Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - 9:32 AM

Familiar devastation
As many as 35 people were killed Tuesday when a car bomb ripped through a bus terminal in the town of Jamrud in Khyber agency (NYT, BBC, AFP, ET, Tel, Reuters, AP).
While no group has claimed responsibility for the bombing so far,
authorities believe the attack is the work of the Tehrik-i-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) in retaliation against the pro-government Zakhakhel tribe
for the killing by Pakistani security forces of a TTP commander, Qari
Kamran, in Khyber last week.
Pakistan's Supreme Court on Tuesday threatened to fire
Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani if he did not implement the National
Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) and re-open a Swiss corruption case filed
against President Asif Ali Zardari (AP, Dawn, ET). Gilani has hit out at the military in an interview with China's People's Daily Online,
saying that army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and intelligence chief
Lt. Gen. Ahmad Shuja Pasha may have broken the law by submitting
replies to the commission investigating the "Memogate" affair without
seeking approval from the government (ET).
Kayani reportedly called an informal meeting of his senior officers
Tuesday and will release a statement about the interview (Dawn).
Former
Pakistani ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani continues to
push back against the investigation into his alleged role in the
incident, saying Monday that he is the victim of a "witch-hunt" (Guardian, ET, Dawn).
In other news, the commission investigating the death of journalist
Saleem Shahzad last year is set to inform the government of its findings
Tuesday (Dawn).
And the commission investigating the presence and death of Osama bin
Laden in Pakistan is likely to complete its work by the end of this
month (ET).
Sindh
Interior Minister Manzoor Wassan said Monday that former President and
military dictator Pervez Musharraf would be arrested as soon as he
arrived in Pakistan, as Musharraf continues to publicly set the scene
for a return to the country (Dawn, ET, CSM, CNN, Dawn). In Lahore, meanwhile, tragedy struck a concert, where three young women were killed in a stampede after the show ended (ET). And Dawn reports that as many as 40,000 women die each year from breast cancer in Pakistan (Dawn).
Ongoing battle
Four
Taliban militants equipped with suicide vests attacked a government
compound Tuesday in Sharan, the capital of Afghanistan's eastern Paktika
province, killing at least two police officers (AP, Reuters, BBC, CNN, AFP). Police are still reportedly fighting a fourth attacker.
Finally,
Sami Yusufzai and Ron Moreau have a must-read on the state of
negotiations with the Taliban, suggesting that President Hamid Karzai's
recent push to gain control of the Parwan prison is an attempt to
reassert a place for the Afghan government in peace talks with the
insurgent group (Daily Beast).
They also report that according to Taliban sources, the insurgency's
lower level commanders and fighters are confused and dismayed by news of
peace talks, with one commander telling saying, "No one understands
what's happening. It's unbelievable." And three Afghan opposition
figures, including warlord Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum, warned
four members of the U.S. House of Representatives Monday against
negotiations with the Taliban, saying that they are "not honest" in a
meeting in Germany (AP).
"I will not strip for Hollywood"
Pakistani actress Veena Malik, involved in an ongoing dispute with an Indian magazine over a racy cover featuring Malik that was published late last year, said in Dubai Tuesday that she "will not strip for Hollywood," adding, "I have my principles and I do what suits my personality and style" (ET). Malik also said that she had patched up differences with her father over the magazine controversy, and would return soon to Pakistan.
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Innocent Pakistanis are paying the price of their support to the US invasion of Afghanistan. The crooks who colluded with the US have filled their coffers at the cost of this hapless nation. The salvation lies in the US withdrawal from the region, and winning back the gun trotters through dialogue.
Pakistani Army/ISI chose to do so with the approval and financing provided by Pakistan’s democratic governments at the time. amv converter
Pakistan suffering from self-inflicted wounds
Pakistan is suffering from self-inflicted wounds.
Nobody forced Pakistani government to facilitate relocation of Osama bin Laden from Sudan to Afghanistan in 1996. Pakistan’s democratic government chose to do so of its own free will at the time.
Nobody forced Pakistani Army/ISI to create what ex-CIA official Bruce Reidel called this ‘jihadist frankenstein’ monster during 1990s. Pakistani Army/ISI chose to do so with the approval and financing provided by Pakistan’s democratic governments at the time.
Pakistan is just reaping the fruits of what it sowed.
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