Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - 10:09 AM

Under fire, again
Gunmen shot and killed
Pakistan's only Christian cabinet minister, minority affairs minister
Shahbaz Bhatti, this morning, reportedly in response to his vocal
opposition to Pakistan's controversial blasphemy laws, two months after
the assassination of Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer (NYT, Guardian, Dawn, Post, Tel, ET, The News, LAT).
The shooters stopped Bhatti's car as it was leaving his parents' house
in Islamabad, opening fire and attempting to pull Bhatti out before
leaving the scene. They left leaflets
signed by al-Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban, and a deputy
spokesman for the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan claimed credit for the
attack, adding, "We will continue to target all those who speak against
the law which punishes those who insult the Prophet. Their fate will be
the same" (BBC, AP).
Police officials insisted Bhatti had been provided with proper security
detail, which was reportedly not with him at the time of the attack (The News, Dawn).
In
a video made four months ago and meant to be shown in case of his
death, Bhatti said that threats of violence would not keep him from
defending "oppressed and marginalized persecuted Christians and other
minorities" in Pakistan, and that he would die to defend their rights (BBC, AJE, AP, Guardian).
Christian leaders, human rights activists, Pakistani president Asif Ali
Zardari, and other Pakistani and world leaders condemned the attack,
and the government has reportedly ordered an investigation (Dawn, Post). Pakistan's Express Tribune has a timeline of Pakistani politicians under attack (ET).
On the tracks
A
bomber believed to be targeting railroad tracks in a Karachi
neighborhood died yesterday after his explosives detonated prematurely,
leading initially to speculation that he intended to be a suicide
bomber (Daily Times, Dawn, ET, Geo, The News). Taliban fighters in North Waziristan killed four tribal elders yesterday, accusing the men of "spying for America" (Daily Times).
And a coordinator for Pakistan's Human Rights Commission in Balochistan
was shot dead by unidentified gunmen in the city of Khuzdar this
morning (Daily Times).
U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton yesterday told Congress not to cut
aid to Pakistan as a result of the country's refusal to release CIA
contractor Raymond Davis, saying the United States is "focused on
addressing Pakistan's political and economic challenges as well as our
shared threats" (Dawn).
The Lahore High Court will hear a petition to allow media reports about
Davis's work into the record as the court decides on his claim of
diplomatic immunity (Dawn).
And the Pakistani government announced a 15 percent "flood tax" on
income along with other measures designed to contain Pakistan's growing
budget deficit (Dawn).
Chilly reception
A
report to be released today by the British parliament's powerful
Foreign Affairs Committee questions the prospects for military success
in Afghanistan, and calls on the United States to push efforts for
direct talks and political reconciliation with the Taliban (Guardian, Reuters, BBC, WSJ).
The report's release comes during a visit to London by Afghan President
Hamid Karzai, who asked for continued British cooperation in a press
conference yesterday with Prime Minister David Cameron, where Cameron
expressed optimism about ongoing military operations (Tolo News, Tel, Tel).
A
year after U.S. Marines began major operations in the rural town of
Marjah in Afghanistan's southern Helmand province, the U.S. military is
placing some of its hopes for a transition to Afghan governance in local
watch groups known as Interim Security for Critical Infrastructure, or
ISCIs (McClatchy, Washington Post).
In Helmand's Sangin district, continued violence has led military
officials to conclude that a much-touted truce signed two months ago
with the district's dominant Alikozai tribe may be falling apart (AP).
Afghan officials yesterday found four of eight policemen who'd gone
missing from their post stabbed dead in a field near Helmand's capital
of Lashkar Gah (AP).
And CENTCOM chief Gen. James Mattis testified yesterday that U.S.
troops would aggressively target and disrupt Taliban units attempting to
return to Kandahar for an expected spring offensive (Reuters).
NATO has apologized for the deaths of nine civilians in operations in the Pech area of Kunar province earlier this week (Reuters, AP, AFP, Pajhwok). Several hundred Afghans in Kunar protested against the airstrike, and Karzai condemned the deaths (AP, AFP).
And villagers in Ghazni province yesterday burned winter clothing and
other aid from international troops yesterday, reportedly on orders from
Taliban fighters (Pajhwok).
The varmint hunter
The
WSJ today reports on a key component of combat operations at Bagram
Airfield, U.S. Department of Agriculture employee George Graves, who
hunts and traps birds and other animals that could get get sucked into
jet engine intakes (WSJ). Graves, who sends his victims to the Smithsonian for study, told the Journal,
"Not only is it contributing to airfield safety...but it's also
contributing to science world-wide. It's kind of a win-win situation.
Except for the animals, of course."
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Fundamentalist Islamic State of Pakistan
Pakistan just keeps America’s Pakistani-apologists proving wrong that Pakistan is a moderate Islamic country.
American news media will faithfully report the turning up of many Pakistanis to cheer the killer of this Christian minister just as it did over the killer of Punjab governor, while still continuing to propagate the myth about illusionary moderate character of Pakistan’s Islamic fundamentalist society.
Longer the news media here continue this myth, more the Pakistani society will prove them wrong, over and over again.
Every sane Pakistani deeply condemns the Minorities Minister's murder, and deepestly condemns the murderers - the TTP reportedly a CIA-sponsored terrorist outfit on a mission to destabilize Pakistan, which has accepted the reponsibility of this murder.
According to the City Police Chief, the late Minister had been provided 2 squads - one from Police and the other from Frontier Constabulary - and that there is no security lapse involved in this tragedy. (DAWN)
It was a voluntary regular routine of the Minister to visit his mother's home without his Security Staff, which is itself a screaming proof of his total trust in the local Muslim majority. Having heard through the press about the TTP's aims I wish he had modified his routine as warranted by the sensitive situation on ground.
The anti-Pakistan and anti-Islam forces are striving their utmost to cultivate this tragic incident by somehow turning it into a Christian-Muslim clash, but they are not going to triumph in their nefarious designs, since the minorities particularly the Christians are themselves the prime witness to the local Muslim majority's attitude in action towards them.
Self-evident Mixup on your side ? I uphold my version.
Self-evident Mixup - whether plain or planned - I uphold my version, but ready for objective and positive discussion. Salman Taseer's case has got nothing to do with Bhatti's tragic murder. Please don't mixup Apples with Oranges as they say. Which of the three cases - Taseer, Davis and Bhatti - you would like to discuss first please let me know?
(3)
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