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Afghanistan/South Asia
Nuggets from the Urdu Press
2005-05-28
Qazi Hamidullah a Taliban connection
Writing in the Jang, Nazeer Naji stated that the MMA leader MNA Qazi Hameedullah, who attacked the marathon in Gujranwala along with his extremist seminarians on April 3, was a hardline Pushtun cleric with a Taliban background. The daily Pakistan wrote that Qazi Hameedullah led a batch of Afghan students who were staying at his seminary illegally. The police said that a raid would soon be conducted into the seminaries to apprehend illegal Taliban students. Khabrain reported that the DIG of Gujranwala had stated that 38 assailants of the marathon in police custody were youths from the NWFP.

Hizb al Tahrir boys freed
According to the daily Din, eight members of the banned organisation Hizb al Tahrir were freed by the Multan Bench of the High Court, which ruled that distributing anti-government pamphlets was not a crime. The members of the banned organisation were caught distributing pamphlets in the Multan and Rahimyar Khan area.

PMLN is really moderate
Columnist Ataul Haq Qasimi wrote in the Jang that when the Punjab Assembly condemned the MMA attack on the Gujranwala marathon, the PPPP sided with the PML because it was a roshan khayal party, but the PMLN sided with the MMA and opposed the resolution of condemnation. If the PMLN sided with the PPPP, it would not be able to compete with its modern approach; and if it went with the MMA it could not compete with the religious fervour of the clergy. Therefore it was a moderate party staying the 'middle course.' Yet the PMLN should not have stood with the MMA on the marathon issue, as that took the PMLN too close to the MMA's extremist stance.

Did the MMA attack the girls?
Columnist Aftab Iqbal wrote in the Nawa-e-Waqt that after the attack on female marathon runners in Gujranwala, MNA Qazi Hameedullah said that his followers had not attacked the girls and those who threw stones and damaged property were some other elements. The columnist said that another source also implied that the real vandalism was perpetrated by agents of some other entity. Yet the MMA leader Liaquat Baloch warned the government that the MMA would agitate unless its workers were released from jail.

PPP not 'enlightened' enough
Columnist Khurshid Nadeem wrote in the Jang that the PPP had the ability to metamorphose itself and present Pakistani nationalism in the correct roshan khayal (enlightened) perspective, but it was not performing this function. Its leaders Iqbal Haider and Aitzaz Ahsan were promoting secularism, which was wrong and a step back from Bhutto's own explanation of Muslim nationalism. It appeared that the two were not able to decide the true position of Islam in the present civilisation.

Benazir and America
Writing in Khabrain, Azam Sultan Suhrawardi stated that Benazir Bhutto was wrong when she told the Americans that they should get Pakistan to adopt democracy the same way Iraq and Afghanistan had. The columnist said that he was not in favour of defying America as long as Pakistan's air force was not able to attack America and defeat it, but Benazir was steps ahead of Musharraf in becoming a slave to America.

State coercion in Gujranwala
Writing in the Nawa-e-Waqt, Irfan Siddiqi said that MNA Hameedullah in Gujranwala had warned the government that he would not allow the marathon; the government had ignored his warning and had not cancelled the marathon, with the result that action was taken by the MNA which led to violence. This was an example of state coercion (jabr) which is undertaken to forcibly change the accepted cultural norms.

Gilgit civil servants asked to return
Tthe daily Jang reported that the government had asked those government functionaries who had fled the sectarian riots of 8 January 2005, to return to their offices by 12 April 2005. Thus Gilgit and the Northern Areas lacked a complete bureaucracy for three months because of the sectarian slaughter.

Girls unsafe in Pakistan
Writing in the Jang, Javed Chaudhry stated that a friend of his who became a Dutch national 20 years ago told him that he thought of Pakistan every day, but could not return. The reason was that he had daughters who would be unsafe in Pakistan. In Amsterdam, they were free to roam about and in fact, returned from work after midnight in public transport. They were respected by Dutch men. In Pakistan, they would have to be protected and kept indoors. In Pakistan, he did not allow his daughters to go too far from home. He had read that at a musical programme in Rawalpindi's Liaquat Hall, boys had molested girls. Girls colleges were haunted by rowdy (awbash) boys who teased them and threatened to kidnap them. News of rape was an everyday happening. The columnist wrote that the roshan khayal government was trying to get girls to run marathons, but the mullahs were out to hurt them. His friend from Holland did not believe that the government was sincere. The rulers did not let their daughters run marathons.

The power of Akbar Bugti
Writing in Khabrain, Shakir Mazari from Rajanpur said that the Bugti tribe had three branches: Raheja, Kalpar and Masuri. Nawab Akbar Bugti led the Raheja sub-tribe by destroying and enslaving the other two. After one Kalpar sardar joined the PPP and became powerful in Sui, Akbar Bugti had him killed, after which the Kalpars killed Akbar's son Salal. Akbar Bugti had completely crushed the Kalpars and made them flee. Then Akbar Bugti heard that the territory of the Masuris could be the place for new gas finds. He arrested their leaders and put them in his personal jail. Mir Ghulam Qadir Masuri and his sons were in this jail for a long time, till someone had the compassion to free them without Akbar Bugti's permission. Akbar Bugti has a personal army. He has 3,000 of his Bugtis employed at Sui, but they perform duties for him. His army was constantly fighting the following tribes around his territory: Jakhrani, Bijrani, Sundrani, Khoso, Golatho, Domki and Mazari, inhabiting the localities of Kashmore, Jacobabad, Kandhkot, Shahwali, Rajanpur and Rojhan.

We will throw girls into the river!
Tthe daily Khabrain reported the senior minister of the NWFP, Sirajul Haq, as saying that if any girls in the NWFP took part in marathons, his government would throw them into the River Indus. He said that the world was concentrating on the NWFP to harm it, but all evil designs would be defeated.

Marathon race and Pakistani identity
Columnist Abdul Qadir Hassan wrote in the Jang that the Pakistani nation was not really a nation, but a people with a certain kind of Islamic mind. It is an ideological nation that doesn't change its mind and if a dictator had to change it, it would take him a long time. America was trying to change this mind through changing the textbooks and through the Aga Khan, but it was not changing. Now, making girls run in marathons was another trick but the people of Pakistan will not change their minds and will reject marathons.
Posted by:Fred

#13  Hey! Careful with Muddy! Him and me were friends!

I used to get him away from his handlers and to the good parties. He'd always invite me to his table at
The Zoo Bar in Lincoln NE. (he was a regular player in the 70s)
Posted by: 3dc   2005-05-28 23:48  

#12  Got my mojo working, but it just won't work on you
Got my mojo working, but it just won't work on you
I wanna love you so bad till I don't know what to do

I'm going down to Louisiana to get me a mojo hand
I'm going down to Louisiana to get me a mojo hand
I'm gonna have all you women right here at my command

Got my mojo working, but it just won't work on you
Got my mojo working, but it just won't work on you
I wanna love you so bad till I don't know what to do

I got a gypsy woman givin' me advice
I got a gypsy woman givin' me advice
I got some red hot tips I got to keep on ice

Got my mojo working
Got my mojo working
Got my mojo working
.....

But it - uh uh - just won't work on you

Posted by: Mr. Muddy Waters   2005-05-28 20:54  

#11  Benazir was steps ahead of Musharraf in becoming a slave to America.

You gotta junp down (HUH!)
Turn around, (HUH!)
Pick a bale of cotton opium...
Posted by: mojo   2005-05-28 14:51  

#10  That should be 1949 not 1979.


Posted by: john   2005-05-28 13:50  

#9  
The fact that the US is giving F-16s to the PAF has no effect on the fervent wish of many Pakistanis that the PAF would someday be strong enough to attack America.

Reading Margaret Bourke-White in 1979 is instructive.

I wondered whether the Quaid-i-Azam considered his new state only as an armored buffer between opposing major powers. He was stressing America's military interest in other parts of the world. "America is now awakened," he said with a satisfied smile. Since the United States was now bolstering up Greece and Turkey, she should be much more interested in pouring money and arms into Pakistan. "If Russia walks in here," he concluded, "the whole world is menaced."

In the weeks to come I was to hear the Quaid-i-Azam's thesis echoed by government officials throughout Pakistan. "Surely America will build up our army," they would say to me. "Surely America will give us loans to keep Russia from walking in." But when I asked whether there were any signs of Russian infiltration, they would reply almost sadly, as though sorry not to be able to make more of the argument. "No, Russia has shown no signs of being interested in Pakistan."

This hope of tapping the U. S. Treasury was voiced so persistently that one wondered whether the purpose was to bolster the world against Bolshevism or to bolster Pakistan's own uncertain position as a new political entity. Actually, I think, it was more nearly related to the even more significant bankruptcy of ideas in the new Muslim state -- a nation drawing its spurious warmth from the embers of an antique religious fanaticism, fanned into a new blaze.


They perceive American weapons as an entitlement.
There is and will never be gratitude to America.


Posted by: john   2005-05-28 13:48  

#8  
Writing in Khabrain, Azam Sultan Suhrawardi stated that Benazir Bhutto was wrong when she told the Americans that they should get Pakistan to adopt democracy the same way Iraq and Afghanistan had. The columnist said that he was not in favour of defying America as long as Pakistan’s air force was not able to attack America and defeat it, but Benazir was steps ahead of Musharraf in becoming a slave to America.

So we're going to give them F-16's (among other stuff)?

We should be spending that money on our own Army. Maybe the M-8 tank, and some XM-8 Rifles and Carbines in 6.5 or 6.8...
Posted by: Phil Fraering   2005-05-28 13:05  

#7  Mister 4Doo cheats, he/she hangs around and reloads the page every 48 seconds hoping for a frist.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-05-28 12:38  

#6  Nugets for you muck4adoo! :)
Posted by: Pheth Phesh2763   2005-05-28 11:45  

#5  what a f*&ked up hellhole of ignorance, hate, and cults
Posted by: Frank G   2005-05-28 10:50  

#4  I don't think the bozo has any idea how far away America is located.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-05-28 09:55  

#3  [Suhrawardi] said that he was not in favour of defying America as long as Pakistan’s air force was not able to attack America and defeat it...

Somebody care to tell this bozo that there's a little thing called a 'Trident submarine'?

Posted by: Pappy   2005-05-28 09:07  

#2  "Girls not safe in Pakistan"

I'm sure the writer squirmed while this loving father went down the list of reasons.
Posted by: Ptah   2005-05-28 06:45  

#1  first!

always first fer nugents!
Posted by: muck4doo   2005-05-28 03:03  

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