they are more than matched by the much larger Indian military.

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Calls for Pakistan madrassas to widen curriculum

August 6th, 2009 · No Comments

Updated August 6, 2009 11:42:34

To many foreign observers, Pakistan is the global centre of extremist Islam, and its madrassas – or religious seminaries – are where the violence starts. However, this kind of scaremongering hides a more complex reality.

Presenter: Mustafa Qadri in Pakistan
Speaker: Professor Qibla Ayaz, Peshawar University; Abdul Ghani, organiser of education conference in Islamabad; Azi Hussain, International Centre for Religion and Diplomacy in Washington DC

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QADRI: There are believed to be 2 million madrassa students in several thousand seminaries throughout Pakistan. But exact figures are hard to verify because most operate independent of government supervision. Although madrassas have ominous connotations in the West…

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Reforming the message

August 4th, 2009 · No Comments

Many of the world’s most dangerous Islamic extremists have learnt their approach in Madrassas, or religious schools, that offer a restricted curriculum that fails to reflect the modern world. In Pakistan madrassas also have a reputation for breeding extremists: but a plan to reform them is in motion, writes Mustafa Qadri.

“One cannot deny the very real role played by madrassas in fomenting extremism in Pakistan. I have met several members of the Taliban and a Lashkar-e-Tayaba operative. All had either been recruited or taught at madrasssas.”

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Pakistan’s power politics

August 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Ordinary Pakistanis still suffer from energy shortages – and are unlikely to benefit from their country’s rich natural resources

· Mustafa Qadri
· guardian.co.uk, Sunday 2 August 2009 17:00 BST

Few things are as oppressive in Pakistan as the summer heat. In colonial times, the British would shift their garrison headquarters from Rawalpindi to the cool peaks of Murree, just north of present day Islamabad. Today, the elite are more likely to skip the country entirely or barricade themselves in the air-conditioned comfort of their cars and homes.

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Once and for all

August 1st, 2009 · No Comments

Reviewed by Mustafa Qadri

Sunday, 21 Jun, 2009 | 10:04 AM PST |

‘Never again’ was the world’s reaction to the horrors of Hitler’s concentration camps. Sadly, those words continue to ring hollow over six decades later. In this timely book Gareth Evans, Australia’s foreign minister in the Hawke and Keating governments, charts international attempts to put an end to mass atrocities once and for all.

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The Seminal Influence Of Pakistan’s Madrassas

July 28th, 2009 · No Comments

Frequently demonised in the West as hotbeds of terrorism, Pakistan’s religious seminaries are actually a vital institution, not the evil dens they are made out to be, writes Mustafa Qadri

According to many security analysts and world leaders, Pakistan is the global centre of extremist Islam. Much of that reputation has been built upon the country’s madaris, or religious seminaries (also sometimes referred to as madrassas), which have been described as jihadi factories spreading terrorism internationally.

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US Steps Up the Pressure in Afghanistan

July 26th, 2009 · No Comments

The latest pieces in America’s Afghanistan jigsaw puzzle have started falling into place. Indeed, parts of the picture had already begun to emerge earlier this year, with US President Barack Obama making good on his election campaign promise to increase the US troop presence from 30,000 to 50,000. He then replaced the traditionalist Gen. David McKiernan with the counter-insurgency expert Gen. Stanley McChrystal as effective military commander of all Afghan national and foreign forces in Afghanistan.

In addition, there have been the controversial missile strikes against suspected Al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders. Although the strikes have been mainly focused on Pakistan, they have targeted insurgents operating in Afghanistan – a clear signal the United States is happy to escalate the war in the territory of key ally Pakistan.

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Bringing peace to the troubled frontier

July 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Bring peace to the troubled frontier

Grassroots attempts to foster peace in Pakistan provide hope for communities torn apart by war with the Taliban

· Mustafa Qadri

· guardian.co.uk, Saturday 25 July 2009 16.00 BST

There has been much soul-searching in Pakistan of late, and with good reason. Although the Army claims to have largely pushed the Taliban out of the Swat Valley, the most developed part of the country yet infiltrated by the insurgents, the war continues in all of its brutality and uncertainty.

Even in Swat it is unclear whether the Taliban are really vanquished. The government may have told the millions made homeless by this conflict that it is safe to return, but the army’s inability to eliminate key Swat Taliban leaders and the existence of huge pockets of remote mountainous terrain incapable of ever being properly secured make the possibility of a Taliban return a real threat…

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Summer Campaigns Heat Up Afghanistan

July 21st, 2009 · No Comments

With the death of another Australian soldier in Afghanistan this week, what are the prospects for peace in the region? Mustafa Qadri reviews political and strategic developments

As the Australian Defence Force mourns its 11th soldier to die in Afghanistan, Private Benjamin Ranaudo, and more than 400 additional troops prepare to travel to the region, many Australians are asking what the future of the conflict holds.

After much anticipation, the United States has finally started to reveal its political and military strategy in the country.

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A snapshot of life in Pakistan’s refugee camps

July 16th, 2009 · No Comments

A snapshot of life in Pakistan’s refugee camps

Updated July 16, 2009 11:48:55

Although the fighting in Pakistan’s Swat valley has ended and some refugees have started to head home, many remain wary of returning.

An estimated 2 million fled the conflict between Pakistani troops and the Taliban, and some ended up at a displaced person camp two hours north of the capital Islamabad.

Presenter: Mustafa Qadri
Speakers: Purmanari, displaced person; Mohammad Yahya, a former town mayor; Ziauddin Yousufzai, School teacher; Mannu, school student

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Public Unites Against Taliban in Pakistan

July 16th, 2009 · No Comments

Public Unites Against Taliban in Pakistan

Mustafa Qadri | 16 Jul 2009

KARACHI, Pakistan — There has been a perceptible shift in the battle against militancy in Pakistan. The massive army operations that recently concluded in the Swat valley, the largest ever conducted by Pakistan against the Taliban, are but one facet of it. For the first time, the government is also winning the propaganda war.

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Fixing Pakistan’s madrasas

July 15th, 2009 · No Comments

Fixing Pakistan’s madrasas

Pakistan’s madrasas have a bad reputation. But is it justified, and will a new programme of reform improve standards?

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Pakistan madrasas: ‘We focus on how to live together and respect diversity’

July 15th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan madrasas: ‘We focus on how to live together and respect diversity’

Mustafa Qadri reports on a programme to reform madrasa curriculums in Pakistan

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Displaced Pakistanis speak out

July 14th, 2009 · No Comments

Displaced Pakistanis speak out

by Mustafa Qadri

16 July 2009

Karachi, Pakistan – Pakistan is in the middle of its largest operation against the Taliban in the troubled Swat Valley and adjacent areas.

Although a small first wave of refugees has begun to return as part of the government’s efforts, up to 2.5 million people are believed to have fled the once quiet, scenic mountain ranges. At a camp in Risalpur, 50 miles south of some of the fiercest battle zones, I spoke with some of the displaced.

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All eyes on Iran

July 13th, 2009 · No Comments

All Eyes On Iran

The fallout from its controversial presidential election has left Iran in a similar position to that faced by Iraq in the lead-up to the US-led invasion, writes Mustafa Qadri

At no point in recent memory has the Islamic Republic of Iran dominated headlines as it has these past four weeks. Virtually all Western governments and mainstream commentators have rushed to condemn the Iranian Government’s violent crackdown on opposition protesters.

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Rise of political violence in Pakistan

July 10th, 2009 · No Comments

The report by the Sindh Chapter of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan on politically motivated murders in Karachi should worry every citizen, for it constitutes an indictment of the country’s politicians and gives a fair indication of the kind of violence-prone society we have become.

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Obama on Pakistan television

July 10th, 2009 · No Comments

US President Obama recently spoke to Dawn News in Washington. It’s something of a coup for Pakistani journalism given that such opportunities are few and far between. Still it’s a fairly sycophantic thing and hence quite disappointing. For instance, there are no hard questions on the around 800 Pakistanis killed by US drone strikes in [...]

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A living hell – interviews with Pakistan’s ‘disappeared’

July 9th, 2009 · No Comments

Interviews with Pakistan’s “disappeared persons” for Amnesty International’s Human Rights Defender Magazine – June/July/August edition 2009.

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Lost Victims Of War

July 8th, 2009 · No Comments

Lost Victims Of War

Mustafa Qadri

As Pakistan announces it has cleared 90 per cent of the country’s north west of Taliban militants, Mustafa Qadri visits the refugee camps sheltering civilians who have been forced from their homes by conflict.

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Interview with Taliban commander from Swat

July 6th, 2009 · No Comments

Late last year I interviewed “Mullah Noor Allam”, a middle ranking Taliban commander from the Swat valley. The interview was published in Australia’s Canberra Times newspaper on 17 January 2009. You can view the story…

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The Karachi king

July 6th, 2009 · No Comments

The Karachi king

After a bloody conflict in Karachi, much-feared political boss Altaf Hussain fled to London, but he is no less powerful in Pakistan

o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Monday 6 July 2009 18.00 BST
o Article history

With his healthy plume of gravity-defying hair and chunky tinted glasses, Altaf Hussain is as colourful in appearance as his reputation suggests. Perhaps no other Pakistani politician has as big a list of enemies as the one-time cabbie and university student who transformed himself into one of the most feared political bosses in the country. That he has directed his Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) party from the distant shores of the UK since 1994 speaks volumes for his enduring influence in the treacherous political life of Pakistan.

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Bigger than bin Laden

June 29th, 2009 · No Comments

Bigger Than Bin Laden Beitullah Mehsud, the man analysts describe as more dangerous than Osama bin Laden, continues to evade death in Pakistan, writes Mustafa Qadri Ever since he was labelled more dangerous than Osama bin laden, Beitullah Mehsud has been the single greatest target of US drone attacks. Remarkably, he has evaded death on [...]

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Pakistan’s divided Taliban

June 26th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan’s divided Taliban

Despite internal divisions and a bloody army crackdown, the Pakistani Taliban are a long way from being defeated

o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Friday 26 June 2009 16.00 BST
o Article history

Baitullah Mehsud, the Taliban warlord from Pakistan’s South Waziristan tribal agency, often described as Emir Baitullah, is widely seen as the movement’s leader in the country. For at least the past two years, Pakistani authorities have sought to attribute most of the terrorism that occurs in this troubled nation to him. According to the North West Frontier Province governor Owais Ahmed Ghani, Baitullah is “the root cause of all the evil”.

Perhaps that is why he was targeted in what was probably the latest and deadliest US drone attack in Pakistan. While the strike failed to kill Mehsud, it did leave the charred remains of anywhere between 40 and 100 people scattered amid the wreckage of a South Waziristan mosque. This has become a dirty war, and neither insurgents nor counterinsurgents have hesitated to attack places of worship.

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Homeless in the mountains of Pakistan

June 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Homeless in the mountains of Pakistan

19 Jun 2009 12:39:00 GMT

Written by: Mustafa Qadri

Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author’s alone.

The Pakistan Army is in the middle of its largest ever operations against Taliban forces in the troubled region bordering Afghanistan. Up to 2.5 million are believed to have fled the once quiet, scenic mountain ranges. At a camp in Risalpur, 50 miles south of some of the fiercest battle zones in the Swat valley, I talked to schoolgirl Mannu.

Among the bare dwellings of Risalpur’s industrial area, buildings donated to the displaced by local businessmen that have been transformed into miniature cities, I met eleven-year-old Mannu, a fearless young student unfazed by the traumas that have, for the time being at least, destroyed her ancient village community.

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Stuck between India and the Taliban

June 18th, 2009 · No Comments

Mustafa Qadri: Stuck between India and the Taliban The idea that Pakistan is inherently dangerous is a mantra used by those who ignore history and avoid the complicated reality According to Kapil Komireddi in these very pages, the demise of Pakistan is “inevitable” because it has since foundation been a source of division and extremism. [...]

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Did Ahmadinejad Steal The Election?

June 17th, 2009 · No Comments

Did Ahmadinejad Steal The Election?

Five days after the election, Iran is still in the grip of massive protests. Now the offer of a partial recount isn’t going to put the genie back in the bottle, writes Mustafa Qadri

Did Ahmadinejad steal the election? That is the question being asked by so many in Iran and around the world.

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Mumbai bombing suspect’s release raises many concerns

June 10th, 2009 · No Comments

Mumbai bombing suspect’s release raises many concerns

Mustafa Qadri 10-Jun-2009

Has South Asia really only brought us grief, Madhav? I don’t think that’s entirely fair, though I admit I’ve increasingly found myself asking that very same question while travelling through the southern mega city of Karachi last week.

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The Battle Has Only Just Begun

June 5th, 2009 · No Comments

The Battle Has Only Just Begun

Thanks to massive army operations in the Swat valley, Pakistan’s Taliban movement is in retreat for the first time, writes Mustafa Qadri

Ever since Nek Mohammad began the first insurgency from Waziristan in 2003, the loose confederation of warlords known as the Pakistan Taliban Movement have either advanced or obtained de facto government recognition in large parts of Pakistan’s Pakhtun tribal areas. Before the current Pakistan Army operations in the Swat valley, one analyst estimated that the Taliban had a presence in over 10 per cent of the country.

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Don’t write the Taliban off just yet

June 4th, 2009 · No Comments

Don’t write the Taliban off just yet

Although the Taliban is on the back foot in Pakistan, the war is far from over and thousands of civilians have been left homeless

o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Thursday 4 June 2009 09.30 BST

The Taliban have suffered their heaviest defeat in Pakistan since first erupting into open insurgency in 2003. Before May, the loose network of warlords that have invoked the Taliban franchise here have expanded into large swaths of Pakistan’s Pakhtun tribal areas. Prior to current events, some estimates placed the Taliban in 11% of Pakistan, almost all of that being in the North-West Frontier Province and Federally Administered Tribal Areas that are presently the centre of military operations by Pakistan and the US.

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The Taliban has no Plan B

May 29th, 2009 · No Comments

The Taliban Has No Plan B

By Mustafa Qadri

The Taliban is stepping up its violent attacks but ordinary Pakistanis have had enough and the organisation is losing popular support, reports Mustafa Qadri from near the Swat valley…

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Isolating The Taliban

May 28th, 2009 · No Comments

Isolating the Taliban

Violence in Pakistan can only be tackled if the state listens to devastated communities and recognises the Taliban threat

Mustafa Qadri

guardian.co.uk, Thursday 28 May 2009 18.30 BST

It was really only a matter of time before we would see this. A day after a bomb ripped through central Lahore, three explosions rocked Peshawar – two at the famous storytellers’ market, and another near the city’s railway station, destroying significant amounts of property, lives and livelihoods. It is too early to know what motivated these latest attacks in Peshawar. Like so much of the North-West Frontier Province, however, Peshawar businesses, particularly book music shops and women’s clothing stores, have been heavily hit, often after being told to shut for being unIslamic.

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Time to end the insecurity and fear

May 28th, 2009 · No Comments

Time to end the insecurity and fear

Mustafa Qadri 28-May-2009

If you speak to most Pakistanis – even the rank and file of the army, as I sometimes do – the answer, Madhav, would be: yes, Pakistanis are ready for more open trade links with India. This shouldn’t be surprising. According to an International Republican Institute poll released a few weeks ago, the priority for most Pakistanis is the economy.

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The human cost of war on the Taliban

May 21st, 2009 · No Comments

The human cost of war on the Taliban

Pakistan’s operations against militants have won praise from Washington but displaced thousands of innocent people

o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Thursday 21 May 2009 14.03 BST

The latest chapter in Pakistan’s war with the Taliban has been a humanitarian disaster for ordinary villagers from Malakand Agency, the region in Pakistan’s lower Himalayas where the battle is now being fought.

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Pakistan’s financial bailout helps elite

May 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Critics say that in a country where up to 40% of its 160 million population live on less than $1 a day or less, Pakistan’s ruling elite wants to keep its perks and privileges at all costs. They say the country’s rulers have no hesitation in slashing development expenditure, eliminating subsidies, going cap in hand [...]

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Thousands Displaced By War In Pakistan

May 18th, 2009 · No Comments

Thousands Displaced by War in Pakistan

By Mustafa Qadri and Tahir Ali
Displaced villager

“We are ready to leave [Katcha Ghauri] to make room for our brothers from Swat,” says Kushdhil, who was displaced from Bajaur Agency, to the west of the current fighting. Photo: Mustafa Qadri

Last week a number of quiet mountain villages became part of the deadly frontline in Pakistan’s battle with Islamic militancy, report Mustafa Qadri and Tahir Ali…

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Shadowy forces in Karachi

May 14th, 2009 · No Comments

My latest article for NewMatilda.com is on ethnic tensions in Pakistan’s great port city of Karachi:

Shadowy Forces In Karachi

The recent gun battles across Karachi demonstrate that there’s a lot more to Pakistan’s problems than dealing with the Taliban, writes Mustafa Qadri

There were a number of Kodak moments for the presidents of Afghanistan and Pakistan in Washington last week. But back in their respective countries, the world’s media were transfixed by images of civilians suffering from the unending war with the Taliban. In Afghanistan the images were of the horrific bombardment of civilians in the southern province of Farah. And next door in Pakistan, there is little doubt that army operations against the Taliban along the foothills of the Himalayas are having a devastating impact on tribal societies.

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Pakistan’s displaced voice fear and anger

May 13th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan’s displaced voice fear and anger

13 May 2009 17:10:00 GMT

Written by: Mustafa Qadri

A veteran of the war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan rues the misfortune of being homeless in his own country.

Mustafa Qadri in Peshawar and Tahir Ali in Rangmala talk to civilians displaced by a Pakistani army offensive against Taliban militants in the Swat valley that has uprooted hundreds of thousands…

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Threat to Pakistan’s nukes exaggerated

May 11th, 2009 · No Comments

A 10,000-strong dedicated army unit reportedly guards the nuclear weapons sites, which are dispersed throughout secure parts of Pakistan. And although political instability has plagued the country for decades, the military has been its steely backbone.

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Loewenstein delves into the ‘Blogging Revolution’

May 10th, 2009 · No Comments

Loewenstein delves into the ‘Blogging Revolution’

Reviewed by Mustafa Qadri

Hot on the heels of his last book, My Israel Question (a history of the Israeli occupation of Palestine from the perspective of an anti-Zionist Jewish Australian), freelance journalist Antony Loewenstein delves into the ‘Blogging Revolution’ with a book of the same title.

The greatest virtue of this book is that it is written not from the distant comforts of the West but on the ground in six fascinating and misunderstood countries. In Iran, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Cuba and China, the reader is taken on a journey through the lives of a variety of people, including but not limited to activists, seeking to engage their society in a social debate on a range of topics from sex to religion and popular culture.

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‘Collateral damage’ in AfPak hurts the US too

May 8th, 2009 · No Comments

The following report for The Guardian, published today, looks at the recent meetings between the Presidents of the United States, Afghanistan and Pakistan in Washington D.C. and the risks to civilians caught up in the war with the Taliban:

‘Collateral damage’ in AfPak hurts the US too

The bombardment of civilians in Afghanistan undermines the security credentials of western forces in the region

o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Friday 8 May 2009 16.30 BST

The timing may have been a disaster for Washington, but for villagers in Afghanistan’s south it was far worse. A day after a US bombing killed up to 120 civilians in Afghanistan’s southern Farah province, President Obama asked the visiting presidents of Afghanistan and Pakistan, Hamid Karzai and Asif Ali Zardari, to step up their attacks on Taliban and al-Qaida militants.

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Kilcullen on Pakistan

May 7th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan is not an ally or an enemy—it’s not coherent enough to be either. There is a free judiciary and a free press, but the there’s no civilian control of the army, especially the intelligence services, which have been backing the bad guys.

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Pakistan’s army: as inept as it is corrupt

May 3rd, 2009 · No Comments

My latest report for The Guardian is on the Pakistan army’s inability to defend Pakistan:

Pakistan’s army: as inept as it is corrupt

The answer to why Pakistan’s mighty army seems impotent against Taliban insurgents is that it is more mafia than military

Mustafa Qadri

No institution dominates Pakistan like its army. The armed forces account for 20% of Pakistan’s national budget, totalling $5bn last year according to official statistics. But the actual figure, already staggering for a country with high levels of illiteracy and malnutrition, is likely to be much higher. The army has been practically unaccountable since the very foundation of the country – last year’s figures were the first it has publicly released since 1965.

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Behind the Afghanistran propaganda

May 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Despite Afghanistan’s recent return to the spotlight, few among the public realize the full extent of the US’s historical meddling in Afghanistan. Sadly, many Americans will believe the version of events that were popularized by George Crile’s book-turned-Hollywood film, Charlie Wilson’s War.

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Pentagon concerns with Pakistan aid

May 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

It appears the Pentagon is opposed to too much oversight of civilian aid to Pakistan, including a provision in a proposed bill that would prevent aid in the event of a military coup: After promising last month that U.S. aid to Pakistan would no longer be a “blank check,” the Obama administration is attempting to [...]

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Is Pakistan’s Army a paper tiger?

May 1st, 2009 · No Comments

My column for newmatilda.com this week is on the inherent failings of the Pakistan Army that make fighting the Taliban more difficult:

Is Pakistan’s Army a paper tiger?

They’ve huffed and they’ve puffed but they can’t blow the Taliban down. Why not, asks Mustafa Qadri

The Army is the most powerful force in Pakistan. So why how has a rural insurgency armed with basic weapons managed to overrun so much of the country? That is the question that Pakistanis, as well as many in the international community, are now asking.

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Good summary of Pak-Taliban war

April 28th, 2009 · No Comments

The Pakistan Army intensified its operation Tuesday against militants in the Lower Dir district in the country’s northwest. The operation, which began on Sunday, has already claimed the lives of 50 militants and 13 security forces. In response, the Pakistani Taliban have suspended their talks with the government.

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US should slash ‘defence’ spending

April 28th, 2009 · No Comments

To understand why that is conservative, consider how much we spend on defense relative to both our purported rivals and our past. Our defense budget is almost half the world’s, even leaving out nuclear weapons, the wars, veterans, and homeland security. It is also more than we spent at any point during the cold war. [...]

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Obama’s new “AfPak” strategy – the view from Pakistan

April 28th, 2009 · No Comments

My analysis of the Obama Administration’s new AfPak policy for the Common Grounds News Service was published today:

Obama’s new “AfPak” strategy – the view from Pakistan
by Mustafa Qadri

30 April 2009

Karachi, Pakistan – People with a hammer only see nails. This well-worn maxim aptly describes the United States’ relationship with Afghanistan and Pakistan over the past several decades. As early as 1954, the United States identified the country as a bulwark against regional encroachment by the Soviet Union when Pakistan received its first substantial tranche of American military and economic aid.

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Sanctions would only fortify the army’s support for militancy

April 28th, 2009 · No Comments

We’re now seeing a subtle, yet seismic, shift in the War on Terror narrative in Western capitals. The host of a recent CNN discussion on ‘Islamism’ tried to distinguish al-Qaeda from the Taliban, basically arguing that as rigidly conservative and chauvinist as the Taliban are, they are not, like al-Qaeda, interested in open conflict with non-Muslim societies and instead want to establish a ‘true Islamic state’.

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Taliban suicide bomber-in-waiting

April 28th, 2009 · No Comments

Not everybody is in a position to write a column, but may have a profound experience or perspective to share. In this feature we seek out such people and report back so the Unleashed audience can absorb and discuss unique, fascinating or moving stories.

In our latest instalment of “Unleashed Voices” Mustafa Qadri meets a boy from Pakistan who has trained to become a Taliban suicide bomber.

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Pakistani denial over Taliban

April 27th, 2009 · No Comments

In my hometown in Punjab, a businessman friend was inspired by the news from Swat. “If two hundred Taliban take over our town, then we can all start making our own decisions. Who needs this corrupt system anyway?” My friend is a typical middle-class conservative Pakistani, and people in cities across the country share his [...]

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800,000-1.3m killed in Iraq

April 26th, 2009 · No Comments

So we have, at present, between 800,000 and 1.3 million “excess deaths” as we approach the six-year anniversary of this war.

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Dump Connex

April 26th, 2009 · No Comments

Ms Windisch said residents were also anti-Connex after the company recently won a $500 million 30-year contract to operate an “apartheid” light rail system in occupied Palestine that would acquire many Palestinian homes. (Thanks Antony)

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Iraq on ‘right track’

April 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, has said that suicide bombings that have rocked Iraq are a sign that fighters are afraid the Iraqi government is succeeding in restoring security… “I think in Iraq there will always be political conflicts, there will always be, as in any society, sides drawn between different factions, but [...]

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Why they love the Taliban

April 24th, 2009 · No Comments

My latest column for The Guardian, on support for the Taliban in some of Pakistan’s tribal areas, was published today:

Why they love the Taliban

Rampant corruption, and the Pakistani government’s failure to provide, is driving people into the arms of the militants

* Mustafa Qadri
* guardian.co.uk, Friday 24 April 2009 20.30 BST

It may be difficult to understand, but in many of the tribal areas where Pakistan’s ethnic Pakhtun population live, the Taliban are very popular.

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John Kerry: no “real” US strategy for Pakistan

April 24th, 2009 · No Comments

Just back from a visit to Pakistan, Sen. John Kerry says the Obama administration’s plan for that volatile country, rolled out last month with great fanfare, “is not a real strategy.”

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Jamaat leader praises pro-Taliban cleric

April 24th, 2009 · No Comments

Addressing a gathering at Friday prayers, the JI Amir said those who speak for Shariah and Islam including Maulana Sufi Muhammad deserve appreciation.

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Is Al Qaeda About To Conquer Pakistan?

April 24th, 2009 · No Comments

My latest piece for newmatilda.com is based on a recent visit to parts of the Kohat and Dera Adam Khel tribal areas in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province where the Taliban has a strong presence:

Is Al Qaeda About To Conquer Pakistan?

Counter-insurgency expert David Kilcullen believes that Pakistan could collapse “within months”. But Mustafa Qadri reports that in the tribal areas, it is actually the Taliban, not al Qaeda, that is gaining traction…

[Read more →]

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Obama’s charm offensive

April 9th, 2009 · No Comments

My assessment of the Obama Administration’s newly announced AfPak policy was published in The Guardian today:

Obama’s charm offensive

Is Barack Obama’s change of strategy – switching focus from Iraq to Afghanistan – a real break with the past?

It was easy to be cynical listening to Barack Obama speak about the “new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan” last Friday. Apart from a vast improvement in elocution, at first glance it was difficult to distinguish his rhetoric from that of his predecessor, George Bush.

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Getting to Know Your Insurgents

April 7th, 2009 · No Comments

The following article was published in NewMatilda.com today:

Getting to Know Your Insurgents

Much of Pakistan is still trying to understand the mentality of the Taliban fighters who are mounting a worsening campaign of killings across the country, writes Mustafa Qadri

There were plenty of glimpses into the mindset of the Pakistan’s Taliban insurgents last week. On Tuesday a gang of heavily armed men dressed in police uniforms stormed a police training school in Lahore killing at least 12 and injuring close to another 100.

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Taliban preys on Pakistani fears

April 6th, 2009 · No Comments

My latest column for The Guardian, on the Taliban and the psychology of fear, was published today:

Taliban preys on Pakistani fears

The Taliban’s extreme version of Islam is the logical conclusion of the region’s violent past and feeds on insecurity

Pakistanis have been offered a frightening glimpse into the true character of the Taliban over the past weeks. Last Monday, 30 March, a group of heavily armed men in police uniforms stormed a police academy killing 11 and injuring close to another 100. Those traumatised police cadets that survived painted a grisly picture of bloodstained walls and body parts. The leader of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, the umbrella network of pro-Taliban groups in the country, Baitullah Masud claimed responsibility for the attack.

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World food crisis leaves most hungry

April 5th, 2009 · No Comments

I read this after another casual stroll to the supermarket stocking up on goods I rarely think twice about… Background to the food crisis: origins, impact, and responses During 2007 and 2008, prices for staple foods such as rice, maize, and wheat increased greatly and at a rapid pace. For some crops, prices doubled in [...]

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Obama like Bush: Nawaz Sharif

April 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Mr Sharif, a possible future prime minister, was sharply critical of US policy in Pakistan saying former US president George W. Bush had helped promote terrorism by backing military ruler General Pervez Musharraf. He said Mr Bush was against Pakistan’s return to democracy and deaf to advice. Interesting to see how his views are now [...]

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Pakistan may get $2.8b military aid

April 1st, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan could get $2.8 billion in military aid from the US in addition to the proposed $7.5 billion civilian aid package spread over five years, a defence official has been quoted as saying.

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Obama sells out taxpayers

April 1st, 2009 · No Comments

THE Obama administration’s $500 billion or more proposal to deal with America’s ailing banks has been described by some in the financial markets as a win-win-win proposal. Actually, it is a win-win-lose proposal: the banks win, investors win — and taxpayers lose.

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Israel may attack Iran: Petraeus

April 1st, 2009 · No Comments

Israel might choose to attack Iran to prevent it from developing a nuclear bomb, the top U.S. commander in the Middle East said today.

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NATO’s Frayed Supply Line

April 1st, 2009 · No Comments

My analysis of NATO’s supply conundrum in Afghanistan was published on the Foreign Policy in Focus website today:

NATO’s Frayed Supply Line

Mustafa Qadri | April 1, 2009

There was much fanfare as President Barack Obama announced the eagerly anticipated “AfPak” policy review, what the White House terms is “a new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.” Many have argued, however, that the new AfPak policy is very much a continuation of the old policy with a few tactical grafts from the occupation of Iraq.

[Read more →]

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Iran offers help in Afghanistan

March 31st, 2009 · No Comments

At an international conference on Afghanistan at The Hague, in the Netherlands, the Iranian delegate, Mohammad Mehdi Akhundzadeh, responded positively to Barack Obama’s new strategy for winning the war against the Taliban.

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House of Saud announces successor

March 31st, 2009 · No Comments

Prince Naif is viewed as a conservative. Only days ago he told reporters he saw no need for women to serve in the shoura council, the consultative assembly, or for its mem­bers to be elected, as recommended by a human rights group report last week. His ministry has also been the target of accusations of [...]

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Not all terrorists are the same

March 31st, 2009 · No Comments

Here is my analysis of the Obama Administration’s new ‘AfPak’ policy for newmatilda.com:

Not All Terrorists Are The Same

Obama’s new strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan is much more nuanced than Bush’s “war on terror”, writes Mustafa Qadri. As a starting point, it recognises that al Qaeda and the Taliban are distinct groups

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NATO’s soft underbelly

March 30th, 2009 · No Comments

My latest column for The Guardian is on the quandaries of supplying NATO forces in Afghanistan:

NATO’s soft underbelly

Nato operations in Afghanistan depend on a precarious international supply system – and the Taliban have realised it

[Read more →]

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At war with the Palestinian people

March 28th, 2009 · No Comments

The matter came before the Supreme Court, The petitioners, Jews and Arabs, argued that this measure contradicts our Basic Laws (our substitute for a nonexistent constitution) which guarantee the equality of all citizens. The answer of the Ministry of Justice lawyers let the cat out of the bag. It asserts, for the first time, in [...]

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Anything new in AfPak plan?

March 28th, 2009 · No Comments

There’s nothing new in Barack Obama’s foreign policy – but the way it is knitted together offers hope… See also TIME magazine’s appraisal: Did George Bush leave one of his old speeches in the Resolute Desk? As President Obama unveiled his Afghanistan-Pakistan policy Friday, it was hard to miss the echoes of his predecessor’s “surge” [...]

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All the best Sparrows!

March 27th, 2009 · No Comments

I am going to miss Kabul. I have grown to love this country in a way I never thought I would. Afghanistan is like a teenage boy. Infuriating, recalcitrant, messy, always destroying things and disappointing hopes. But you love him anyway.

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Court summons Musharraf

March 27th, 2009 · No Comments

Sindh High Court has summoned Pervez Musharraf and top lawyers from his regime to answer a treason charge.

[Read more →]

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Sudan claims US airstrikes

March 26th, 2009 · No Comments

A Sudanese minister has told Al Jazeera that the US launched two air raids in the country earlier this year. Mabrouk Mubarak Salim, the state minister for highways, said on Thursday that Sudanese, Somalis, Ethiopians, and Eritreans were killed in the attacks in January and February.

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Restuarant blast kills 10

March 26th, 2009 · No Comments

This is how the Taliban deals with its opponents: At least 10 people have been killed in a suicide bombing in north-western Pakistan, local officials say.

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Government indifferent as people suffer

March 26th, 2009 · No Comments

If you ever wonder how a group as harsh as the Taliban is capable of getting support from ordinary Pashtuns consider the Pakistan Government’s near total indifference to their suffering in internally displaced person camps: …during three separate trips to Bajaur, we clearly saw the only way they could fight an entrenched Taliban was with [...]

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Chaudhry court reinstates lecturers

March 26th, 2009 · No Comments

The Supreme Court ordered on Wednesday that the Punjab government regularise 97 ad hoc lecturers within three day…

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Don’t mention the war

March 26th, 2009 · No Comments

Here is my report on Australia’s military presence in Afghanistan and Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s visit to the United States this week, published in NewMatilda.com today:

Don’t Mention The War

They managed to avoid the sticky subject of a troop increase. However, despite growing opposition back home, Rudd has backed the Obama Administration’s questionable strategy in Afghanistan.

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Ordinary people power

March 26th, 2009 · No Comments

My latest report from Pakistan, a reflection on the nation on the 69th anniversary of the Lahore Resolution of 1940, was published in the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s ‘Unleashed’ website today:

Ordinary People Power

Mustafa Qadri

Monday was Republic Day in Pakistan, the 69th anniversary of the moment when, under the Lahore Resolution, the idea of Pakistan was formally adopted by the subcontinent’s Muslim leadership. Seven years later, on August 14, 1947, the idea would turn into the reality of an independent state.

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Petition seeks Musharraf’s arrest

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

An advocate on Tuesday filed a petition with the Supreme Court charging former president Pervez Musharraf with ‘high treason’ and seeking his trial under Article 6 of the Constitution.

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Nawaz Sharif and the US

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Now, as the Obama administration completes its review of strategy toward the region this week, his sudden ascent has raised an urgent question: Can Mr. Sharif, 59, a populist politician close to Islamic parties, be a reliable partner? Or will he use his popular support to blunt the military’s already fitful campaign against the insurgency [...]

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Toba Tek Singh

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

“Maulvi Sahib! What is Pakistan?” After careful thought he replied: “It’s a place in India where they make razors.”

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A skewed view of Pakistan

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

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Interview with Israeli peace activist

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

The founder of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolition (ICAHD) has given up on any solution coming from within Israel.

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The big takeover

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

The mistake most people make in looking at the financial crisis is thinking of it in terms of money, a habit that might lead you to look at the unfolding mess as a huge bonus-killing downer for the Wall Street class. But if you look at it in purely Machiavellian terms, what you see is [...]

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Kashmir war claims more lives

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Five days of gunbattles between the Indian army and separatist militants in Indian-administered Kashmir have left at least 25 dead — eight Indian army troopers, including one officer, and 17 militants, the Indian military said Tuesday.

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Violence against women in Gaza

March 25th, 2009 · No Comments

The UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) in Gaza, local Palestinian NGOs and mental health professionals are reporting increased incidents of domestic violence and sexual assault against women in Gaza since the beginning of 2009. (Thanks Antony).

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US increases aid to Pakistan

March 24th, 2009 · No Comments

A threefold increase in civilian aid would come on top of more than $10 billion in mostly military assistance since 2001. In addition to the aid, the administration will seek similar contributions from other nations, the officials said, describing the conclusions of a strategy review on condition of anonymity because it has not been made [...]

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NGOs ordered out of Swat

March 24th, 2009 · No Comments

First, Sufi Muhammad, the TNSM leader who negotiated the deal on behalf of the Taliban, warned all lawyers and courts in Swat to pack up and leave as the shariat courts with qazis approved by the Taliban leadership will start functioning soon. Now, the Taliban have asked all NGOs in Swat to leave as well. [...]

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Rough Justice In Swat

March 21st, 2009 · Comments Off

My latest piece on the situation in Pakistan for The Guardian was published today:

Rough Justice in Swat

The growing influence of the Taliban in the North-West Frontier Province is a direct threat to Pakistan’s fragile democracy…

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Registrar rejects sloppy petitions

March 21st, 2009 · No Comments

Registrar Office of Supreme Court of Pakistan has raised the objections on all the four review petitions filed by Federation early on Thursday against court’s verdict in Sharif brothers’ eligibility case. According to the SC registrar, the petitions miss necessary documents, including surety bonds, court fees, paper books and copy of the court’s earlier verdict [...]

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Pakistan’s clear message to the West

March 21st, 2009 · No Comments

My analysis of the grassroots democracy movement that led to the reinstatement of Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry as Chief Justice of Pakistan’s Supreme Court was published in the Los Angeles Times today:

Pakistan’s clear message to the West

It’s not all fanaticism and violence. A grass-roots democratic movement is making strides.

By Mustafa Qadri

March 21, 2009

Writing From Islamabad, Pakistan — Politics is never dull in Pakistan. This week, it was inspirational too.

On Monday, I watched people flock to the home of Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry. A tense standoff between the government and a coalition of opposition groups over Chaudhry’s reinstatement as chief justice of Pakistan’s Supreme Court had finally been resolved. After two years of government-enforced “retirement,” Chaudhry would return to the bench…

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UN: Gaza assault a ‘war crime’

March 20th, 2009 · No Comments

The United Nations special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories has said Israel’s military offensive on Gaza “would seem to constitute a war crime of the greatest magnitude under international law”.

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Soldiers admit to murder

March 19th, 2009 · No Comments

“That’s the beauty of Gaza. You see a man walking, he doesn’t have to have a weapon, and you can shoot him,” one soldier told Danny Zamir, the head of the Rabin pre-military academy, who asked him why a company commander ordered an elderly woman to be shot.

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Gilani trying to weaken Zardari?

March 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan’s prime minister said in an interview he would seek to tip the balance of power back toward parliament and away from embattled President Asif Ali Zardari, a move that could help restore democratic checks and balances in the turbulent nation and possibly help bring the opposition into the ruling coalition.

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Clinton threatened aid blockade

March 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told Pakistani leaders that some US lawmakers “may not feel inclined” to support aid to Islamabad if political chaos continues, a top US official said on Monday. But the official, speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity, said Clinton presented the issue as a reality rather than a threat in [...]

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General praised for keeping away

March 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Kudos to Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani for honouring his repeated pledge, unlike his four predecessors, to keep the Army out of politics despite having been persuaded by a section of the establishment to pack up the present political dispensation and take over the reins of power at the time [...]

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President’s powers to be curtailed

March 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan’s prime minister said in an interview he would seek to tip the balance of power back toward parliament and away from embattled President Asif Ali Zardari, a move that could help restore democratic checks and balances in the turbulent nation and possibly help bring the opposition into the ruling coalition.

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Democracy revitalised by Pakistan’s Chief Justice

March 18th, 2009 · No Comments

My analysis of the reinstatment of Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry as Pakistan’s Chief Justice was published in Crikey.com.au today:

Democracy revitalised by Pakistan’s Chief Justice

By demonstrating the importance of functioning and accountable institutions, Pakistan’s lawyers may well have paved the road upon which the long road from its present hell may be charted, writes Mustafa Qadri.

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US considers widening war in Pakistan

March 18th, 2009 · No Comments

President Obama and his national security advisers are considering expanding the American covert war in Pakistan far beyond the unruly tribal areas to strike at a different center of Taliban power in Baluchistan, where top Taliban leaders are orchestrating attacks into southern Afghanistan.

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Inside goss on Rehman resignation

March 17th, 2009 · No Comments

Before Gilani could say anything, an uneasy Zardari abruptly told Sherry: “OK, please start talking, as you have five minutes.” To the surprise of both of them, all of a sudden, Sherry Rehman dropped a bombshell and said: “I am resigning from my ministry.” Even before Sherry could explain the reasons behind her dramatic decision, [...]

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In Swat judges told to stay away

March 17th, 2009 · No Comments

The Tehrik-e-Nifaaz Shariat Muhammadi, a militant group, ordered government judges not to show up for work “because we are establishing a true Islamic justice system,” said Amir Izzat Khan, a spokesman. The group is introducing Sharia law in the region as part of a government truce with Taliban fighters.

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Long March ends in triumph

March 17th, 2009 · No Comments

Here is my report for NewMatilda.com from the lawn of the Chief Justice’s residence in Islamabad the day of his reinstatement.

Long March ends in triumph

Instead of violent confrontation there was jubilation in Islamabad yesterday as the Government bowed to protestors’ demands and reinstated the sacked Chief Justice. Mustafa Qadri reports

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Democracy has been revitalised by Pakistan’s Chief Justice

March 16th, 2009 · No Comments

My report for The Guardian from Islamabad the day of the Chief Justice’s reinstatement has just been published here:

Democracy has been revitalised by Pakistan’s Chief Justice

President Zardari’s decision to reinstate Chief Justice Chaudhry has stabilised the country – and saved his political career

Mustafa Qadri

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ICG on Pakistan’s militant jihadi challenge

March 14th, 2009 · No Comments

The recent upsurge of jihadi violence in Punjab, the Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP), the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and Balochistan’s provincial capital, Quetta, demonstrates the threat extremist Sunni-Deobandi groups pose to the Pakistani citizen and state.

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Pakistan’s football suffers

March 14th, 2009 · No Comments

It is another irony that as football is the game of poor masses in Pakistan, the teams and players are given the lowest priority in terms of security. Bartalan Bisciki, the noted Hungarian football coach, was selected last month by the Pakistan football association to coach the national team, but he refused to take up [...]

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Latest on the Long March

March 14th, 2009 · No Comments

Here’s a list of breaking developments on the lawyers’ Long March to Islamabd (to restore the deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry): Allegations of torture of lawyers arrested by Police, from Imran Schah in Islamabad. With the US and UK’s blessing, have Prime Minister Gilani and Army Chief Kayani given President Zardari an ultimatum to [...]

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The Long March begins

March 13th, 2009 · No Comments

My report for NewMatilda.com from the start of the lawyers’ Long March in Karachi for NewMatilda.com was published today:

The Long March Begins

Protestors in Pakistan’s lawyers’ movement set out yesterday on their long march to the capital. Mustafa Qadri reports from Karachi on what has become a street-level vote of no-confidence in the Government

From across the country they took to the streets, re-enacting scenes from the darkest days of the Musharraf regime over a year earlier.

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History repeats itself in Pakistan

March 13th, 2009 · No Comments

Mustafa Qadri: History Repeats Itself In Pakistan

Guardian: Comment Is Free

By invoking a Raj-era law against public protest, the government demonstrates its inability to handle the country’s real problems…

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Zardari cracks down using British law

March 12th, 2009 · No Comments

The crackdown began late Tuesday night, with the government invoking Section 144 of the 1860 Penal Code, a law from the British colonial era that forbids public gatherings of four or more people.

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Dictatorship returns to Pakistan?

March 11th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan has arrested hundreds of opposition political activists in an overnight sweep ahead of a planned protest rally, as a looming political showdown presents the most serious challenge yet to the year-old government.

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Speak to Hamas and Hezbollah

March 11th, 2009 · No Comments

Britain aligned itself with the U.S. position on Hezbollah, but has now seen its error. Bill Marston, a Foreign Office spokesman, told Al Jazeera: “Hezbollah is a political phenomenon and part and parcel of the national fabric in Lebanon. We have to admit this.”

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Working conditions in Pakistan

March 11th, 2009 · No Comments

The Guardian has an excellent photo essay on working conditions in Pakistan for those who make many of the medical instruments used by the UK’s NHS.

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Obama caves in to Lobby

March 11th, 2009 · No Comments

…if Barack Obama can’t stand up to the likes of Marty Peretz, Jonathan Chait, Steve Rosen, and other snarky critics, and if the White House can’t defend a critical intelligence pick when that person is savaged by Republican sharks smelling blood in the water, then how can we expect Obama to stand up to Bibi [...]

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Long march to nowhere

March 11th, 2009 · No Comments

Mustafa Qadri: Long March To Nowhere

As bickering politicians bring paralysis to Pakistan, will Washington give the army its backing?

It seems with each new week a fresh crisis is thrust upon the people of Pakistan. This year, in a little over two months, the nation has faced more traumas than most countries face in a generation. Last month authorities in the north-western Swat valley reached a peace deal with a religious group closely aligned to the Taliban. This week another peace deal was signed directly with the Taliban in the neighbouring Bajaur tribal agency after a series of successful if devastating operations by the Pakistani army.

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Pakistani writers emerge

March 10th, 2009 · No Comments

Until two or three years ago, Pakistan seemed to be a literary desert in both Urdu and English. Now, quite suddenly, it has produced a cluster of remarkable bright young novelists able to match anything coming out India: in fiction, Nadeem Aslam, Mohsin Hamid, Mohammed Hanif and Kamila Shamsie; and in non-fiction, Ahmed Rashid and [...]

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Peace in Bajaur tribal agency?

March 10th, 2009 · No Comments

A test of progress will be if refugees in camps in Peshawar begin to head home. Despite the military’s declaration of victory against the Taliban in Bajaur late last month, many say it’s still too unsafe to return. Travelers and residents say the Taliban haven’t been flushed from two of nine districts there.

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FATA’s Hindus migrate to India

March 10th, 2009 · No Comments

A group of 35 Hindus, nearly half of them women, from Pakistan have crossed over to India and asked the government to allow them to settle in the country, Indian media reported Monday.

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A new dictator for Pakistan?

March 10th, 2009 · No Comments

Will Pakistan’s Army Chief step into the political fray the country’s civilian leadership is currently embroiled in? That’s the question I ask in my latest piece for newmatilda.com:

A New Dictator For Pakistan?

Speculation is mounting in Islamabad that a military coup is on the cards, writes Mustafa Qadri. And Pakistan’s most powerful ally doesn’t seem to mind…

Pakistan is facing its greatest political crisis since the resignation of Pervez Musharraf as president last year.

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Gunmen sought to kidnap cricketers

March 4th, 2009 · No Comments

Tuesday’s attack in the Pakistani city of Lahore on a convoy carrying Sri Lankan cricketers was carried out by disgruntled Punjabi militants seeking to extract concessions from the government, Asia Times Online has learned.

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Election Commission overrules Karzai

March 4th, 2009 · No Comments

A senior UN official says it will be nearly impossible to hold credible elections in Afghanistan in April, as ordered by President Karzai.

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Bush admin face torture charges?

March 4th, 2009 · No Comments

A Gallup poll last month showed that 62 percent of Americans support either an investigation or prosecution of Bush administration officials for torture. Sources familiar with the administration’s thinking say Obama’s team has thoroughly thought through the concept of a torture investigation. President Obama, however, has remained cool to the notion in his public statements.

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Gaza conference fineprint

March 4th, 2009 · No Comments

One of the headlines coming out of the Gaza donors conference currently being held in Egypt is the US’s pledge of $900 million for the Palestinians. What is getting less attention is that only one third of that will actually go to Gaza and none of that can be used for rebuilding.

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Release of AQ Khan

March 4th, 2009 · No Comments

When asked if, during his visit to Islamabad, White House Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke had expressed U.S. concerns about the release of Khan in his meetings with Pakistani leaders, State Department spokesman Robert Wood was at a loss: QUESTION: I’d like to stay on Pakistan for a second. Do you know [...]

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Tariq Ali on cricketer attacks

March 4th, 2009 · No Comments

The failures of this government and its inability to defend the country’s interests or its population from drones or terrorist attacks are paving the way for the return of the army to power as a way of avoiding a serious split within its own ranks. All that is awaited is a green light from the [...]

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US looks beyond military

March 3rd, 2009 · No Comments

In an admission that its dependence on the Pakistani military has yielded few results against the Taliban, the United States is now seeking to change its relationship with Pakistan – the world’s sole Muslim nuclear power and home of Al Qaeda’s leadership.

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Where now for Hamas?

March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

The Diplomat’s Middle East and South Asia correspondent, Mustafa Qadri, reports on Hamas’ future…

The latest edition of the excellent The Diplomat magazine, Australia’s only dedicated foreign affairs magazine, has an article by me on the future of the Palestinian Hamas movement following the recent Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip. The article is available here via subscription.

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Jihad: the struggle continues

March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

In January I interviewed a member of Lashkar-e-Toiba, the pro-Pakistan militant group believed to have been involved in the Mumbai attacks, for The Diplomat magazine. The interview has just been published in the latest edition of the magazine and is available online here.

JIHAD: THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES

02-Mar-2009

Mustafa Qadri investigates the organisations believed by many to have been behind the Mumbai terrorist attacks

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Interview with Sufi Mohammad

March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Outlook India has done an interview with Sufi Mohammad which you can read here. Sufi Mohammad is the religious leader who signed a peace deal with the government in Pakistan’s Swat region basically to replace existing, secular laws with the Sharia.

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Pakistan claims victory against Taliban

March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Maj Gen Tariq Khan, the commander of military operations in five of Pakistan’s seven tribal agencies, said his paramilitary Frontier Corps (FC) had driven extremists out of Bajaur, where Pakistani forces have waged a six-month long campaign.

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Swat peace deal still being settled

March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Addressing a press conference on Sunday, Sufi Mohammad warned that the TNSM would start setting up protest camps if the Islamic courts were not set up and prisoners not swapped by 15 March… The situation in Swat remains tense and the militants are yet to disarm or end their hold over areas they control.

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What did Iran ever to do to us?

March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

My first piece in a series on Iran was posted on NewMatilda.com today:

What did Iran ever to do to us?

In the first of a series of articles leading up to the Iranian presidential elections in June, Mustafa Qadri looks at how Iran became the pariah of the West…

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The Return of the Heckmatyar

February 25th, 2009 · No Comments

It was hoped that t he election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the United States would bring a change of course to the beleaguered US effort in Afghanistan. But word that representatives of the Taliban and the infamous Afghan drug trafficker and extremist Gulbuddin Hekmatyar might be on the president’s list of possible [...]

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Supreme Court rules out Sharif brothers

February 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan’s supreme court on Wednesday nullified the election last year of a key opposition leader, sparking a wave of anti-government protests in the populous Punjab province and prompting worries over a new round of political instability.

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Taming the Taliban

February 25th, 2009 · No Comments

The following article appears on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Unleashed website today:

Taming the Taliban

Mustafa Qadri

This month the world reacted with surprise and trepidation at the news that Pakistan had reached a peace agreement with religious groups closely aligned to the Taliban. The accord relates to the mountainous Malakand division of the North Western Frontier Province that borders Afghanistan. It covers the beautiful Swat valley, the onetime alpine honeymoon resort, that, since 2007, has been gripped by a Taliban insurgency.

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US Counterinsurgency Guide

February 24th, 2009 · No Comments

The U.S. Government Counterinsurgency Guide has now been officially posted to the U.S. Department of State offical web page. Organizations involved in the drafting of this document included Department of State, Department of Defense, U.S. Agency for International Development, Department of Justice, Department of The Treasury, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Agriculture, Department of [...]

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What will this ‘peace’ cost?

February 23rd, 2009 · No Comments

My latest article, on the peace deal between a pro-Taliban group and the Pakistan Government in the mountainous tribal area of Malakand was published in NewMatilda.com today: WHAT WILL THIS ‘PEACE’ COST? By Mustafa Qadri Pakistan has agreed to entrench Sharia law in its North-West Frontier Province in exchange for peace, but locals are still [...]

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Taliban abduct official in Swat

February 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

Muslim Khan, the Taliban spokesman in Swat, said the group claimed responsibility for abducting the administrator. “He is our guest. We have to discuss some issues with him. We will serve him with tea and then free him,” he told Reuters.

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Truce in Afghanistan acceptable to US?

February 21st, 2009 · No Comments

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Friday that Washington could accept a political agreement between the Afghan government and Taliban rebels along the lines of a truce in neighboring Pakistan.

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It’s not easy being a hijra

February 21st, 2009 · No Comments

“Its not easy being a hijra is this society, but is it our fault that we are like this?

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Shuja Nawaz on the Swat peace deal

February 21st, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan’s constitution already contains provisions protecting against un-Islamic laws. Why then does the country need an agreement with violent extremists to ensure Islamic laws? And who will pronounce on these laws? The militants? And if the army is to remain in a “reactive” mode, as a government minister explained, will they stand by and watch [...]

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Obama expands missile strikes

February 21st, 2009 · No Comments

With two missile strikes over the past week, the Obama administration has expanded the covert war run by the Central Intelligence Agency inside Pakistan, attacking a militant network seeking to topple the Pakistani government.

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Kerry in Gaza but not with Hamas

February 21st, 2009 · No Comments

“Hamas has to change its policies,” Mr. Kerry said at the ruins of the American International School in Gaza, which was destroyed by an Israeli air attack in early January. “There is no change in our policy.” I can’t think of any other conflict on earth where the aggressor (the US, by supplying Israel with [...]

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Pakistan needs a Marshall Plan

February 20th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan needs a modern day “Marshall Plan” to help it fight Taliban militants through economic development, President Asif Ali Zardari said, referring to the U.S. aid plan for Europe after World War II.

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Zardari purging Bhutto loyalists

February 20th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan president Asif Ali Zardari has been accused of launching a purge of his late wife Benazir Bhutto’s closest supporters within his ruling Pakistan People’s Party.

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Pakistan signs deal with Islamists

February 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Many Muslims believe that ancient Khorasan – which covers parts of modern-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Iran, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan – is the promised land from where they will secure the first victory in the end-of-time battle in which the final round, according to their beliefs, will be fought in Bilad-i-Sham (Palestine-Lebanon-Syria).

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Has Israeli politics really shifted right?

February 19th, 2009 · No Comments

According to most regional analysts, the results of Israel’s recent election signal a profound shift to the right. But a deeper reading reveals a more pedestrian reality.

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Peace or appeasement in Pakistan?

February 18th, 2009 · No Comments

The following piece, on the recent peace agreement between the Pakistan Government and Islamic leaders in the northern Malakand district, was posted on the Guardian Comment is Free website today:

Peace or appeasement in Pakistan?

The recent deal between religious leaders in tribal Pakistan and the government legitimates the Taliban insurgency…

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Increase in civilians killed by NATO

February 17th, 2009 · No Comments

The transparency group Wikileaks has issued a press release regarding a confidential NATO report that details the dramatic increase in civillians deaths, the rise in civil disorer and the lack of basic health care and education in Afghanistan. (Thanks to Reuben)

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Afghan elections postponed again

February 17th, 2009 · No Comments

The credibility of the international mission in Afghanistan was dealt a blow yesterday with the announcement that presidential elections have been put back by three months.

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Missile strikes continue to escalate

February 17th, 2009 · No Comments

U.S. missile strikes in Pakistan have killed more than 50 people in the past three days in what appears to be an escalation of the military campaign in the troubled region along the Afghan border

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Moral victory for Taliban?

February 17th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan government officials said they struck a deal on Monday to accept a legal system compatible with Shariah law in the violent Swat region in return for peace.

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Amnesty criticises neglect of Swat valley

February 16th, 2009 · No Comments

The Pakistani government should act immediately to protect hundreds of thousands of people from insurgents in the Swat valley and elsewhere in the country, Amnesty International said today. See also Amnesty’s “Swat deal threatens human rights”.

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US drones flown from Pakistan

February 15th, 2009 · No Comments

A senior U.S. lawmaker said Thursday that unmanned CIA Predator aircraft operating in Pakistan are flown from an air base in that country, a revelation likely to embarrass the Pakistani government and complicate its counter-terrorism collaboration with the United States.

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Soviet vets warn US

February 15th, 2009 · No Comments

Soviet veterans marking 20 years since their defeat in Afghanistan warned the United States it would never truly control the country, citing bitter memories of a fiercely proud people and unforgiving landscape.

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Children killed by Australian forces

February 15th, 2009 · No Comments

A gunfight between Australian forces and Taliban fighters in southern Afghanistan killed five children who were caught in the crossfire, the Australian Defense Ministry said Friday.

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UK appoints special envoy

February 14th, 2009 · No Comments

Britain appointed its own Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan and named Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles, currently its Ambassador to Afghanistan, for the post on the day US President Obama’s Special Representative for the two countries arrived in Islamabad. You may recall that Cowper-Coles was the British diplomat who got into a bit of hot water [...]

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Valentine’s in Gaza

February 13th, 2009 · No Comments

Israel temporarily eased its blockade of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip on Thursday to allow Palestinian flower growers to export 25,000 blooms to Europe ahead of Valentine’s Day. The amount of carnations allowed out of the Gaza Strip was only a fraction of what farmers produce. Many farmers say they have no choice but to feed [...]

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Yeh hum naheen

February 13th, 2009 · No Comments

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Holbrooke visits Kabul

February 13th, 2009 · No Comments

Famed for negotiating the 1995 Dayton accord that ended the war in Bosnia, Holbrooke is a relative newcomer to South Asian politics. Before two private visits since 2006, Holbrooke had only traveled to Afghanistan once, as a backpacker in 1971.

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Defaming Darwin

February 13th, 2009 · No Comments

Darwin did not believe there was evidence for God in nature; he consistently rejected the claim that such evidence existed, on purely scientific grounds… He sincerely wanted to believe in God but found that he could not, and his candour should not be used against him.

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Pakistan says talk to Taliban

February 13th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan advised President Barack Obama’s special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan on Tuesday to reach out to reconcilable elements of the Taliban movement as part of a strategy for peace in the region.

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No military solution for Afghanistan

February 11th, 2009 · No Comments

And I gave an example of the fact that USAID had built forty-one courthouses at a cost of over $200 million, and the day the US ambassador went to the minister of justice to sort of hand over these courthouses, the minister of justice knew nothing about it and said, “Well, that’s very nice, that’s [...]

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Turkey arranged Israel-Pakistan meeting

February 1st, 2009 · No Comments

At the request of Syria, we entered a phase of working together with Israel and Syria indirectly to get them to talk with each other. We are mediators in that process. This was an example of how much importance we put on peace in the Middle East. We had done this before with Pakistan and [...]

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Israel Lobby pressures BBC

January 31st, 2009 · No Comments

Somewhere deep in the bowels of the BBC is a top secret document that could explain a great deal about the corporation’s decision to boycott the aid appeal for Gaza.

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Pakistan Taliban to relax ban on girls schools?

January 31st, 2009 · No Comments

Maulana Fazlullah, chief of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Swat chapter, on Friday announced relaxation in the ban on girls’ education by allowing students to attend school up-to fourth grade.

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Economist gets banned in Thailand

January 30th, 2009 · No Comments

The Thai distributor of the Economist said it had banned the latest edition of the news magazine, which carried a story about Australian writer Harry Nicolaides, who was jailed for insulting the monarchy.

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Police arrest alleged Indian agents

January 30th, 2009 · No Comments

Police arrested three men Thursday who they alleged carried out a deadly bombing in 2006 in Pakistan on the orders of India’s intelligence agency, a top officer said. Lahore police chief Pervaiz Rathor told reporters the three Pakistanis had also been told to attack mosques as well as the virulently anti-Indian Muslim organization blamed for [...]

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Australia’s continued silence on Papua

January 29th, 2009 · No Comments

The Australian Government has been gutless in its dealings with Indonesia over the five Australians detained in West Papua…

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El Baradei refuses BBC interview

January 29th, 2009 · No Comments

The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency has cancelled interviews with the BBC over its decision not to broadcast a charity appeal for Gaza.

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Nawaz Sharif joins lawyers movement

January 28th, 2009 · No Comments

Nawaz announced that his party would extend full support to the long march of the lawyers’ community on March 9 for restoration of judges, expressing the hope that masses would give enthusiastic response to the event like they had done to the last long march. He, however, said they had not talked to the lawyers’ [...]

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I’m giving a lecture in London this February

January 28th, 2009 · No Comments

I’ll be taking part in a discussion on ‘Just Wars in World Cultures’ at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London on Wednesday 4 February. The full details are…

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UK Govt ordered to release Iraq minutes

January 28th, 2009 · No Comments

But in its ruling, the Tribunal said: “We have decided that the public interest in maintaining the confidentiality of the formal minutes of two Cabinet meetings at which ministers decided to commit forces to military action in Iraq did not… outweigh the public interest in disclosure.” The Tribunal said its decision to rule in such [...]

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Obama’s first interview as President

January 28th, 2009 · No Comments

…was to Al Arabiya. You can read a transcript of it here. As has been his want in a still very young political career the rhetoric is top notch. But material changes from previous US Mid-East policies are yet to be seen.

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More foreign aid on the way

January 28th, 2009 · No Comments

Mr Tarin said the country’s balance of payment position would improve after a loan of $700 million from donors was received by the end of March. He said the country would get $500 million from the World Bank in February and another $200 million from the Asian Development Bank. Pakistan has recently received loan of [...]

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Slumdogs no millionaires

January 28th, 2009 · No Comments

The film’s British director, Danny Boyle, has spoken of how he set up trust funds for Rubina and Azharuddin and paid for their education. But it has emerged that the children, who played Latika and Salim in the early scenes of the film, were paid less than many Indian servants. Rubina was paid $1060 for [...]

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Students protest Jamaat ban

January 27th, 2009 · No Comments

Hundreds of students angrily protested on Tuesday as a government official took over administrative control of an Islamic charity which is linked to the militant group accused by India to be responsible for the Mumbai attacks.

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Indians and Pakistanis lobby Washington

January 27th, 2009 · No Comments

“I want to caution my Indian friends: Be wary of your wishes, as they might come true,” Saeed said. “Because the diplomatic cornering of Pakistan, by way of sanctions, by way of coercive diplomacy . . . is going to [create] a tremendous reaction in Pakistan. Any government cooperation with the United States will be [...]

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Descent into chaos

January 26th, 2009 · No Comments

Across much of the North-West Frontier Province—around a fifth of Pakistan—women have now been forced to wear the burqa, music has been silenced, barbershops are forbidden to shave beards, and over 140 girls’ schools have been blown up or burned down. In the provincial capital of Peshawar, a significant proportion of the city’s elite, along [...]

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More civilians killed than militants

January 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Remotely piloted Predator drones operated by the Central Intelligence Agency have carried out 28 missile attacks in Fata since last summer, killing at least 132 people. The NYT, quoting Pakistani officials, reported that as many as 100 of them were civilians.

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Peace mission to India

January 25th, 2009 · No Comments

The South Asians for Human Rights (SAHR) and South Asian Free Media Association (SAFMA) have jointly decided to take a Peace Mission from Pakistan to New Delhi from 21st to 24th January 2009. The 19-Member Delegation will interact with civil society, media and political leadership of India to stress the need to keep the peace [...]

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UN rapporteur on Israel’s war crimes

January 25th, 2009 · No Comments

The mental anguish of the civilians who suffered the assault is so great that the entire population of Gaza could be seen as casualties, said Falk, UN special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.

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Gitmo detainee recalls horrors

January 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Mohammad Saad breaks into sobs and gut-wrenching moans when he details six years’ humiliation, interrogation and ill-treatment under US orders in Egypt, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.

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Obama restores UN funding

January 25th, 2009 · No Comments

“The President’s actions send a strong message about his leadership and his desire to support causes that will promote peace and dignity, equality for women and girls and economic development in the poorest regions of the world,” said Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, UNFPA Executive Director.

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Taliban spread fear by radio

January 25th, 2009 · No Comments

Every night around 8 o’clock, the terrified residents of Swat, a lush and picturesque valley a hundred miles from three of Pakistan’s most important cities, crowd around their radios. They know that failure to listen and learn might lead to a lashing — or a beheading.

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Airstrikes confirm Obama policy

January 24th, 2009 · No Comments

Two remote U.S. missile strikes that killed at least 20 people at suspected terrorist hideouts in northwestern Pakistan yesterday offered the first tangible sign of President Obama’s commitment to sustained military pressure on the terrorist groups there, even though Pakistanis broadly oppose such unilateral U.S. actions.

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Kill them like insects

January 24th, 2009 · No Comments

Interesting that the Wall Street Journal has no qualms with Israeli soldiers who describe Palestinians as mosquitoes: Arieh Spitzen, the former head of the Israeli military’s Department of Palestinian Affairs, says that even if Israel had tried to stop the Islamists sooner, he doubts it could have done much to curb political Islam, a movement [...]

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Same old same old?

January 24th, 2009 · No Comments

U.S. President Barack Obama has taken the Middle East by surprise with the speed of his diplomacy but his first statement on the conflict between Arabs and Israelis was strikingly similar to old U.S. policies.

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Guarding Pakistan’s nukes

January 23rd, 2009 · No Comments

In fact, the Times’ Sanger reports that a top George W Bush administration official expressed his fears to him that “some groups could try to provoke a confrontation between Pakistan and India in the hope that the Pakistani military would transport tactical nuclear weapons closer to the front lines, where they would be more vulnerable [...]

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Clinton speaks to Zardari

January 23rd, 2009 · No Comments

Hillary Clinton, on her first day as the secretary of state, telephoned President Asif Ali Zardari and told him that the Obama administration was appointing a special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.

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A traumatised nation

January 23rd, 2009 · No Comments

According to studies cited by the Afghan health ministry an astonishing 66% of Afghans suffer mental health problems.

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India’s Israel envy

January 23rd, 2009 · No Comments

The fact is that India knows that war will accomplish nothing. Indeed, it is just what the terrorists want – a cause that would rally all Pakistanis to the flag and provide Pakistan’s army an excuse to abandon the unpopular fight against the Taliban and Al-Qaida in the west for the more familiar terrain of [...]

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Pakistan’s spies reined in

January 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

Recently, the International Monetary Fund approved a 23-month US$7.6 billion bailout program for Pakistan. “American military officials played a crucial role in this approval,” commented the executive director of the Center for Research and Security Studies (CRSS), Dr Farrukh Saleem, to Asia Times Online. “The purpose is to keep pace with Pakistan and its armed [...]

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Chomsky on Israel’s targeting of civilians

January 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

“the Israeli Army has always struck civilian populations, purposely and consciously…the Army, he said, has never distinguished civilian [from military] targets…[but] purposely attacked civilian targets.” The reasons were explained by the distinguished statesman Abba Eban: “there was a rational prospect, ultimately fulfilled, that affected populations would exert pressure for the cessation of hostilities.” The effect, [...]

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Global financial crisis hits Iceland

January 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

Icelanders were shocked to see Landsbanki listed alongside Al Qaeda and North Korea on Britain’s list of sanctioned “regimes.”

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Gaza sewage disaster looms

January 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

The World Bank and UNICEF have reported that despite repeated requests Israel has forbidden the importation by any means — sea, air, or by land across the Egyptian border — of consignments of pumps, metal pipes, air and oil filters, and other goods that need to be obtained from outside Gaza; while allowing only a [...]

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Bush admin’s blindspot on Indian nukes

January 21st, 2009 · No Comments

The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) was dealt yet another reeling blow by the recent U.S.-India nuclear deal. The Bush administration not only turned a blind eye to India’s development of nuclear weapons without signing the NPT, it lauded India for its strong nonproliferation record. When you preside over a nuclear arsenal the size of ours, [...]

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Israel wanted humanitarian crisis

January 21st, 2009 · No Comments

The scale of Israel’s attack on the Gaza Strip, and the almost daily reports of war crimes over the last three weeks, has drawn criticism from even longstanding friends and sympathisers. Despite the Israeli government’s long-planned and comprehensive PR campaign, hundreds of dead children is a hard sell. As a former Israeli government press adviser [...]

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NATO vs Karzai

January 20th, 2009 · No Comments

Mr Baheen said the Afghan government was committed to establishing rule of law. However, its efforts were being undermined as “the international community, including some powerful Nato member countries, has their own favourite warlords” who they back against the Karzai government, he charged.

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Spy war between Iran and US

January 20th, 2009 · No Comments

The official, who was not named by local media, said two Iranian AIDS specialists, whose arrests last year sparked concern in the West, are part of a group of four “ringleaders” who were recently convicted of involvement in an alleged U.S.-funded plot to overthrow the Islamic government. Dozens of others have been arrested and interrogated, [...]

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Afghan impressions of Obama

January 20th, 2009 · No Comments

Businessman Ata-u-llah expressed the distrust of the Western intervention that is widespread in Afghanistan. “There will be no change because infidel countries always have the same politics against Muslim countries and their target is to give a bad name to Islam and extend Christianity and Judaism,” he said.

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US claim Al Qaeda unsafe

January 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Al Qaeda leaders no longer feel safe in Afghan-Pakistan border areas, where they face heavy U.S. and Pakistani pressure and their local welcome has worn out, CIA chief Michael Hayden said on Thursday.

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Sacked Chief still fighting for justice

January 19th, 2009 · No Comments

Chaudhry said the people are being denied justice as those who violated the law and the constitution still enjoyed unlimited and unchecked powers.

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Women face brunt of Taliban

January 18th, 2009 · No Comments

In a dark echo of Taliban rule in Afghanistan, violent religious extremists in Pakistan are moving to restrict girls’ education as they seek to impose a draconian version of Islamic law on a beleaguered population.

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India’s Mumbai dossier

January 18th, 2009 · No Comments

Is available here.

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Israeli PM boasts of scuppering peace

January 18th, 2009 · No Comments

In an unusually public rebuke, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel said Monday that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had been forced to abstain from a United Nations resolution on Gaza that she helped draft, after Mr. Olmert placed a phone call to President Bush.

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US tax payers keeps Israel strong

January 18th, 2009 · No Comments

The U.S. fuel shipments are part of a sustained policy that has widened the energy gap between Israel and its neighbors. Over the past few years, the Israel Defense Force has cut off fuel supplies and destroyed electricity infrastructure in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon. Those embargoes and attacks on power plants have exacerbated a [...]

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Reporting on Hamas

January 17th, 2009 · No Comments

This is why it’s generally hard to trust the mainstream Western press when it comes to the Israel/Palestine conflict: <!– /* Font Definitions */ @font-face {font-family:SimSun; panose-1:2 1 6 0 3 1 1 1 1 1; mso-font-alt:??; mso-font-charset:134; mso-generic-font-family:auto; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:3 680460288 22 0 262145 0;} @font-face {font-family:”Cambria Math”; panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 [...]

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A young Australian in Pakistan

January 17th, 2009 · No Comments

The tragedy spurred Simonsen. She has since helped raise funds to buy an ambulance for the foundation and secured a $20,000 grant from a UN development program. She is also establishing legal aid for women who want to testify against their attackers.

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Jewish MP compares Israel to Nazis

January 17th, 2009 · No Comments

A prominent Jewish MP has compared the actions of Israeli troops with Nazis who forced his family to flee Poland.

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Bush CIA director defends torture… again

January 16th, 2009 · No Comments

“These techniques worked,” Hayden said of the agency’s interrogation program during a farewell session with reporters who cover the CIA. “One needs to be very careful” about eliminating CIA authorities, he said, because “if you create barriers to doing things . . . there’s no wink, no nod, no secret handshake. We won’t do it.”

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Pakistan cracks down on Jamaat and Lashkar

January 16th, 2009 · No Comments

The government said on Thursday that it had shut down five training camps of the outlawed Jamaatud Dawa and Lashkar-e-Taiba, banned their seven publications and blocked all their websites.

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Israel destroys UN stores

January 16th, 2009 · No Comments

Three members of UN staff were injured when three Israeli shells hit the headquarters, setting it on fire. Thousands of tonnes of desperately needed food and humanitarian supplies were destroyed and about 700 refugees given shelter in the building had to be evacuated. UN officials said the shells were white phosphorus, believed to have been [...]

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Revealing statement on Liberal politics

January 16th, 2009 · No Comments

Mr Pyne appeared to want the Liberal Party to become a greens party, “which is not consistent with its history and philosophy … and is not a particularly sensible recipe for returning to government”, Senator Minchin adds.

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Fighting for peace

January 13th, 2009 · No Comments

To those who have an emotional need to maintain a belief in Israel’s inherent goodness, such views may well seem self-evidently true. To those of us who do not share this need, the evidence of recent weeks makes them seem bizarre. It is hard to imagine what the civilians of Gaza would make of the [...]

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India ready to break all ties with Pakistan

January 13th, 2009 · No Comments

India plans to break off business, transport and tourist links with Pakistan and isolate it from the rest of the world if it fails to help to investigate the Mumbai terrorist attacks…

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No paradise on island

January 13th, 2009 · No Comments

10,000 tourists go to the Maldives per week 330 tonnes of rubbish dumped on Tilafushi island every day Rubbish now covers 50 hectares or 120 acres. hand sorted by 150 Bangladeshi workers (Thanks to Shafiur)

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Who will save Israel from itself?

January 12th, 2009 · No Comments

According to a joint Tel Aviv University-European University study, this fits a larger pattern in which Israeli violence has been responsible for ending 79 per cent of all lulls in violence since the outbreak of the second intifada, compared with only 8 per cent for Hamas and other Palestinian factions.

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Colonial relationship

January 12th, 2009 · No Comments

Afghan and Pakistani officers at the center were barred from talking to a reporter during a recent visit. But a glance around the room showed several of them primarily engaged in watching a wrestling match on one of the big TV screens and playing computer solitaire. Their U.S. counterparts, meanwhile, sorted through e-mails from the [...]

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The War Nerd

January 9th, 2009 · No Comments

Will Obama be more hardnosed with the Israelis? I doubt it. Why would he? You’re not supposed to say out loud that there’s a big rich Israeli lobby, but everybody knows there is. And more to the point, what’s their counterweight? Who cares about the Palestinians, even in the Arab world, never mind DC? So [...]

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Red Cross accuses Israel

January 8th, 2009 · No Comments

The International Committee of the Red Cross said Thursday that it had found at least 15 bodies and several children — emaciated but alive — in a row of shattered houses in the Gaza Strip and accused the Israeli military of preventing ambulances from reaching the site for four days.

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What You Don’t Know About Gaza

January 8th, 2009 · No Comments

NEARLY everything you’ve been led to believe about Gaza is wrong. Below are a few essential points that seem to be missing from the conversation, much of which has taken place in the press, about Israel’s attack on the Gaza Strip.

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Rockets from Lebanon hit Israel

January 8th, 2009 · No Comments

Several rockets have been fired into northern Israel from neighbouring Lebanon, Israeli police say.

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Hamas speaks

January 8th, 2009 · No Comments

While Americans may believe that the current violence in Gaza began Dec. 27, in fact Palestinians have been dying from bombardments for many weeks. On Nov. 4, when the Israeli-Palestinian truce was still in effect but global attention was turned to the U.S. elections, Israel launched a “preemptive” airstrike on Gaza, alleging intelligence about an [...]

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Watching Israel destroy your home

January 8th, 2009 · No Comments

There are other pictures that haunt me. The Israeli army issued a video of the bombing of the Hamas-run government compound, which it posted on YouTube. In it, I also can see my home being destroyed, and I watch it obsessively.

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Adviser sacked for admitting the obvious

January 8th, 2009 · No Comments

Pakistan’s private Geo television station quoted Gilani as saying Durrani had made unauthorised comments to the media confirming that the lone surviving Mumbai attacker was a Pakistani national.

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Israel uses white phosphorous in Gaza

January 7th, 2009 · No Comments

Dr. Mads Gilbert, a member of a Norwegian triage medical team working in Gaza, has documented Israel’s use of Dense Inert Metal Explosive (DIME), which cuts its victims to pieces and reportedly causes cancer in survivors. Gilbert, who has worked in several conflict zones, said the situation in Gaza is the worst he has ever [...]

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Jews speak out against Israel

January 6th, 2009 · No Comments

“There is a growing number of Jews around the world, tens of thousands if not more in the last week, [who] if nothing else have spoken out forcefully against Israel,” he said.

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Obama’s silence

January 6th, 2009 · No Comments

“Obama said that if rockets were being fired at his home while his two daughters were sleeping, he would do everything he could to prevent it,” Barak was reported as saying on Monday.

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Lost in the rubble

January 6th, 2009 · No Comments

The young in Gaza have nothing to do. There are no jobs. They have nowhere to escape to. They cannot marry because they cannot afford housing. They cannot leave Gaza, even for Israel. They sleep, sometimes 10 to a room, and live on less than $2 a day, surviving on United Nations or Hamas charities [...]

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Solidarity not religious conviction

January 5th, 2009 · No Comments

And therein lies my problem. I came to the march to express solidarity with Palestinians and express my anger at Israel’s bombings. I didn’t come to express solidarity with Hamas, nor want to come to a religious march. If I wanted to hear “God is Great” I could have gone to a mosque or a [...]

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Ten myths about Pakistan

January 5th, 2009 · No Comments

Here are some common assumptions about Pakistan and its citizens that I have come across in the Indian media…

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Gaza’s man-made catastrophe

January 5th, 2009 · No Comments

It has never been like this before. The assault is coming from the sky, the sea and the ground. The explosion of shells, the gunfire from the tanks and the missiles from planes and helicopters are incessant. The sky is laced with smoke, grey here, black there, as the array of weaponry leaves its distinctive [...]

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Pakistan’s Islamist challenge

January 5th, 2009 · No Comments

These groups have given sanctuary to the Afghan Taliban and al-Qaeda forces that fled Afghanistan after the U.S. invasion. They now fight alongside them against the United States and its allies in Afghanistan. They too consider themselves Pakistani nationalists. In the midst of the crisis triggered by the attacks on Bombay, Baitullah Masud, the leader [...]

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Uncritical support for Israel

January 4th, 2009 · No Comments

Ultimately, what is most notable about the “debate” in the U.S. over Israel-Gaza is that virtually all of it occurs from the perspective of Israeli interests but almost none of it is conducted from the perspective of American interests.

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Taliban ban girl schools

January 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

“He said we must take our daughters out of all schools – private or public – by 15 January 2009 at the latest. Failing this, he said the schools will be bombed and violators would face death. He also said they will throw acid into the faces of our daughters if we don’t comply, like [...]

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Israel’s PR strategy helps

January 2nd, 2009 · No Comments

Israeli officials have also enjoyed a clear edge with coverage. An Israeli foreign ministry assessment of eight hours of coverage across international broadcast media reported that Israeli representatives got 58 minutes of airtime while the Palestinians got only 19 minutes. Speaking for the Israeli military, Major Avital Leibovich said: “Quite a few outlets are very [...]

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Why Pakistan’s army gun shy

January 1st, 2009 · No Comments

The problems started after September 11, when the US forced the then-military government of president General Pervez Musharraf to abandon the Taliban. Up to 2001, Afghanistan had virtually been a fifth Pakistani province for which Pakistan arranged day-to-day expenditures. Even the communications network was run by the Pakistan Telecommunication Corporation Limited.

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Iran helps NATO in Afghanistan

January 1st, 2009 · No Comments

Meanwhile, NATO is looking to protect its supply lines and might have found assistance from Iran, which would reduce its dependence on Pakistan, where supply lines have come under heavy attack.

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What to expect for 2009

January 1st, 2009 · No Comments

Two major events are likely to mark the beginning of 2009 and decide the new rules of war and peace in the region. In Pakistan, the foremost is curtailing the powerful military dominated intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and the second is the unveiling of a new strategy in Afghanistan.

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Names of those killed in Gaza

January 1st, 2009 · No Comments

The first 187 names of those murdered in the ongoing Gaza massacre were released today.

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Pakistan moves 20,000 troops

January 1st, 2009 · No Comments

The day after Christmas, the wires buzzed with reports that Pakistan was moving 20,000 troops from its western border with Afghanistan to locations near the eastern border with India.

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Probe finds links to Mumbai attacks

January 1st, 2009 · No Comments

At least one top leader of militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba, or “Army of the Pure,” captured in a raid earlier this month in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, has confessed the group’s involvement in the attack as India and the U.S. have alleged, according to a senior Pakistani security official.

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Hamas hopes for ground invasion

December 31st, 2008 · No Comments

But Hamas officials and analysts said Monday that the organization would actually like Israel to launch a ground operation; it hopes this would let it inflict such heavy losses on Israeli tanks and infantry that Israel would flee with its tail between its legs. (Thanks Antony)

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Fisk mentions the unmentionable

December 31st, 2008 · No Comments

That is why Gaza exists: because the Palestinians who lived in Ashkelon and the fields around it – Askalaan in Arabic – were dispossessed from their lands in 1948 when Israel was created and ended up on the beaches of Gaza.

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Return to the centre for Bangladesh

December 30th, 2008 · No Comments

The Mohajot (Grand Coalition) alliance practically demolished its rivals, the centre-right Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its Islamist ally the Jamaat-e-Islami. All top leaders of the Jamaat lost their seats.

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Guardian speaks out

December 30th, 2008 · No Comments

The death toll by last night had climbed to nearly 290, with more than 700 wounded. This in reply to hundreds of rockets from Hamas militants which killed one Israeli in six months. But the equation is always like this. We also know that to have chosen to strike on a Saturday morning, when the [...]

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UN rapporteur speaks out

December 30th, 2008 · 2 Comments

I am an individual who had done nothing wrong beyond express strong disapproval of policies of a sovereign state. More importantly, the obvious intention was to humble me as a UN representative and thereby send a message of defiance to the United Nations.

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Diary of an aid worker in Gaza

December 30th, 2008 · No Comments

I can’t bear to think what will happen if the bombing continues. There are not enough beds in the hospitals and they are severely short of equipment, including x-ray machines.

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Obama backs Israel’s crimes

December 29th, 2008 · No Comments

Barack Obama yesterday appeared to line up behind the Bush administration in support of Israel’s attack on Gaza.

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Israel can do no wrong

December 29th, 2008 · No Comments

One can travel from the farthest right fringe of the GOP to the heart of the Democratic Party leadership and hear exactly the same thing:  Israel is always right.  Israel must not be criticized.  Israel never bears any blame.  Any action taken by Israel is justified.  No matter the situation, that just gets repeated over and over [...]

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Israel’s attack planned 6 months ago

December 29th, 2008 · No Comments

Sources in the defense establishment said Defense Minister Ehud Barak instructed the Israel Defense Forces to prepare for the operation over six months ago, even as Israel was beginning to negotiate a ceasefire agreement with Hamas.

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Gaza’s hospitals struggle with casualties

December 28th, 2008 · No Comments

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Israeli strikes kill 271

December 28th, 2008 · No Comments

Palestinian medics say that at least 271 people have been killed and more than 600 injured in continuing Israeli bombardment of the impoverished Gaza Strip.

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US and Pakistan militaries’ close links

December 25th, 2008 · No Comments

Admiral Mullen met Chief of the Army Staff Gen Ashfaq Kayani and Director General ISI Lt-Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha in Islamabad and told reporters travelling with him that he made it a point to meet his Pakistani counterpart whenever possible.

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Government under fire over Dogar

December 25th, 2008 · No Comments

He went on to say if the government would not ensure the supremacy of the constitution, then there would be no difference between the present government and previous government of Pervez Musharraf.

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India yet to provide evidence

December 24th, 2008 · No Comments

During a visit to Islamabad, Interpol chief Ronald Noble said Tuesday that Pakistan has agreed to cooperate with the global police force to find the perpetrators of the Mumbai attack. However, he said that India had not shared information about the gunmen.

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Gap in the Global Financial Architecture

December 24th, 2008 · No Comments

This exposes a gaping hole in the international financial system: the lack of an international, independent mechanism for countries to resolve disputes over potentially illegitimate and/or illegal debt or in the case of bankruptcy.

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Education, job creation to stem terrorism

December 24th, 2008 · No Comments

Addressing a certificate distribution ceremony of National Vocational and Technical Commission (NAVTEC) here on Tuesday, the Prime Minister termed poverty, illiteracy and unemployment the root cause of terrorism and extremism.

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More deaths from US strikes

December 23rd, 2008 · No Comments

The unmanned drones have carried out over 30 missile attacks in the tribal region over the past three months, killing over 200 people.

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Pakistani girl band

December 23rd, 2008 · No Comments

Zeb and Haniya are a living and vivid example of how much more there is to the Pashtun sensibility than the images of gun-toting renegades.

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Iran silences human rights campaigner

December 22nd, 2008 · No Comments

The unlawful raid by Iranian security forces on the Tehran rights group run by Nobel Laureate Shirin Ebadi on December 21, 2008, raises concerns of a broader attempt to silence Iran’s human rights community, the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran and Human Rights Watch said today. See also this.

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Trade barriers increase

December 22nd, 2008 · No Comments

The list of countries making access to their markets harder potentially includes the United States, where critics are calling the White House‘s $17.4 billion bailout of the U.S. auto industry an unfair government subsidy that would put foreign competitors at a disadvantage.

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Continued belligerency towards Hamas

December 22nd, 2008 · No Comments

Lieutenant General Moshe Yaalon, a former chief of staff who is now Likud’s security expert, recommended the assassinations of Hamas leaders and “in and out” military incursions to stop the rockets. However, a leading analyst, Yossi Alpher, said it is time for Israel to admit that it does not have a “workable strategy” for dealing [...]

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Mumbai is not New York

December 21st, 2008 · No Comments

This, then, is the larger historical context of terrorism in the subcontinent and of the Mumbai attacks. It shouldn’t surprise us that Hafiz Saeed of the Lashkar-e-Taiba is from Shimla (India) and LK Advani of the Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh is from Sindh (Pakistan).

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US to double Afghan presence

December 21st, 2008 · No Comments

Adm. Michael G. Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that between 20,000 and 30,000 additional U.S. troops could be sent to Afghanistan to bolster the 31,000 already there.

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UN doubles Afghanistan budget

December 19th, 2008 · No Comments

The United Nations said Wednesday it will double the budget of its Afghan mission next year, taking on hundreds of new staff and opening more offices to meet more “complex” challenges.

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Zardari interviewed on BBC

December 19th, 2008 · No Comments

“And if we get to the stage where there is tangible proof, then I assure you that our democracy will take the action laid down in our law, in our constitution”.

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Poll of Palestinians and Israelis reveals sentiments

December 19th, 2008 · No Comments

Fifty percent of Israelis and 59% of the Palestinians said they believed that American policy toward the conflict would not change after Obama took office. (Thanks Antony)

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Zardari outlines plan for FATA

December 19th, 2008 · No Comments

The government is working on a new model of economic development, which envisaged that the tribal people will be made shareholders in various development projects with a view to weaning the unemployed youth away from militancy.

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Bush’s continued delusions

December 18th, 2008 · No Comments

President George W. Bush said on Wednesday he is leaving to his successor a stronger anti-terrorism partnership with Pakistan and Saudi Arabia forged in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks.

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Pakistanis support crackdown on extremists

December 18th, 2008 · No Comments

A recent Gallup Poll of Pakistanis suggests their government has domestic support for a crackdown on Pakistan-based extremists.

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US arming more Afghans

December 18th, 2008 · No Comments

The U.S. military will soon launch a pilot program to raise local militias, paid by the Pentagon, in an effort to improve security throughout the country.

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Born without a birthday

December 17th, 2008 · No Comments

More than fifty million kids in the developing world have been born without a birth certificate.

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Trivial Pursuits Distract A Nation In Crisis

December 15th, 2008 · No Comments

In the longer term, climate change is an issue that can’t fail to radicalise citizens and voters — possibly violently. It’s impossible to imagine a more serious issue, after all. If politicians felt political pressure earlier this year when petrol reached $1.50 per litre — and they certainly did – then what will they do when [...]

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Attempt to ban former ISI chief

December 11th, 2008 · No Comments

Pakistan government has blocked a resolution moved in the UN Security Council for imposing sanctions against former ISI chief Lt Gen (Retd) Hamid Gul over his alleged links with al-Qaida and Taliban, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said on Wednesday.

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Muslim feminists confront world of obstacles

December 11th, 2008 · No Comments

With the rise in religious extremism and growing antagonism among ordinary Muslims against the West–largely a response to U.S. interventionist policies abroad–secular, Western-style feminists in countries such as Pakistan are increasingly seen as U.S. agents and regarded with suspicion and distrust.

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Save money, avoid private schools

December 11th, 2008 · No Comments

Just so we’re clear, this page is called opinion and my opinion is private schools should not receive any government funding.

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Strong links to Lashkar-e-Toiba

December 10th, 2008 · No Comments

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Slides and Stories from Pakistan to Palestine

December 10th, 2008 · No Comments

Slides and Stories from Pakistan to Palestine Special newmatilda.com event: Hear the stories behind the news about people and places often mentioned in the Western media but rarely understood Mustafa Qadri is newmatilda.com‘s Middle East and South Asia correspondent, based in the Pakistani port city of Karachi. He returns briefly to Sydney with stories and [...]

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India tells SC to ban Jamaat-ud-Dawah

December 10th, 2008 · No Comments

The Charter of the United Nations and provisions of international law, including the right of self-defence, gives us the framework to fulfil these responsibilities.

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Bush’s torture blindspot

December 9th, 2008 · No Comments

Horton despaired at current Attorney General Michael Mukasey’s comments last week that President Bush had no need to issue pardons to administration officials because there was “absolutely no evidence” that anyone who developed policies in the “war on terror” “did so for any reason other than to protect the security in the country and in [...]

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Don’t mention the ‘O’ word

December 8th, 2008 · No Comments

His language is poor, and he is utterly uninterested in broadening his horizons. He is hostile towards Arabs and hostile towards foreigners in general and feels obligated to cheat them whenever he can (empty the open buffet; sneak six people into a double room at night so as not to come out “a sucker.”) He [...]

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Peshawar terrorism weakens Pakistan’s case

December 8th, 2008 · No Comments

The latest Peshawar blast was a sectarian crime but it has ended up killing indiscriminately Muslims of all sects.

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Militant attack burns NATO supply containers

December 7th, 2008 · No Comments

Dozens of containers, possibly holding supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan, burned after militants attacked a Pakistani freight terminal with mortars and grenades early Sunday, according to Pakistani police officials.

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Hamas and Fatah fight over Haj

December 7th, 2008 · No Comments

Thousands are stranded. The militant group and rival Palestinian faction Fatah are embroiled in a power struggle over who has the right to hand out visas for the pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia.

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Hoax call almost starts war

December 7th, 2008 · No Comments

As the international effort to defuse the tension intensified, matters started to clear up and by late Saturday evening calm began to prevail. But sources admit that those 24 hours made many people in Islamabad and Delhi and, perhaps in Washington, quite anxious. Perhaps for this reason, the Americans decided against taking any further chances, [...]

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Interview on ABC Radio National – December 4, 2009

December 4th, 2008 · No Comments

I was interviewed by Phillip Adams on ABC Radio National tonight on the recent Mumbai attacks, sentiments in Pakistan, and an interview I conducted with a Taliban commander from the Swat valley. You can listen to the interview here.

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Cluster bombs

December 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

Nearly all victims of cluster bombs worldwide are civilians…

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IMF Pakistan bailout not enough

December 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has handed an economic lifeline to Pakistan by agreeing to lend the embattled country $7.6 billion (£4.9 billion), but more cash will be needed, perhaps in a matter of weeks, officials said.

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Is Al Qaeda behind Mumbai attacks?

December 2nd, 2008 · No Comments

The network of the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami, which was a major supporter of the ISI in the whole region, especially in Bangladesh, was shattered and fell into the hands of al-Qaeda when Maulana Ilyas Kashmiri, chief of Harkat, a hero of the armed struggle in Kashmir who had spent two years in an Indian jail, was arrested [...]

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Pakistanis implicated in Mumbai attacks

December 2nd, 2008 · No Comments

India’s foreign ministry has said investigations have shown that all gunmen involved in the Mumbai attacks were Pakistani nationals.

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Chomsky lifts lid on Obama

November 27th, 2008 · No Comments

One leading economist, one of the few economists who has been right all along in predicting what’s happening, Dean Baker, pointed out that selecting them is like selecting Osama Bin Laden to run the war on terror.

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Mumbai attacked

November 27th, 2008 · No Comments

“There is a middle class of around 100 million who live very well but 800 million-plus people live in miserable conditions,” he said.

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Israel’s international law loophole

November 25th, 2008 · No Comments

Ambassador to Britain Ron Prosor said earlier this year that the law was detrimental to relations between Israel and the UK and that officials were working to amend the law.

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New cluster bomb convention fails

November 25th, 2008 · No Comments

The United States, Russia,China, India, Pakistan, Israel, and Finland were among the countries pushing for a new protocol to the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) that would allow the use of all existing cluster munitions, including the oldest, most inaccurate, and unreliable varieties, for a period of up to 20 years.

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IMF okays Pakistan loan

November 25th, 2008 · No Comments

The International Monetary Fund approved a $7.6 billion bailout package to help prevent Pakistan from defaulting on its debt.

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Hamas divided

November 25th, 2008 · No Comments

These leaders claim Hamas in Gaza caused the reconciliation talks with Fatah that had been slated for Cairo to fail, and that their Gaza counterparts thwarted the chances for a Palestinian national unity government by their unwillingness to consider giving up control of the Strip and setting “impossible” conditions.

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Obama picks chief economist

November 25th, 2008 · No Comments

Romer, 49, also fits an emerging pattern of decidedly centrist economic appointments – despite promises of an enormous fiscal stimulus that could match October’s jaw-dropping $700 billion bank rescue – that has disappointed many liberals but is winning rave reviews on Wall Street and in academia. Many Republicans are thrilled.

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US to stay in Iraq

November 18th, 2008 · No Comments

Although the pact has experienced pockets of resistance, many Iraqis say the victory of US President-elect Barack Obama was a factor because of his promise to withdraw troops within 16 months of taking office.

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Interactive government for Obama?

November 18th, 2008 · No Comments

“What was so unique about the Obama campaign [was] that interactivity was real. When people commented on something, they saw things happen. That’s what the people are expecting the president to do now.”

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NATO supply line hampered

November 17th, 2008 · No Comments

The recent ambush took place at the entrance to the pass. U.S. officials say the attackers seized two Humvees and a water truck. Several trucks carrying wheat for the World Food Program were also hijacked.

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CIA director says Pakistan centre of terrorism

November 17th, 2008 · No Comments

CIA director Michael Hayden has warned that every major terrorist threat confronting the world has ties to Pakistan. Of course, the US has had nothing to do with that…

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More of the same coverage of Afghanistan

November 16th, 2008 · No Comments

Reviewing history’s arcs, Ayub seems to have given up on the current generation of Afghan leaders, dismissing them as “thieves, murderers and criminals” whose corruption and inefficiency has allowed the Taliban to survive and prosper. Instead she reserves her sorrow for the next generation. “Young people are not convinced that there is a secure future [...]

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Taliban have no faith in Obama

November 15th, 2008 · No Comments

“For us, the change of America’s president — we don’t have any good faith in him,” said Muslim Khan, a grizzled Taliban spokesman…

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Shaukat spent over a billion and lied to the nation

November 12th, 2008 · No Comments

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Shaukat Aziz spent over one billion rupees on 47 foreign visits during 2004-07. He had also falsely claimed after his visit to Saudi Arabia that he had paid the expenses from his own pocket. The Foreign Office revealed this in the National Assembly on Monday.

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Secret Order Lets U.S. Raid Al Qaeda

November 11th, 2008 · No Comments

The United States military since 2004 has used broad, secret authority to carry out nearly a dozen previously undisclosed attacks against Al Qaeda and other militants in Syria, Pakistan and elsewhere, according to senior American officials.

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The Duel by Tariq Ali

November 10th, 2008 · No Comments

According to Ali, the real threat to Pakistan, and as a consequence to the world, emerges from the appalling economic inequity and the dangerous complicity among Pakistan’s corrupt-to-its-core military, its civilian elite and their American counterparts, which goes way back: the founder of the nation Muhammad Ali Jinnah tried to sell his own house to [...]

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Obama to reasses policy on Afghanistan, Pakistan

November 10th, 2008 · No Comments

“That means bringing in the neighbouring countries: Iran, India, and the five Central Asian states, and then resolving some of these regional problems — like the disputes between India and Pakistan, between Iran and the Americans, between Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

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Embedded with the Pakistan army

November 10th, 2008 · No Comments

“It’s a guerrilla war in a built-up area and forest, against a strongly held defence line held by people who are invisible…”

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Not much of a ‘change’

November 7th, 2008 · No Comments

If he goes to the White House, he’ll be going to serve the president – but Israel will have a friend in the White House…

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Australis’ corporate welfare

November 5th, 2008 · No Comments

TABCORP is pleading for immediate government intervention, through tax cuts and increased protection for licensed tote operators, to halt the slide of punters’ cash to its Northern Territory rivals.

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Documentary on US financial crisis

November 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

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Chomsky on Iran

November 2nd, 2008 · No Comments

“Nobody is seriously concerned about Iranian aggression. There has been no sign of any. But they are upset about Iran’s influence in the region. Also in the background is the concern that Iran might turn East. That’s not discussed very much but that’s certainly a policy concern,” the feisty US political dissident added.

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Afghanistan’s dying mothers

November 1st, 2008 · No Comments

Afghanistan’s dying mothers By Carol Mann First Published: October 31, 2008 KABUL: Today in Badakhshan, Afghanistan, for every 100,000 births, 6,500 young mothers die. This is a world record, unrivaled anywhere. In other parts of Afghanistan, too, the rates of maternal mortality continue to be among the highest in the world. Roughly 75% of Afghan [...]

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US about to talk to Taliban?

October 30th, 2008 · No Comments

The U.S. is actively considering talks with elements of the Taliban, the armed Islamist group that once ruled Afghanistan and sheltered al Qaeda, in a major policy shift that would have been unthinkable a few months ago.

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Saudis confirm peace talks with Taliban

October 22nd, 2008 · No Comments

Saudi Arabia has confirmed for the first time that it’s been sponsoring talks between the Afghan government and Taliban insurgents. “We will not negotiate with terrorists but we do believe in political engagement. We are a political government and we believe in talking to the people who are willing to reconcile.”

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Obama’s rich donors

October 22nd, 2008 · No Comments

Lost in the attention given to Obama’s Internet surge is that only a quarter of the $600 million he has raised has come from donors who made contributions of $200 or less, according to a review of his FEC reports. You have to wonder what kind of change is possible when so many of the [...]

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Swat valley violence shatters education

October 22nd, 2008 · No Comments

My dreams of becoming a doctor have been all but shattered…

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Afghans search for peace own way

October 20th, 2008 · No Comments

“We need to pressure the Afghan government and the international community to find a solution without using guns.”

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Seeing past the poverty

October 18th, 2008 · No Comments

Courtesy of the excellent Tofu Notes: So you can talk about the smell of urine and the kids rummaging through rubbish which has been dumped by the roadside. You can see rusted tin roofs, narrow muddy alleys, streams containing human waste, and kids with grubby clothes and bare feet. But if you do see those [...]

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Accepting facts on the ground

October 14th, 2008 · No Comments

Taliban leader Mullah Omar promised at the 11th hour in those fateful days from his hideout in Kandahar via Pakistani intermediaries – that, yes, he would verifiably sequester his movement from al-Qaeda and ask Osama bin Laden to leave Afghan soil, provided the US acceded to his longstanding request to accord recognition to his regime [...]

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Anti-democratic nature of US capitalism is being exposed

October 14th, 2008 · No Comments

Such interventionism is a regular feature of state capitalism, though the scale today is unusual. A study by international economists Winfried Ruigrok and Rob van Tulder 15 years ago found that at least 20 companies in the Fortune 100 would not have survived if they had not been saved by their respective governments, and that [...]

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Saleem Shahzad on Pakistan’s dilemma

October 14th, 2008 · No Comments

Last week, in a special briefing session of a Senate committee, Pakistani Secretary of Defense Kamran Rasool briefed lawmakers on the recent dynamics of Pakistani support for the “war on terror”. Rasool openly admitted that Pakistan does not have any option but to follow US dictates, whatever they may be, because the country would collapse [...]

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Suicide attacks are haram

October 14th, 2008 · No Comments

LAHORE: A meeting of Muttehadda Ulema Council (MUC) held here Tuesday issued a unanimous decree (fatwa) declaring suicide attacks in Pakistan as haram (unlawful) and Najaez (unjustified).

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Lula on the US financial crisis

October 1st, 2008 · No Comments

“This crisis belongs to the American bankers, to the European bankers. It doesn’t belong to the Brazilian bankers,” Lula said Monday. “It’s not fair for Latin American, African and Asian countries to pay for the irresponsibility of sectors of the American financial system.”

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Matt Damon on Sarah Palin

October 1st, 2008 · No Comments

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Olmert calls for West Bank withdrawal

October 1st, 2008 · No Comments

Israel will have to give up “almost all” of the West Bank areas it occupies and accept the division of Jerusalem in order to take advantage of a rapidly closing window of opportunity for peace with the Arabs, outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said in an interview published Monday. Kinda a bit late…

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McCain-Obama obsession

September 28th, 2008 · No Comments

The English-language press is obssessed with the Obama-McCain presidential race. So much so that they’ve almost entirely failed to report on their policies. It was interesting to note in the first debate between the two candidates that McCain was actually less hawkish than Obama on US policy towards Pakistan: “If the United States has Al [...]

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Taliban force locals to fight

September 27th, 2008 · No Comments

Militants battling security forces in a tribal region bordering Afghanistan have forced families to give up sons to fight alongside Islamist extremists, a Pakistani military official said.

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Talk to the Taliban?

September 27th, 2008 · No Comments

“They have to talk to Mullah Omar, certainly – not maybe, and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and the Haqqani group,” Mr Ghani told The Daily Telegraph in an interview in Peshawar.

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Corporate socialism

September 26th, 2008 · No Comments

No, we just hear the call for us to happy with the status quo. That there’s nothing weird about privatising the profits, and socialising the losses.

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President meets Palin

September 25th, 2008 · 1 Comment

At that point, Zardari entered and the conversation turned decidedly flirtatious. He told her she was “even more gorgeous” than he thought.

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Bob Woodward’s new book

September 21st, 2008 · No Comments

And you think that Sarah Palin is woefully ill-prepared to be president? When Bush is a two-term president?

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I got mentioned on Reuters

September 19th, 2008 · No Comments

Time for (another) shameless self-promotion. Sanjeev Miglani at the Reuters Blog mentioned my article here. Quite apart from that, I do enjoy Sanjeev’s reporting which is particularly surprising given it comes from a corporate news outlet. Interesting to see the diversification of news content now that the internet, and blogs, have displaced newspapers as the [...]

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Must see documentaries

September 19th, 2008 · No Comments

The Real News Network has an excellent series of mini-documentaries on the US/Pakistan war against the Taliban along the border with Afghanistan. You can check them out here.

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Tariq Ali on US strikes in Pakistan

September 19th, 2008 · No Comments

What is really required in the region is an American/NATO exit strategy from Afghanistan, which should entail a regional solution involving Pakistan, Iran, India, and Russia. These four states could guarantee a national government and massive social reconstruction in that country. No matter what, NATO and the Americans have failed abysmally.

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Selective victims

September 10th, 2008 · No Comments

The father of an Israeli girl killed by a suicide bomber was invited, but no Palestinian victims, even though the Palestinian Authority proposed several names. Arab ambassadors complained that the selection process, which tilted toward victims of Islamic militant groups, was secretive.

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Son of Nation Islam founder dies

September 10th, 2008 · No Comments

W. Deen Mohammed was for many years an obedient son. He was the minister of the Nation of Islam’s mosques in Chicago and Philadelphia in the 1950s. On his 28th birthday in 1961, Mohammed was sent to federal prison in Minnesota for refusing, on the basis of Nation of Islam teachings, induction into the U.S. [...]

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France criticises US missile strikes

September 10th, 2008 · No Comments

France warned Tuesday that missile strikes by suspected U.S. drones in Pakistani tribal areas were undermining international efforts in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

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Langston Hughes

September 6th, 2008 · No Comments

Reading or listening to Hughes makes the heart sore, like a bird flying south for the winter. Even when he’s talking the weary blues. Genius.

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Islamabad cools down

September 5th, 2008 · No Comments

The weather was exhilaratingly cool in Islamabad today. Khala (auntie from mother’s side) and I went for a walk along the narrow roads that abut wealthy acreages just outside the suburb where we live. Most are small farms owned by Islamabad’s wealthy along with their consummate mansions and extensive walls that ensure outsiders do not [...]

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Grumpy poms

September 4th, 2008 · 2 Comments

Why are Poms so grumpy? There’s one subeditor at a British outlet whom Iregularly pitch articles to. He always send me these terse monosyllabic responses. And when I query little things like where is my paycheck or why isn’t my name featured on the website his response is always ‘it’s someone else’s responsibility’. And of [...]

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A Republican radical

September 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

“I did not want to run people’s lives, I did not want to run the economy and I did not want to run the world. I didn’t have the authority to do it, and I didn’t have the Constitution behind me to do it,” said Paul, who has served in the House of Representatives for [...]

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First US ground attack in Pakistan?

September 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

At least 15 people, including women and children, were killed by US special forces Wednesday during a raid on a border village in a Pakistani tribal region, local residents and security officials said.

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Women buried alive in Balochistan

September 2nd, 2008 · No Comments

“Are Pakistani women not human beings? Or are they not considered citizens, deserving equal protection under the constitution and law?”

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I’m in love with Saeed

September 2nd, 2008 · No Comments

The best bookshop in the world, as far as I’m concerned, because it’s chock full of all the type of books I love reading. And by Australian standards it’s pretty cheap. I bought Ayesha Jalala’s ‘Partisans of Allah’ and Ahmed Rashid’s ‘Descent into Chaos’, both recent publications, for $A22! Best of all the staff are [...]

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Ramadan confusion

September 1st, 2008 · No Comments

It is extremely ironic, not to say embarrassing, that the Muslim people, who led the world for a millennium in every scientific discipline, developed the scientific method itself and taught it to the west, are still in a state of chaos over a relatively simple matter of science and religion, ie the lunar calendar.

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Zardari makes his move

September 1st, 2008 · No Comments

Asif Ali Zardari, widower of the murdered former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto, has purged almost all of his wife’s top advisers from her party, including her political secretary and closest friend, who cradled her as she died.

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Life is a memory

August 30th, 2008 · No Comments

I’ve been a runner for over a decade now. Owing to my physiology I find middle distance, from 5kms to 15kms but no more, to be my optimal range. Nevertheless, even when I’m running, stretching and exercising regularly, the first ten minutes is always an intense struggle. My lungs gasp and legs tense up. My [...]

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Lahore

August 23rd, 2008 · No Comments

I haven’t had many opportunities to write recently due to the lack of internet access. It has shown just how dependent I am on the technology. In my defence, without internet, small scale writers such as I would not be able to contribute very much. The cost of constant phone calls and transport, which I [...]

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US won’t provide sanctuary to Musharraf

August 18th, 2008 · No Comments

The United States made it known on Sunday that it was not considering any proposal to grant political asylum to President Pervez Musharraf.

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Even the aunties are angry

August 17th, 2008 · No Comments

Just noticed this energetic video clip on youtube of a Pakistani woman voicing her discontent towards President Musharraf. Quite amusing.

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Volleyball

August 17th, 2008 · 3 Comments

In spare moments, which isn’t very often, I’ve been catching bits of the Olympics. I saw both the women’s volleyball and beach volleyball for the first time ever. I never realised just how pornographic it is. The women wear bikini-like outfits in the beach version and underpant-like bottoms in the volleyball. They also happen to [...]

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A divided society

August 17th, 2008 · No Comments

Pakistan is an incredibly divided society. Most of those divisions relate to class. Even within a class there are several different subclasses. Here’s one example. The neighbour’s servant, who’s a top bloke, came over today to give me some yummy desert. I offered him most of the food in my fridge because I’m leaving for [...]

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Double standards on military intervention

August 16th, 2008 · No Comments

A recent book by Michael Vickery, Cambodia: A Political Survey, dramatizes once again the fantastic double standard that operates in cases of cross-border attacks by the weak, and U.S. targets, and the strong, especially the United States.

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US and UK still helping Musharraf

August 16th, 2008 · No Comments

The US and British diplomats are covertly seeking a graceful exit for the Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, reports say.

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Day trip to Hyderabad

August 16th, 2008 · No Comments

Today I did a preliminary trip to Hyderabad, the next biggest city in the province of Sindh after Karachi. The purpose of the visit was to speak to a representative from the local branch of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. The major issue covered by the HRCP in Hyderabad is the abuse and enslavement [...]

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US distancing itself from Musharraf

August 16th, 2008 · No Comments

The White House has said that President George W. Bush believes only Pakistanis should decide who they want to lead their country, sending a clear signal that he will not rescue President Pervez Musharraf from an impeachment move.

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Is Musharraf set to resign?

August 15th, 2008 · No Comments

What remained to be worked out were guarantees for Mr. Musharraf’s physical safety if he stayed in Pakistan, or where he would go into exile. Among the places that Mr. Musharraf is said to favor if he goes abroad are Dubai, Turkey, the United Kingdom or the United States, though his strong preference is to [...]

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Occupiers cannot also be liberal

August 14th, 2008 · No Comments

<!– /* Font Definitions */ @font-face {font-family:SimSun; panose-1:2 1 6 0 3 1 1 1 1 1; mso-font-alt:??; mso-font-charset:134; mso-generic-font-family:auto; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:3 680460288 22 0 262145 0;} @font-face {font-family:”Cambria Math”; panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 6 3 2 4; mso-font-charset:1; mso-generic-font-family:roman; mso-font-format:other; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:0 0 0 0 0 0;} @font-face {font-family:Calibri; panose-1:2 15 5 [...]

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Who cares they’re only Palestinian

August 14th, 2008 · No Comments

If you are an Israeli citizen living in the West bank towns of Samaria and Judea and you beat up a Palestinian, even kill him or her, there’s a 90 percent chance you will get away with it.

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Who’s to blame for Russia-Georgia conflict?

August 13th, 2008 · No Comments

(Thanks to Damian)

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Not so dry anymore

August 11th, 2008 · 2 Comments

I had my first-ever Pakistani beer yesterday. Okay, I lie. I had my first four. The first was after lunch with a local newspaper editor. We went to a bottle shop near to where I live. You couldn’t tell from the outside however, because the place was largely boarded up. You drive up in your [...]

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Good summary of Gaza blockade

August 11th, 2008 · No Comments

The Gaza Strip has been under an Israeli blockade since the militant group Hamas seized control in June 2007. What gets in and out of Gaza, what has been the impact of the restrictions, and what has changed since the truce between Israel and Hamas in June 2008?

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Are Blacks better athletes?

August 11th, 2008 · No Comments

The one thing Entine is correct about is that the general reluctance to talk about “black” athletic success has bolstered the idea that there is a truth about racial differences that is being suppressed by political correctness. This has done untold damage to blacks in areas in which the stereotype says they are inferior – [...]

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Where’s the money?

August 11th, 2008 · No Comments

Benazir Bhutto’s widower is accusing President Musharraf of siphoning off millions from aid intended to support war on terror.

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A visit to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan

August 11th, 2008 · No Comments

Sorry for not posting more travel diary entries of late. Or perhaps that’s a good thing? I’ve been a little flat out putting some stories together. The decision to impeach Musharraf didn’t help either… in terms of my workload. I’m still way behind on some non-Pakistan stories including one which is oh, just around 2 [...]

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Morales claims another victory

August 11th, 2008 · No Comments

President Evo Morales appeared to have won a sweeping victory Sunday in a nationwide recall election that the leftist chief of state crafted as a means of consolidating support against fierce conservative opposition.

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RIP Mahmoud Darwish

August 10th, 2008 · No Comments

In 2000, then education minister Yossi Sarid suggested including some of Darwish’s poems in the Israeli high school curriculum, but then prime minister Ehud Barak overruled him, saying Israel was not ready yet for his ideas in the school system.

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A history of marriage

August 9th, 2008 · No Comments

We are now taught to expect that we would find in our spouse a great lover, a best friend, a constant companion, a financial partner. All of those things that went into the old “good wife” are true, but she also has to be like the courtesan. She has to also be charming and entertaining [...]

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Musharraf won’t resign

August 8th, 2008 · No Comments

Mr. Zardari has made it known that he would like to be president, according to Pakistani and Western officials. As leader of the majority party, he could seek the nomination for president. The appointment of the president is decided by a vote of the national legislature and the provincial assemblies.

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The Hollowmen

August 8th, 2008 · No Comments

As an ex-Canberra bureaucrat (who used to work next door to the Dept of Prime Minister and Cabinet) I’ve got to say I’m loving this wonderful new show from the old D-Generation mob. Far more cutting than that banal variety program they had on Channel Ten a few years back. Friends in Canberra tell me [...]

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Israeli soldiers charged

August 8th, 2008 · No Comments

The most recent footage, taken in the village of Naalin in the occupied Palestinian West Bank, sparked particular outrage because it involved a clear abuse. It shows an Israeli officer holding a young Palestinian man by the arm while a soldier standing a few feet away aims his gun at the Palestinian’s foot and fires. [...]

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Lawyers disappointed with impeachment

August 8th, 2008 · No Comments

ISLAMABAD – The elders of the legal fraternity are displeased with the ruling coalition for placing the demand of restoration of deposed judges on the back-burner and linking the same with the impeachment of President Pervez Musharraf.

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Geo TV Interview

August 8th, 2008 · No Comments

I just got interviewed by Geo TV on the impeachment of Musharraf. They asked what I thought will happen from here. I said no one really knows but Musharraf won’t budge easily. A lot depends upon what the Army and the US does. No doubt Musharraf is counting his allies as we speak. More importantly, [...]

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Impeaching Musharraf

August 7th, 2008 · No Comments

President Pervez Musharraf will have to face impeachment under Article 47 of the Constitution if he fails to take vote of confidence from the assemblies immediately. This was announced by Co-chairman PPP, Asif Ali Zardari at a joint press conference with PML(N) Chief, Nawaz Sharif, here at Zardari House on Thursday. The announcement came after [...]

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Salute

August 7th, 2008 · No Comments

“If I win, I am American, not a black American. But if I did something bad, then they would say I am a Negro. We are black and we are proud of being black. Black America will understand what we did tonight.” – Olympic champion Tommie Smith. There’s a new documentary out detailing the role [...]

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Justice, Bush Admin style

August 7th, 2008 · No Comments

A military jury’s verdict on Wednesday in the first U.S. war crimes trial since World War II — that Yemeni Guantanamo prisoner Salim Hamdan is guilty of material support for terrorism, but not guilty of terrorism itself — was the culmination of two weeks of proceedings that provided some extraordinary insights into the United States’ [...]

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All by myself

August 7th, 2008 · No Comments

Dad left yesterday evening and the apartment has been noticeably quiet ever since. I’ll miss the old fella’s company. It was good to have him around for three weeks, even if he had five pet subjects he mentioned frequently every day. In other news, the taxi driver who threw our money back at us returned [...]

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Dad and I

August 6th, 2008 · No Comments

It was an eventual day yesterday largely for uneventful reasons. The highlight was when the taxi driver we were using for three hours between nine and twelve at night asked for an exorbitant fee. When we paid him the usual amount we pay taxi drivers he literally threw the money back at us. After a [...]

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France accused in Rwanda genocide

August 6th, 2008 · No Comments

Will we see an international tribunal for this? An independent Rwandan commission said France was aware of preparations for the genocide and helped train the ethnic Hutu militia perpetrators. (Thanks to Shafiur for this.)

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The worst of the worst

August 5th, 2008 · No Comments

On Saturday armed settlers from Kiryat Arba invaded a Palestinian house in Hebron where a wedding was taking place, throwing stones and harrassing guests. Two of the guests were wounded and one, 15 year old Hamza Abu Hitta, was thrown from the roof. He suffered a broken back and is in hospital, where his condition [...]

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The siege of Ni’lin

August 5th, 2008 · No Comments

HINDI MESLEH: Actually, I’m right now stuck in a house, because the Israeli army has invaded the village, because we had the Friday pray at the land. Israeli—Israel army—more than 100 soldiers now are invading the village, shooting tear gas and rubber-coated steel bullets at houses. The demonstrations, as usual, they are not violent and [...]

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Ordinary people on the Olympics

August 5th, 2008 · No Comments

These letters were published in today’s Sydney Morning Herald: We must support the Australian Olympic Committee president, John Coates, in his appeal for more funding (“AOC chases more money, more medals”, August 4). We must not let our Olympians lag behind in their medal count in future Olympics. Sacrifices must be made. Perhaps some federal [...]

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Trained in terror

August 5th, 2008 · No Comments

The British trained the Kenyan army in counter-terrorism tactics that are being used with devastating force against its own people.

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Taliban continues war on women

August 4th, 2008 · No Comments

By destroying girls’ schools in Swat and Quetta.

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US admits kidnapping

August 4th, 2008 · No Comments

WASHINGTON, Aug 3: Five years after her mysterious disappearance in Karachi, the FBI has finally conceded that an MIT-trained Pakistani neuroscientist is alive and is in US custody in Afghanistan.

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Assessing Pakistan’s democracy

August 3rd, 2008 · 1 Comment

Pakistanis hoped for a fresh start after a decade of Pervez Musharraf’s military rule. But a host of political, economic and security problems is already threatening the democratic era with a return of the past, says Ian Talbot.

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Going in circles

August 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

Today I had some yummy pancakes with a cousin and his family. It was good to have a chilled out late Sunday chat and a big feed. There was another bloke there, around my dad’s age or possibly older. He was an interesting character. Quite knowledgeable and it seems he’s had a lot of life [...]

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Karzai speech at Sth Asia Summit

August 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

Statement by His Excellency Hamid Karzai President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan At the 15th Summit of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) Colombo, Sri Lanka 02 August 2008 Please Check Against Delivery Your Excellency President Mahinda Rajapaksa, Excellencies Heads of State and Government, Distinguished Delegates, ladies and gentlemen, I thank you, [...]

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More violence in Gaza

August 3rd, 2008 · No Comments

Hamas and a group affiliated with Fatah battle it out in Gaza leading to deaths on both sides, mostly on the latter. This follows a bomb blast that killed Hamas members that the Islamic movement beleives the group is responsible for. Interestingly that blast was not described as a ‘terror attack’. That term seems to be reserved for attacks against Israel.

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A journey to Hindu Karachi

August 2nd, 2008 · 5 Comments

Today and yesterday I visited Karachi’s Hindu community at two different ‘mandirs’ or temples. One was in the Lighthouse district of the city. From the main road you would be forgiven for not knowing it exists because it is surrounded by markets. The only entrance to the tempe is through a small alleyway covered by [...]

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Religion is poetry

August 2nd, 2008 · No Comments

A belief system is meant to be a comprehensive network of ideas about what one thinks is absolutely real and true. Within that system, everything is adequately explained and perfectly reasonable. You know exactly how far to go with your beliefs and when to stop your thinking. A belief system is defined by an absolute [...]

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Israel’s treatment of award-winning journalist

August 1st, 2008 · No Comments

This summer, at age 24, I was honored to learn that I had become the youngest journalist to receive the Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism, named for the famed American war reporter and awarded to journalists who counter propaganda with the truth. Although Israel has sealed Gaza’s 1.5 million Palestinians in what many now call [...]

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Kuwait deports Bengali workers

August 1st, 2008 · No Comments

The Kuwait government sent another 123 Bangladeshi workers back Thursday morning, bringing the total to 201 since the Gulf kingdom announced Wednesday that it would deport Bangladeshis who were involved in violence during recent unrest over low pay.

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Is Pakistan helping Islamic militants?

August 1st, 2008 · No Comments

In a demonstration of growing U.S. frustration, the CIA’s deputy director flew to Islamabad this month to warn Pakistani officials that they need to do more to address dangerous ties between the country’s spy agency and resurgent Al Qaeda-linked militants, a U.S. official said Tuesday.

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Reporting on Turkey

July 31st, 2008 · No Comments

Turkey is often held up as a model Muslim state because of the way it tackles the modernisation process. But lift the lid and you discover that it is complex in good and bad ways. Today the International Herald Tribune reports that the ruling party of Turkey’s government narrowly missed being found in breach of [...]

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Still fighting

July 30th, 2008 · No Comments

I wasn’t able to get to Hyderabad so I went to a public rally by the deposed Chief Justice of Pakistan’s Supreme Court, Iftikhar Chaudhry, in Karachi. It was a hot, humid day owing to the rain the previous evening. It got even hotter and more humid inside the hall where Chaudhry and other senior [...]

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It’s raining for the first time

July 29th, 2008 · No Comments

The default mind frame for negotiating transactions in Karachi is suspicion. Occasionally suspicion spills over into outright hostility. Today I visited the bank to open an account. I was a little exhausted owing to the heat and while I patiently waited for all the formal things to get processed a gentleman sitting with another bank [...]

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Impeaching George Bush

July 28th, 2008 · No Comments

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Free Gaza

July 28th, 2008 · No Comments

Subject: Setting Sail on August 5th 2008 to Break the Siege of Gaza Press Release – Thursday 24 July 2008 The Free Gaza Movement UK For Immediate Release Setting Sail on August 5th 2008 to Break the Siege of Gaza Around 60 Palestinians, Israelis and Internationals from 15 countries will sail to the Gaza Strip [...]

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Crime in Karachi

July 27th, 2008 · No Comments

Tonight I went to the ‘haq-eqa’ of one of my cousin’s first child Asad. The baby was all of eight days old and very cute. It was a good opportunity to meet a number of my father’s relatives whom I haven’t seen for some time. I asked a bunch of blokes at the event whether [...]

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The myth of nuclear deterrence

July 26th, 2008 · No Comments

The New America Foundation proves why it is the best mainstream think tank in the US with another excellent lecture, this time on the important issue of nuclear deterrence.

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Fruit and other things

July 23rd, 2008 · 1 Comment

Pakistan has some of the best natural produce I’ve ever sampled. The eggs here are just superb and the fruit is second only to that which I ate in Morocco and Palestine. Perhaps that makes it third best. You can tell the produce is much more natural than what you get in developed countries because [...]

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Karachi heat

July 22nd, 2008 · 3 Comments

The electricity has been shut down in Clifton, the part of Karachi where I’m staying, for two hours now. With it, most everything I do has ground to a halt. Almost everything. I started reading, ‘Torture Team’ by Philippe Sands, a book I’m meant to be reviewing but the heat eventually got to me. I [...]

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Starting from scratch

July 21st, 2008 · 1 Comment

Everytime I leave for a long overseas journey I’m confronted by a rich mixture of emotions. I generally lose my appetite, a function of being a little anxious about the impending experience. Due to the nature of my work, there is always a fair degree of uncertainty about what precisely I’m meant to be doing. [...]

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Welcome!

July 17th, 2008 · No Comments

Thanks for stopping by. I’m a freelance journalist from Australia focusing mainly on Middle East politics. But, over time, expect to see a diverse range of other topics also being discussed.

For more information on who I am go to my ‘About me’ section. A full list of my published work is available in the ‘Articles’ section. Over here in the blog I’ll be posting more day-to-day accounts of my take on the news and my travels through one of the most over-reported and least understood regions on our planet.

If you’re particularly observant you will have noticed the ‘Vlog’ section of my website. Here I’ll be uploading video footage of interviews and the places I visit.

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