Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - 9:33 AM

Breaking news
Initial reports about a blast just
heard in Lahore say that at least 7 people were killed, including four
policemen, and at least 47 wounded in an explosion near a Shia
mourning procession at the Bhati Gate (The News, Geo, Dawn, AP, BBC).
Police said the blast, coming as thousands of Shia worshippers marked
the end of the holy month of Muharram, was a suicide attack by a teenage
boy.
Karin Brulliard describes the University of Karachi,
where last semester ended "with a flurry of clashes involving armed
student organizations, a professors' strike against violence, canceled
exams and a lunchtime bombing," as a microcosm of ethnic and
political conflict in the southern port city, where three times as many
people died in political violence in 2010 as in 2009 (Post).
Pakistani interior minister Rehman Malik recently ruled out an army
operation in Karachi, though did say the Pakistani army would be sent
"wherever the need arises" (The News, Dawn).
Flashpoint
Leaders
from the Indian political party the BJP, a Hindu nationalist group
currently in the opposition, were reportedly detained at the airport in
Jammu en route to making an attempt to raise the Indian flag in the
Lal Chowk area of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian-administered
Kashmir in commemoration of Republic Day tomorrow, marking India's
adoption of a democratic constitution (AP, IE, Hindu).
More than a dozen Kashmiri separatist groups said they would oppose
any such attempts, and Indian and Kashmiri authorities are concerned
the move would cause violence in the valley.
The BJP members
were trying to go ahead with their plan to raise the flag and hold a
rally beginning on the border of Jammu and Kashmir and the Indian state
of Punjab, and have apparently been ignoring calls from Indian home
minister P. Chidambaram to "give up the path of confrontation" (WSJ, PTI, IE). The three leaders were reportedly arrested at the border earlier today (Hindu).
A standoff continues at the border, where authorities have sealed off
routes into Kashmir and forced around 7,000 BJP supporters into buses
to be taken away (Reuters). The remaining 2,500 protesters face arrest.
Deal making
The
U.S. and U.N. have offered the first international endorsements of the
deal reached between Afghan president Hamid Karzai and Afghan
parliamentarians to open the parliament tomorrow, rather than in a month
as Karzai proposed last week, and keep the special tribunal appointed
by Karzai to investigate fraud in last year's parliamentary elections,
rather than abolishing it as the MPs demanded (AP, Tolo, WSJ, McClatchy, AP).
Observers and Afghan MPs are concerned that Karzai will use the
tribunal, whose constitutionality has been condemned by the
international community, to filter out opposition legislators. NATO said
yesterday that the alliance plans to start transferring security
control to Afghan forces in some areas of the country in March, with
secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen emphasizing the "need for a
timely opening of parliament" to contribute to a "stable political
environment" (Reuters).
Outgoing
special inspector general for Afghan reconstruction Arnold Fields said
yesterday in congressional testimony that of 884 bases scheduled to be
built by the U.S. for Afghan security forces by the end of fiscal 2012,
only 133 have been completed and 78 are under construction, leaving 673
not yet begun (AFP, Post).
More than $11 billion in American funding for the base construction
projects is reportedly "at risk of being wasted" because the Pentagon
has no "comprehensive plan" for the program, according to Fields, who
steps down next month.
A tree grows in Lashkar Gah
As
many as 100,000 trees will be planted in Afghanistan's southern Helmand
province as part of a greening initiative in and around the provincial
capital, Lashkar Gah (Pajhwok). Afghan authorities have 114,000 saplings in stock, and farmers are also bringing seeds to bazaars.
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