Filed Under (Pakistan) by Teeth Maestro on July-14-2007

Ghazi Abdur Rasheed Previously Posted at Teeth Maestro: Before I begin, let me be clear on the issue that I do not hold the Ghazi Brothers in high regard to what they did these past few days, they used women and children as human shields to take an entire city as hostage and in effect ridiculing my country as a nation we harbor terrorists. Lets also be honest about the fact that what Musharraf did was quite simply needed, there were no two ways about it and had to be done.

Accepting the fact that Musharraf was right to end this siege, I contest that it should have been done far sooner then even this week long stand-off. He should have nipped the bud six months back when it initially started to take shape. We as Pakistanis knew it was a disaster in the making, the world watched in amazement, the western media pleaded us to put a stop to this radicalism.
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Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on July-8-2007

KNUT DEN MAKTIGE, King of England, Denmark and Norway, commonly known as Canute the Great of England (1016-1035) was surrounded by sycophantic courtiers who never failed to flatter him. You are the greatest man in the world, one would tell him. Another, there is nothing you cannot do. And another, you are the monarch of all.

A sensible man, Canute, he soon grew tired of this insane flattery and decided one fine day to put an end to it. Walking by the seashore, with the chatterers trotting out their usual praise, he asked them if it were their contention that all things obey him. Absolutely, they toadied in unison. ‘Right,’ said the king, `bring me a chair, and put it close to the sea, right at the water’s edge.’ He sat down. ‘The tide is coming in,’ he said. ‘Will it stop if I command it to so do?’ The flatterers dare not say no. ‘Give the order, they said, ‘and the sea will obey.’

‘Right,’ said Canute. ‘Oh mighty waves, stop your rolling. Come no closer’, he cried. The waves advanced and lapped his feet. Again, he commanded that it stop. In answer another wave swept forward, and another, and another until he was almost knee deep in water.

He turned to his foolish courtiers. `It seems that I am not as powerful as you think,’ he told to them, smiling. `Perhaps now you have learned something and perhaps you will now reserve your flattery and praise for the one who is all powerful and rules all, the seas included.’

This little story used to be taught to young children in schools when they were first introduced to history, so that from an early age they would learn to beware of false flattery. It seems that President General Pervez Musharraf missed out on this one.The General, no fundo he, can take on the Taliban if he wishes to so do, and the same with the bigots and unenlightened. Reason having finally failed, logic and reasoning being no match for fanaticism, he has at last taken on the mullahs of the Lal Masjid.

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Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on July-8-2007

By Omar Waraich
Published: 07 July 2007

Benazir Bhutto has said she is determined to return to Pakistan because her country, facing the worst turmoil since its military ruler General Pervez Musharraf seized power in a coup in 1999, needs her.

Ms Bhutto, who was twiceprime minister and is now in exile in Dubai, said in an interview with The Independent that she was not deterred by the threat of corruption charges, nor by constitutional amendments that bar anyone from being elected for a third term.

“I intend to go back before the year’s end and contest the elections. And if my people wish, they will lift that ban to enable me to then serve them as prime minister for a third time.” Her remarks come as General Musharraf faces mounting opposition, triggered by his decision to suspend the country’s chief justice, Iftikhar Chaudhry.

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Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on July-8-2007

Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf appears to have survived his fourth known assassination attempt. Pakistani state-owned television said gunshots were heard July 6 near the Chaklala military air base in Rawalpindi as the president’s airplane was taking off. Musharraf has reportedly landed safely in Turbat, a remote town in the southwest that has been affected by recent flooding.

Musharraf has more enemies than he can count these days, and an attempt on his life is not surprising. The Pakistani general was targeted by al Qaeda militants twice in 2003 in the capital, Islamabad, and once in 2002 in Karachi. Pakistani military spokesman Maj. Gen. Waheed Arshad denied that the shots fired from a rooftop near the air base in Rawalpindi had targeted Musharraf’s plane and said the gunfire was unrelated to the president. However, Pakistani sources have said there was an attempt on Musharraf’s life.

Although the last military ruler of Pakistan, President Gen. Mohammed Zia-ul Haq, was killed in a mysterious plane crash in 1988 (believed to have been an inside job), and although there is a significant level of concern among Musharraf’s commanders because of his dire political situation, this assassination attempt is unlikely to have involved the military. It was most likely perpetrated by al Qaeda elements — and not very sophisticated ones at that. Junior military officers were involved in car bombings in 2003 that targeted Musharraf, but they were sophisticated attacks in close proximity to the president.

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Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on July-8-2007

Day 5 of the situation unfolding in Islamabad.

Islamabad metblogs has the latest information on what is happening in Islamabad.



Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on June-29-2007


Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on June-28-2007

More than 100 fishermen have been rescued by the navy

Rescuers in southern Pakistan are battling to reach tens of thousands of people stranded after a cyclone struck the country’s Arabian Sea coastline.

Many people are clinging to trees and rooftops to escape floods. Bad weather and damaged roads, bridges and phone links are slowing relief efforts.

Thousands lost their homes having fled to high ground ahead of cyclone Yemyin. At least 20 people are reported killed. Read the rest of this entry »



Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on June-24-2007

The order is posted at: http://supremecourt.gov.pk/sub_links/pr/PR-23-06-2007.htm



Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on June-22-2007

Movies usually tell a story powerfully, emotionally—and simply. But “A Mighty Heart” is notable for the nuance it manages to convey. The 2002 murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl wasn’t itself complicated: a group of jihadists kidnapped him and then brutally beheaded him. But its setting, Pakistan, is awash in gray tones, which the movie paints skillfully. To fully understand this story, we must recognize the utter ruthlessness of Pearl’s killers but also the complexity of where they came from. Now, with Pakistan undergoing its greatest crisis since 9/11, the United States would do well to take that complexity into account.
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Filed Under (Pakistan) by Accidental Jurist on June-22-2007

Until recently, President General Pervez Musharraf was adamant that he would seek presidential re-election from the current parliament in late September as required by law, within two months of the expiry of his tenure as president on November 15. This implied that the general elections would be held after the presidential election – that is, between November 2007 and January 2008. General Musharraf also insisted that the uniform was like “second skin” to him. This implied that he would move heaven and earth to remain army chief. But the Supreme Court is expected to decide the CJP case within a week or two. If the CJP is restored, its fallout would be akin to a vote of no-confidence in the government. Read the rest of this entry »