Showing posts with label Islamic Terrorism in Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islamic Terrorism in Pakistan. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 June 2013

Karachi: hospitals are as dangerous as its streets.

In Karachi, hospitals are as dangerous as its streets.
SAHER ABLOCH
A wall next to Jinnah hospital's Emergency Ward
Executive Director's office. The wall was sprayed 

with bullets when a fight broke out between two 
rival groups who came to the hospital for treatment. 
— Photos by Shameen Khan/Dawn.
KARACHI | 01 June 2013:: Riots, target killings, bombs – Karachi has seen it all. Behind the scenes, responsible for damage control are the doctors and paramedical staff who work around the clock to keep up a semblance of normalcy in the city’s chaotic emergency wards.Apart from the large number patients that flock the hospitals in a city teeming with over 18 million people, the emergency departments have a whole other problem to face: The constant danger and threats faced by the medical staff. Read More>>>
[Courtesy: Dawn].

Friday, 31 May 2013

Bomb blast in Peshawar on Friday.

Bomb blast in Peshawar kills peace committee member.
ZAHIR SHAH SHERAZI

PESHAWAR | 31 May 2013:: A peace committee member, Najeeb Khan was killed early Friday, when a bomb blast occurred in Peshawar’s Budh Berh area.
The bomb which was likely to have been planted by a roadside exploded near the house of peace committee member who was on his motorbike at the time.
According to police, the bomb was detonated through a remote controlled Improvised Explosive Device (IED), killing the peace committee member on the spot.
Later, police cordoned off the area and started an investigation.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the blast. However, the province has long been plagued by al Qaeda and Taliban linked militancy and the country’s military has staged numerous operations against the insurgents.A reporter in Dawn.
[Courtesy: Dawn]                                                                                                                          

Thursday, 30 May 2013

Drone death: a blow to Taliban in peace process in Pakistan.

Drone death a blow to Pakistani Taliban - and to peace efforts. 

In this July 28, 2011 file photo, Taliban No 2 commander
Waliur Rehmantalks to the Associated Press during an
interview in Shawal area of South Waziristan along the
Afghanistan border in Pakistan. — AP Photo.
Islamabad | AFP | 31 May 2013 :: The killing of the Pakistani Taliban's deputy leader is a heavy blow to the militants but could also complicate peace efforts due to the loss of a relatively moderate voice, analysts say.


Waliur Rehman, second-in-command of the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), was killed in the early hours of Wednesday by a US drone attack in the tribal district of North Waziristan, according to Pakistani security officials.

The TTP has killed thousands in its bloody campaign of gun and bomb attacks in recent years, attacking the Pakistani state for being insufficiently Islamic and for allying itself with the US “war on terror”.

Washington refused to confirm Rehman's death but said that if true it would mean the TTP had lost its “chief military strategist”, blamed for assaults on US forces in Afghanistan including a suicide attack that killed seven CIA agents.

The TTP groups numerous different tribal and militant factions, sometimes competing. Analyst Saifullah Khan Mehsud said the 42-year-old Rehman was the only figure since Baitullah Mehsud, the network's founder, to inspire respect across the spectrum. “His death is a big blow to the TTP, they have lost their statesman, they have lost a man who had the support of the rank and file and I believe that it will be very difficult for the TTP to replace him,” Mehsud, executive director of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) Research Centre, told AFP.

“When we look at the current leadership, mid- and high leadership among the TTP, we don't see anyone who has supposedly the capability to replace Waliur Rehman.” Rehman, who had three wives and was a member of the Mehsud tribe which dominates the TTP, was a key figure in the outfit from its inception in 2007. He came from a religious background and set up a seminary in his native South Waziristan before taking up arms.

Pakistan's incoming prime minister Nawaz Sharif has raised the possibility of talks with the Taliban to try to end the bombings and shootings that plague life on an almost daily basis. Tribal affairs and security expert Rahimullah Yusufzai said Rehman's links to the mainstream religious Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl (JUI-F) party, seen as a possible go-between in any talks, could have made him a useful interlocutor.

“A common perception about Rehman was his political mind – he was considered as a man who believed in talks,” Yusufzai told AFP. “He was close to JUIF and his elimination from the scene would be a great setback to the peace efforts.”

TTP supremo Hakimullah Mehsud, himself several times mistakenly reported killed by US drone strikes, is seen as a more hardline militant and Mehsud the analyst said negotiating with him would be difficult. “He is considered as very volatile and considering his crimes against the Pakistani state, it would be very, very difficult for the Pakistani state to come to terms with the fact that they will have to talk with someone like him,” he said. In any event, peace talks look a distant prospect. Sharif has set accepting the Constitution and the rule of law as a condition for coming to the table, something the TTP reject. Moreover, meaningful dialogue could only go ahead with the blessing of the armed forces, Pakistan's most powerful institution.

Last month the military chief General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani made it clear the militants could not dictate terms for talks. “We sincerely desire that all those who have strayed and have picked up arms against the nation, return to the national fold,” he said in a speech. “However, this is only possible once they unconditionally submit to the state, its Constitution and the rule of law. There is no room for doubts when it comes to dealing with rebellion against the state.”

Yusufzai said the killing could well drive the TTP even further away from the path to peace. “Taliban will take revenge as they had already said that Pakistan military are cooperating with US on drone strikes,” he said. “But Taliban cannot take revenge on Americans, which means they will speed up their attacks on Pakistan military and security forces.”

Analyst Hasan Askari said the drone strike would raise pressure on the Taliban because they were powerless to strike back against the Americans. “It is a setback for the Pakistani Taliban. It has shown the US capacity and it will build more psychological effects on the Taliban,” Askari said. [Curtesy:Dawan].

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Islamic Peace in Peshawar


Blast kills two, injures 17 in Peshawar

An injured of a blast near Imamia Colonly Gulbahar is
being treated at Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar
on Tuesday night. – Photo by Zahir Shah Sherazi
Zahir Shah Sherazi | Peshawar | 28 May 2013::  At least two people were killed and around 17 others injured when a bomb exploded on Tuesday evening in Peshawar – the capital of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan.

The apparent planted explosive device was detonated near Imamia Colony of Peshawar’s Gulbahar Neighbourhood, said a local police official.
ASP Ismael Kharak told Dawn.com that the device was planted in a motorcycle.
Rescue and security agencies are being dispatched to the blast site.
According to the Bomb Disposal Squad officials about three to four kilograms of explosives was used in the remote controlled blast.
SP City Khalid Hamdani also confirmed that two people have been killed and 15 inured in the blast.
He added that it’s not clear what was the target of the blast, however, it occurred near a Shia Imam Bargah in Imamia Colony.
Chief Executive of the Lady Reading Hospital Dr Arshad Javed told Dawn.com that two people have been killed while 17 injured are being treated at the hospital.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the blast. However, the province has long been plagued by al Qaeda and Taliban linked militancy and the country’s military has staged numerous operations against the insurgents. [Courtesy: Dawn Pakistan]