Monday, August 23, 2010 - 8:29 AM

Bracing
Flood waters in
Pakistan's Sindh province continued to rise over the weekend, with at
least 300,000 people forced to evacuate from Shahdadkot as levees on the
eastern side of the city struggled to hold up against nine feet of
water, which broke through on Sunday (AP, The News, NYT, BBC, Reuters, WSJ, Times, AP). Authorities say Hyderabad, Sindh's second-largest city, is not in danger from the torrents (Dawn/AFP, Daily Times).
The Indus River has flooded five to seven miles beyond its banks, and
floodwaters are expected to empty into the Arabian Sea over the next few
days (NYT, WSJ). Communicable diseases like malaria, scabies, and respiratory infections are spreading across the country (CNN).
In
Punjab province, a flood plain "criss-crossed with canals" where the
government reportedly had 48 hours notice of imminent flooding, locals
have accused authorities of failing to act in time or powerful
landowners of protecting their interests "at the expense of others" (NYT).
Waters have started to recede in areas of Punjab, and aid groups
estimate that millions of dollars are needed to help the nine million
people displaced by flooding (WSJ, FT). Some 1,500 people have been killed and 2,000 injured in the last month,
and thousands of people are also stranded in Baluchistan (ET, Dawn).
More
than $800 million has been pledged or donated, and Pakistani officials
will reportedly ask the IMF for looser terms for its $10 billion loan
while it copes with the aftermath (Reuters, Independent, AP, LAT, Tel, ET, AJE).
A senior U.N. official has criticized the slow response from the
international community, and Pakistan has banned Islamic charities
suspected of ties to militant groups from operating flood relief
efforts, though they continue to offer assistance, particularly in the
northwest (BBC, AFP, Times, Daily Times, WSJ, McClatchy).
How you can help relieve the worst flooding in Pakistan's history: donate to Relief4Pakistan (R4P). More options here (Wash Post).
Released to fight again
Earlier this morning, as many as 17 people were killed when a suicide
attacker detonated his explosives at a mosque in the main town of South Waziristan, and a bomb exploded inside a school where a group of tribal
elders were reportedly meeting in Kurram agency, killing seven (Geo, AFP, AP, Geo); several members of a local 'peace committee' were killed in Mohmand when a remote-controlled bomb detonated at a security checkpost they were manning over the weekend (The News); and three more were killed in Karachi on Saturday (Dawn). Bonus read: Amb. Wendy Chamberlin on Karachi's boiling melting pot (FP).
Dexter
Filkins reports that seven months after Afghan Taliban number two
Mullah Baradar's capture in Karachi, Pakistani officials are now
claiming his arrest, which was accomplished with the help of the CIA,
was deliberately designed to break up secret talks between Baradar and
the Afghan government (NYT).
Other Taliban leaders who were picked up in the aftermath of Baradar's
arrest, writes Filkins, "have been released to fight again" "after
receiving lectures against freelancing peace deals."
More
information is emerging about the killings of two teenage boys in the
eastern Punjabi town of Sialkot on August 5, which happened in front of a
crowd of people that included several Pakistani police officers:
authorities are reportedly becoming more convinced that the boys were
innocent (AP).
Fourteen people have been detained in connection with the lynching,
which has caused outrage across the country; Punjab's chief minister
promised yesterday that the "murder culprits" will be arrested within
three days and tried in an anti-terrorism court (ET, The News, Hindu, ET).
And a suspected U.S. drone strike outside the main town in North Waziristan killed at least four alleged militants (Geo, Daily Times, AP, AFP). It is the 52nd reported strike this year, compared with 53 in 2009 (NAF).
Flashpoint
On
Saturday, Indian security forces imposed a curfew on several cities in
Indian-administered Kashmir, and on Sunday six people were hurt after
Indian forces fired on stone-throwing anti-India protesters in Srinagar (AFP, AFP).
More than 60 have been killed in the Valley during the last two months,
including one protester who died from his injuries earlier today, and
31 Indian policemen were hurt over the weekend (AFP).
The minority Sikh community in Kashmir has reportedly received a wave
of threats from alleged militants telling them to convert to Islam or
leave the area (ToI).
Accidental deaths
At
least 21 U.S. troops, Afghan policemen, and Afghan civilians died in
security incidents across Afghanistan over the weekend: a coalition
airstrike accidentally killed three Afghan police officers in the
northern province of Jawzjan on Friday, several civilians were killed in
an airstrike in Farah that targeted insurgents, and the bodies of six
Afghan policemen were found in their "station house" in Helmand (AFP, NYT, AJE, LAT).
The Taliban also staged an "audacious nighttime raid" against hundreds
of Afghan security guards in Helmand province late last week, killing at
least 21 (NYT).
And Laura King reports on the stoning deaths of a 28 year old man and a
19 year old woman who eloped in the northern Afghan province of Kunduz (LAT).
Afghan
President Hamid Karzai defended his decision to disband private
security companies operating in Afghanistan to Christiane Amanpour on
ABC's "This Week," a day after the Afghan government officially issued
the orders to begin dismantling the firms (AP, Reuters, AFP).
Karzai also admitted for the first time that he personally intervened
to free one of his top political aides who was arrested on corruption
charges (Wash Post, NYT). The interview transcript is available here (ABC).
And on Friday, Karzai said he would allow two Western-backed
anti-corruption investigative units, which were instrumental in
arresting his political aide, to operate without political interference (AP, McClatchy, AFP).
Gen.
David Petraeus, top commander in Afghanistan, said the Taliban's
momentum in southern Afghanistan has been reversed, and said he would
offer U.S. President Barack Obama his best "professional advice" next
July when the transition to Afghan control is scheduled to begin (BBC). And the AP considers the coalition offensive reportedly set for next month in Zhari district in Kandahar (AP).
And
the Post has several must-read pieces focused on Afghanistan: U.S. and
Afghan officials are working on a plan to slow the flow of undeclared
cash leaving the country (Post),
three air bases in Mazar-e Sharif, Shindand, and Camp Dwyer in Helmand
are being expanded at a cost of around $100 million each, illustrating
the Pentagon's intention to keep building military facilities in
Afghanistan (Post),
and al-Qaeda's role in the Taliban insurgency has been limited, as both
groups have been concerned about the appearance of foreign interference
in a local insurgency (Post). Bonus read: Anne Stenersen on the relationships between al-Qaeda and various Taliban factions (NAF).
Good clothes for a good cause
In
a special event in Lahore called "Fashion for Flood Relief" at the
Royal Palm Golf and Country Club, top Pakistani fashion designers
slashed their prices and donated the proceeds to flood victims (Daily Times).
Clothes, furniture, jewelry, and cosmetics all flew out the door, with
nearly 60 percent of the items gone within the first hour.
Sign up here to receive the daily brief in your inbox. Follow the AfPak Channel on Twitter and Facebook.
Pakistan suffering from self-inflicted wounds
Pakistan projects sympathetic image as a victim of terror, even as it is, in fact, the creator of terrorism. So Pakistan is suffering from self-inflicted wounds and will continue to do so as long as it shelters, nurtures, supports and protects innumerable terrorist outfits on its soil.
Nobody forced Pakistani government to facilitate relocation of Osama bin Laden from Sudan to Afghanistan in 1996. Benazir Bhutto’s democratic government of Pakistan chose to do so of its own free will.
Nobody forced Pakistani Army and Intelligence to create what ex-CIA official Bruce Reidel called a ‘jihadist Frankenstein monster’ in 1990s. Pakistani Army and Intelligence chose to do so with the full financing provided by Pakistan’s democratic governments at the time.
Pakistan boldly holds the Western world to ransom. It garners generous financial aid and military supplies from the US and has successfully projected itself as recourse of last resort in its geographical theatre. It runs circles around international sanctions and bans by nurturing a large number of home-grown terrorist outfits forever changing nomenclature. In addition, it maintains seemingly freelance non-state actors that allow it the fig-leaf of plausible deniability.
And in a masterful demonstration of how to manage chaos, Pakistan keeps its domestic situation in destabilized ferment and flux by stoking sectarian, that is, Sunni versus Shiite violence, and religious tensions between Islamic progressives and fundamentalists, rent-collecting on such issues from the oil-rich Islamic world as well.
For the further bamboozling of the West, Pakistan uses its blow-hot-blow-cold relationship with the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban and its hosting of the Al Qaeda as adroit bargaining chips.
It flaunts its strategic relationship with China with the latter’s tacit support. This enables Pakistan to be muscular about its armed nuclear options and hint menacingly about the possibility of its nuclear weapons falling to the Taliban as well.
This image is really scary. The situation they are traspassing is miserable...people have no fault in this. Albergues en Barcelona
(2)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE