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Daily brief: 100,000 protest Pakistani government in Lahore

By Andrew Lebovich Share

Crowds in the streets

Pakistani cricket star-turned-opposition politician Imran Khan drew as many as 100,000 people to a rally in Lahore Sunday, where Khan lambasted the country's leading political figures as well as the United States (NYT, Post, AP, AFP, ET, Tel, Dawn, DT). Khan called the demonstration part of a "tsunami," and said that, "My message to America is that we will have friendship with you, but we will not accept any slavery." The turnout surprised many politicians and analysts who had previously regarded Khan, whose Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) party holds no seats in the country's parliament, as a marginal figure (ET, Dawn, ET, Dawn, ET). The rally comes after a much smaller protest Friday, when 2,000 people came out in Islamabad at Khan's urging to protest American drone strikes in Pakistan (AFP, ET). And the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), a member of the country's ruling coalition led by the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), organized a pro-government rally in Karachi Sunday (Dawn, DT).

A suspected drone attack on Sunday reportedly killed as many as six militants, after several missiles were fired on a car in the Datta Khel area of North Waziristan (Dawn, ET, AJE, AFP, CNN). Pakistani officials reported Friday that up to 13 militants, possibly including Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) commander Taj Gul Mehsud, were killed last week in a drone strike on a compound in Mir Ali (Reuters). The rash of strikes recently prompted criticism  this weekend from Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani as well as Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar (Dawn, ET).

A PPP minister in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, Amjad Khan Afridi, survived an attack by militants on his vehicle Monday, while in Karachi an activist for a party linked to the banned Sipah-e-Sihaba Pakistan (SSP) was killed by unidentified gunmen (Dawn, AFP, Dawn). Elsewhere in the province, a suicide bomber killed two policemen Sunday in Nowshera (BBC). Pakistani law enforcement on Sunday arrested a former commando with the country's elite Special Services Group (SSG) on charges that he planned an attack against Pakistan's parliament (ET). Dawn reports that police in Karachi are hesitant to file charges against a "hit man" blamed for nearly 250 killings in the city (Dawn). And for the fourth time since September, an anti-terrorism court in Rawalpindi has delayed the indictment of seven men accused of involvement in the 2007 killing of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto (Dawn).

Five stories round out the weekend: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced Friday that Pakistan had not asked for a new loan package after its current arrangement expired last month (The News). Pakistani officials denied reports from a German newspaper that Pakistan "spied" on a group of German police officers deployed in Afghanistan (Dawn). A woman in Balochistan threatened to set herself on fire in front of the province's parliament if her brother, who she said was taken away by Pakistani security services in September, was not released (ET). New information indicates that polio remains resilient in Pakistan despite drives to eradicate the disease (Dawn). And Balochistan has reportedly seen a major increase in cattle smuggling to neighboring Afghanistan and Iran (ET).

Grim milestone

A Taliban suicide bomber in Kabul attacked an armored bus carrying American, international, and Afghan soldiers and contractors Saturday, killing at least 17 people including 13 Americans, the highest American casualties in an attack in Kabul since the war in Afghanistan began (NYT, BBC, WSJ, Tel, AJE, LAT, Globe and Mail, Guardian, Reuters). Officials indicated this weekend that the bombing may be linked to the insurgent Haqqani Network, which has stepped up the pace and proficiency of attacks on foreigners and prominent targets in Kabul (NYT, Reuters, AP, WSJ, Post). The Times reports that the Obama administration is now relying on Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI) to bring the Haqqanis to the negotiating table in Afghanistan, even while the former has increased its efforts to fight the group (NYT). And Afghan President Hamid Karzai angered many American officials on Sunday when he condemned the Kabul attack, but made no mention of American casualties (NYT).

Elsewhere in Afghanistan, a suicide bombing and ensuing gun battle in Kandahar Monday killed four people and heavily damaged the United Nations High Commission on Refugees office in the city (AP, Guardian, AFP). Three Australian soldiers were killed Saturday when an Afghan National Army trainee opened fire on them before being shot dead (NYT, BBC, AP). And a female suicide bomber was shot and killed before she could detonate her explosives in the province of Kunar Saturday, while on Friday fighting broke out in Nangarhar province -- though reports differ as to whether the violence was an attack on a convoy of NATO and Afghan forces or a land dispute between the Shinwari tribe and the Afghan government that quickly escalated (NYT).

The violence comes as the Pentagon announced Friday that violence dropped in Afghanistan this summer, while warning of the continued risk posed by insurgent safe havens in Pakistan and the "limitations" of the Afghan government (AP, WSJ, Reuters, The News). McClatchy notes the persistent threat of roadside attacks on U.S. and international forces in the country (McClatchy). Meanwhile, British forces have begun an offensive into a lingering Taliban stronghold in the province of Helmand (Tel). The Post reveals that American forces plan to begin withdrawing from Kandahar City in order to redeploy to surrounding rural areas (Post). And Reuters and the Tribune take a pessimistic look at the international conference on Afghanistan scheduled to open Wednesday in Istanbul (Reuters, ET). 

Finishing off the news, Joshua Partlow and Julie Tate report that top American officials were repeatedly warned of "systematic torture" in prisons run by Afghanistan's National Directorate of Security (NDS) (Post). Court martial proceedings began Friday for U.S. Army Sgt. Calvin Gibbs, who is accused of leading a "kill team" that intentionally targeted Afghan civilians (Reuters, CNN, BBC). And the United Nations announced Saturday that nearly 60 percent fewer Afghan refugees returned from Pakistan this year as compared to last year (AP).

Let's go bowling

An Afghan woman who fled the country in 1992, Meena Rahmani, has spent $1 million to open a 12-lane bowling alley and restaurant in Kabul, called The Strikers (AP). The alley had to be built using all imported materials and using foreign engineers, because, as Rahmani explained to the AP, "Since there had never been bowling in Afghanistan, no one here knew how to set it up."

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Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images

 

VISIONTUNNEL

1:23 PM ET

October 31, 2011

New Pakistani Darling: Playboy Turn Puritan Mullah Imran Khan

The new Darling of Pakistan, Playboy Turn Puritan Mullah Imran Khan has shamelessly supported blasphemy laws, loves Taliban and Al Qaeda, bends before Pakistani Army.

He may be the next befitting leader/ruler of a helplessly radicalized nation, looking to his high pitched 24x7 anti Americanism, along with latest salvo aimed at India about Kashmir.

That has been the survival and power grabbing strategy of all of Pakistani leaders/rulers right from times of ZA Bhutto, who built his political power on blatant anti Americanism and anti Indian ideals/actions.

Sadly the paucity of able leaders with out of box thinking and modern vision, remains in Pakistan.

There has to be some thing special about the society, which keeps on throwing up such leaders/rulers.

GOD SAVE PAKISTAN....

 

MARTY MARTEL

3:31 PM ET

October 31, 2011

Continuing death of US troops in Afghanistan is America’s fault

US soldiers are dying in Afghanistan even after ten long years of war is the result of American government’s policy of mollycoddling Pakistan at any cost.

This endless war in Afghanistan has been of US’ own making. Taliban insurgency has been fueled by Pakistani government since 2001. The years of American policy of appeasing Pakistan have resulted in this continuing Afghan war.

Intentional and willful denial of Pakistani State’s terrorist connections by Bush administration since 2001 and then Obama administration have brought this untold suffering to not just American troops but to Afghan – civilian and security - people as well.

The seeds of the ‘current Afghan tragedy’ were sowed in Washington when Bush administration decided to allow Musharraf to spirit away by airlift hundreds, if not thousands, of Taliban operatives cornered by the advancing Northern Alliance in Kunduz in November, 2001. Pakistan relocated those Taliban cadres including Mullah Mohammed Omar in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan (now relocated to Karachi by Pakistani ISI to protect them from possible US drone attacks) and Haqqani network (HQN) in North Waziristan from where Mullah Omar’s QST and Haqqani’s HQN have been planning raids in Afghanistan ever since.

U. S. has deliberately deluded itself about Afghan Taliban’s Pakistani connections in fueling and sustaining Afghan insurgency as reported by Matt Waldman in ‘The sun in the sky‘ on 6/13/2010, corroborated by WikiLeaks leaks on 7/25/2010 and then further corroborated by Chris Alexander, Canadian ambassador to Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005 and Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Afghanistan from 2005 until 2009 in his article on 7/30/2010 titled ‘The huge scale of Pakistan‘s complicity‘.

Duplicitous Pakistan has U. S. under the barrel of a gun - US can NOT use its aid leverage to force Pakistan to stop supporting terrorist groups who kill US/NATO troops in Afghanistan day in and day out because US needs Pakistan’s help in ferrying supplies to those very US/NATO troops.

With an ally like Pakistan, US does not need an enemy.

 

TAUSEEF

9:58 PM ET

October 31, 2011

Come forward with Electables.

Its time Imran Khan come forward with a team that resonates with his image, shares his outlook and can effectively face media and a common man in the street. He needs people who have the potential to win elections against stiff competition by entrenched politicians. If this cant be done then there is a strong possibility that his party cant capitalize on the emotion stirred by his personality.