Saturday, August 4, 2007

Al-Qaida manipulates videos, images, says Black Hat speaker


A photo by al-Qaeda's media wing as-Shahab provided 06 May by the Site Institute, which tracks radical Islamist websites, shows al-Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri giving an interview at an unspecified location. US intelligence chiefs urged Pakistan to wage a more vigorous pursuit of terrorism, warning that its lawless region bordering Afghanistan has become a sanctuary for Al-Qaeda and Taliban diehards.(AFP/Site Institute/HO)


Al-Qaida manipulates videos, images, says Black Hat speaker
Posted by Robert Vamosi
news.com

LAS VEGAS--In a presentation at the Black Hat conference here Tuesday, Neal Krawetz of Hacker Factor showed how basic manipulations to images can be revealed through digital analysis.

After presenting on the specific techniques he used, Krawetz launched into what he called the case of "Dr. Z," who happens to be Ayman al-Zawahiri, the No. 2 man in al-Qaida.

Using a photo that originally appeared on December 20, 2006, in USA Today, al-Zawahiri appears to be seated before a large banner with a desk underneath. On the desk, in the photo, is a tiny cannon. Yet in the text, al-Zawahiri is described as sitting with "a rifle behind his shoulder that was leaning against a plain brown backdrop."
Using the techniques demonstrated earlier in the talk, Krawetz deconstructed the image to show a halo around al-Zawahiri that suggests that he was likely sitting in front of a monochromatic screen. Even the letters on the banner had been altered. Further, the overall image had been cropped from the original.

Krawetz showed another image of al-Zawahiri from July 27, 2006, showing him seated in what appears to be a television studio. Krawetz said many people who saw this video were outraged that he could sitting in a television studio somewhere, yet the U.S. government couldn't find him.

Image analysis suggests that the studio and the various pictures positioned in the studio around him were added later. Again, a halo around al-Zawahiri suggests that he was shot in front of a monochromatic screen and pasted into a new background.

The studio background behind al-Zawahiri includes five different elements placed within the shot: The picture of Mohammad Alef is taken from a video of a wedding ceremony. The picture of the Twin Towers and the picture of Mohammad Atta are both taken from the 911 Commission report. Meanwhile, the studio itself appears created; the lighting suggests that the wall is an unlikely 1 foot behind al-Zawahiri, for example.

Krawetz found an image from the SITE Institute, an organization that tracks terrorism worldwide. (SITE stands for Search for International Terrorist Entities.) The image was intercepted before it was released by al-Qaida.

In the SITE video, al-Zawahiri appears before a blackened backdrop. In the upper-right corner, there appears to be the edge of a wall or screen. By adjusting the contrast, Krawetz could see that the wall behind al-Zawahiri is a draped backdrop. Krawetz didn't show the final al-Qaida image, but it likely included a composite of images designed to disguise his true location and press a specific message. As was the case in the final image Krawetz showed.

An image of Azzam al-Almriki, another member of al-Qaida, showed the young man seated in an office with a computer and a stack of books. Image analysis shows that the books were added. What an odd detail, yet it must be there to convey added meaning.

Throughout his demonstration, Krawetz did not speculate on the reasons behind al-Qaida's image manipulation. His interest is only that the images were manipulated and that the specific changes could be revealed.

Fresh violence claims 19 lives in Pakistan


A Pakistani army soldier stands alert on a street in Parachinar, April 2007. Fresh violence has left 19 people, including four soldiers, dead in an escalation of the bloody unrest that has rocked Pakistan over the past month.
(AFP/Str/File)


Fresh violence claims 19 lives in Pakistan
08-04-2007, 08h28
ISLAMABAD (AFP)



Fresh violence left 19 people, including four soldiers, dead Saturday in an escalation of the bloody unrest that has rocked Pakistan over the past month.
The military said militants fired a barrage of rockets at security checkposts and then attacked one of them with automatic weapons in a restive tribal district near the Afghan border overnight.
"The miscreants fired 50 to 60 rockets at five posts before attacking one of the posts with automatic weapons in Dosali, in the North Waziristan tribal district," military spokesman Major General Waheed Arshad told AFP.
Fierce fighting ensued and the troops repelled the attackers, killing 10 rebels, Arshad said, adding that four soldiers also died in the battle.
About 50 kilometres (32 miles) to the north, in Parachinar town, a suicide bomber rammed his vehicle into a taxi stand Saturday, killing at least five civilians.
Several cars and shops were also damaged in the attack, which officials linked to the wave of unrest gripping the country since the July 9-10 army raid on the pro-Taliban Red Mosque in the capital Islamabad.
"It was a suicide attack in Parachinar. Five civilians were killed and over 20 injured," said area security chief Arbab Mohammad Arif.
Local administration official Mujtaba Asghar said the attack happened at a taxi stand in front of a car showroom in the town, some 240 kilomtres (150 miles) west of Islamabad.
"Some public transport vehicles were parked on the road in front of the showroom when the bomber rammed his car and exploded," said Asghar.
The devastating blast damaged several vehicles and five shops.
"Human limbs and pieces of flesh were scattered around the site," witness Mohammad Sajjad said.
Officials said the violence trigged by the July 10 killing of Red Mosque senior cleric Abdul Rashid Ghazi in the army raid has claimed more than 230 lives.
More than 100 people, mostly militants hiding in the mosque, were killed in the operation to clear it.
Interior ministry officials said there had been at least 13 suicide attacks since the mosque operation, including two in Islamabad --- one targeting a rally by the country's chief justice and the other a police contingent.
Pakistan has come under mounting pressure from the United States and European allies to act decisively against Taliban militants allegedly using its tribal region for attacks across the border.
Pakistan has also strengthened its military presence in the region following US intelligence warning that Al-Qaeda was regrouping in the tribal regions on its side of the border and planning attacks on the United States.
Islamabad has denied charges by Washington that the border regions have become a safe haven for an Al-Qaeda resurgence.

AFP

Suicide Car Blast Kills 9 in Pakistan


Pakistani army troops keep positions near the site of a suicide bombing in Parachinar, about 250 kilometers (150 miles) south of Peshawar, Pakistan on Saturday, August 4, 2007. A suicide attacker slammed an explosive-laden car into traffic at a busy bus station in northwestern Pakistan, unleashing a blast that killed nine people and wounded 35 others, officials said. (AP Photo/Dilawar Hussain)


Suicide Car Blast Kills 9 in Pakistan
By RIAZ KHAN 08.04.07, 6:24 AM ET

PESHAWAR, Pakistan -

A suicide attacker detonated a car bomb at a busy bus station in northwestern Pakistan on Saturday, killing at least nine people and wounding 35 others, officials said.
Elsewhere in the region, four soldiers and 10 militants were killed in a checkpoint shootout.
The attacker rammed an explosive-laden car into another vehicle near a bus packed with passengers in Parachinar, a town in the North West Frontier Province, said Mohammed Kamal, a local police official.
"According to our information, it was a suicide attack, and the body parts of the attacker are being collected," Kamal said.
Sahabzada Mohammed Anis, the top government official in the town, said the dead and injured were rushed to hospitals in Parachinar, about 150 miles south of the provincial capital of Peshawar.
Mohammed Sultan, a doctor at the Parachinar Hospital, said they received five bodies after the blast, and that four of the injured died later. At least two other victims were still in critical condition, he said.
In the other attack Saturday, pro-Taliban militants assaulted a security checkpoint in Oblanki, a remote area of the North Waziristan tribal region, triggering a shootout that killed four soldiers and 10 militants, officials said. Five other soldiers were wounded, said army spokesman Maj. Gen. Waheed Arshad.
The security situation in Pakistan, especially in the tribal zone bordering Afghanistan, has been deteriorating for weeks, and almost daily attacks have killed more than 300 people.
Pakistan is a key ally of the United States in its war on terror, and it has deployed about 90,000 soldiers in its tribal regions since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to flush out remnants of the Taliban and al-Qaida, who are believed to be hiding there.
President Gen. Pervez Musharraf is under increasing pressure from Washington to crack down in the tribal region.
The surge in violence has followed tribal leaders' withdrawal from a 2006 peace deal with the government, and amid widespread anger at an army raid of Islamabad's radical Red Mosque last month that left at least 102 people dead.
Arshad said Saturday's gunbattle raged for two hours and ended when the militants fled to nearby mountains with some of the bodies of slain associates.
A local intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to media, said the assailants shouted "God is great" and used rockets, assault rifles and other munitions to target the checkpoint.
Two helicopter gunships were used to pursue the fleeing fighters, he said
Separately, militants fired eight rockets at a security checkpoint near Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan, but caused no damage or casualties, the official said.
Pakistan used to be a main supporter of Afghanistan's former Taliban regime, but Musharraf switched sides after the attacks in the U.S. He has since said that his fight against terrorism would continue until it is reasonably assured that militancy, extremism and terrorism have been defeated.
Associated Press writers Bashirullah Khan in Miran Shah and Munir Ahmad in Islamabad contributed to this report.
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

Friday, August 3, 2007

Tripartite agreement on voluntary return of Afghan refugees in Pakistan extended




Tripartite agreement on voluntary return of Afghan refugees in Pakistan extended

The Pakistani and Afghan governments and the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) Thursday extended the tripartite agreement governing the voluntary repatriation of registered Afghans from Pakistan for another three years.
The tripartite agreement, signed here Thursday by officials from the three parties, provides the legal and operational framework for the voluntary repatriation of Afghans from Pakistan, officials said.
To date, over 3 million Afghans have returned from Pakistan under the voluntary repatriation program since 2002, and there are about 2.05 million registered Afghans remaining in Pakistan.
A tripartite commission formed under the agreement meets three times a year to discuss and review issues related to the stay of Afghans in Pakistan and their voluntary repatriation to Afghanistan.
Under a tripartite agreement, first signed in 2003 between the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan and UNHCR, UNHCR was responsible to assist the repatriation of Refugees who want to return until 2005.
Later, the agreement had been extended several times but the ultimate goal was to find a final, durable solution to this human tragedy that began a quarter century ago, according to officials.
Source: Xinhua


Editorial: Afghan refugee mess
Daily Times, Pakistan
The people General Zia-ul-Haq welcomed from Afghanistan as “our own people” in 1978 are no longer wanted in 2007. Pakistan has reluctantly renewed its pledge with Afghanistan and the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) on Thursday that it would repatriate “voluntary” registered Afghan refugees in the next three years. It actually wants all of them back in Afghanistan, voluntary or not, but can’t do it in the face of global humanitarian concerns.
Since 2002, more than 3 million Afghans have returned under the voluntary repatriation programme of the UNHCR. If you have so far believed the figure of 3 million plus, prepare to make some revisions. The “registered” ones who remain in Pakistan are 2.5 million, which makes the total figure go up to nearly 6 million. Don’t even talk about the “unregistered” ones. And even less about Pakistan’s ability to hunt down the stragglers who have been born and grown up here and are now in their mid- and late-20s and able to bear arms.
General Zia spoke tongue-in-cheek when he said Pakistan should absorb the fleeing Afghans in Pakistan. Brigadier Mohammad Yousaf, the man who headed the Afghan desk of Pakistan’s intelligence agency ISI during the 1980s, in his book The Bear Trap, spoke the truth: “The refugee camps were places to which the Mujahideen (guerrillas) could return for rest and to see their families”. He also described the refugee camps as “a huge reservoir of potential recruits for jihad”. The policy has boomeranged and the refugees today are, in the eyes of its hosts, a “security risk” that Islamabad wants to remove in short order.
But the argument advanced by Pakistan for the repatriation of Afghan refugees is hardly credible. It says since the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan has ended, the refugees should return home. The truth is that after the “defeat” of the Soviet Union the Afghan mujahideen fought among themselves for several years and caused more refugees to flee instead of getting back the ones displaced by the Soviets. Mention too should be made of the Pakistan-supported Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001 when more refugees had to flee all kinds of Islamic punishments in Afghanistan. One can, however, accept Islamabad’s plaint that the latest batch came after 2000 because of the drought in Afghanistan.
In Pakistan, fleeing Afghan families were mostly absorbed in the NWFP and Balochistan. When the new population arrived in Peshawar the local population complained of being pushed out of their jobs. In the countryside, the cattle brought by the refugees denuded the grazing areas used by the local pastoral society. Islamabad, flush with money that it got for caring for the refugees, turned a deaf ear to these reports. Some of the international food assistance was consumed by the bureaucracy — for instance, cheese, which the Afghans didn’t want to eat — and the meat from slaughtered animals on Eid that came from Saudi Arabia, after it was “waylaid” on the way from Karachi to Peshawar.
By 1985, there were more than 300 refugee villages along the Durand Line. With the exception of a single camp in Mianwali district of Punjab, all were either in the NWFP or Balochistan. But the Afghans who were Pushtun by ethnicity spread out to all corners of the country, including Karachi, and the state soon lost control over their movement, especially as a Pakistan ID card was the easiest thing to obtain. A report says: “Refugees have acquired property, businesses and jobs, putting an economic squeeze on the permanent residents. The crime rate and violence have soared, including social evils like prostitution and drug addiction. In short, the Afghan war has corrupted Pakistani elites, administration and society and its social effect on Pakistan has given birth to many complex problems which are less obvious but quite disturbing”.
General Zia, himself a refugee from India, could hardly imagine the denouement of the grand shift of populations at Partition which permanently destroyed the peace of Sindh. (Most ethnic conflicts in the world start with migrations.) He presided over the beginning of another almost equally big migration from Afghanistan. No country in history has this kind of record: receiving two populations within fifty years after its creation. Yet most Pakistanis innocently wonder why the state seems so unprepared for survival!
Those who formulate Pakistan’s security strategies are actually clueless about Pakistan. Having coped badly with two massive migrations, they went into Afghanistan seeking “strategic depth” and are now stuck with a state that is reeling under occupation where terrorists going in from Pakistan’s “ungoverned spaces” prevent the infrastructural development that could enable the refugees to return voluntarily. The good money for looking after the refugees Pakistan used to get in the 1980s stopped after the Soviets left Afghanistan. Now there is a Pushtun Talibanisation in Pakistan and Islamabad is tragically looking at the refugees with suspicion. *

Autopsy confirms German hostage "shot dead" in Afghanistan


The kidnappers of the German hostages in Afghanistan (in a video from Tuesday): Two shots killed hostage Rüdiger Diedrich. al-Dschasira

MURDER IN AFGHANISTAN
Autopsy Shows Kidnappers Shot German Hostage

A German hostage victim whose body was found in Afghanistan in late July was shot by his kidnappers, an autopsy has found.
The kidnappers of the German hostages in Afghanistan (in a video from Tuesday): Two shots killed hostage Rüdiger Diedrich.
Autopsy results released on Thursday afternoon show that a German hostage found dead in Afghanistan just over a week ago died of injuries sustained from gunshot wounds. A spokesman for Germany's Foreign Ministry said Rüdiger Diedrich was shot and killed by his captors after a circulatory collapse.
Initially, German officials thought the hostage might have died of exhaustion after being taken on forced marches by his suspected Taliban kidnappers in mountainous Afghan terrain. An autopsy performed after his body was returned to Germany, however, determined that he had in fact suffered from a circulatory collapse, but that it didn't kill him. Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Jäger said Thursday that his kidnappers shot him after his collapse. "After his collapse, the victim, who was still alive at the time, was shot twice," he said.
The autopsy report states that victim suffered a circulatory collapse because of "extreme duress caused during the kidnapping." The collapse, however, "did not cause the hostage's death." It adds that two initial bullets killed the hostage and that four further shots were fired at his body after his death.
Diedrich's corpse has been kept since being returned by jet to Germany at Cologne's Institute for Forensic Medicine. A second German hostage, identified only as Rudolf B., is still in the hands of the kidnappers. Intense negotiations are underway in an effort to secure his release.
An engineer from the German city of Teterow in the northeastern state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Diedrich was kidnapped together with colleague Rudolf B. on July 18. His body was found on July 22.
dsl/dpa/AP/Reuters




07:34, August 03, 2007
Autopsy confirms German hostage "shot dead" in Afghanistan

A German hostage kidnapped in Afghanistan last month died of gunshot wounds instead of heart attack as previously believed, German Foreign Ministry spokesman said Thursday after an autopsy of the body.
The 44-year-old engineer was abducted together with another German engineer, who is still alive, by a Taliban group two weeks ago.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Jaeger said the autopsy showed that the engineer had collapsed but was still alive before the shots were fired.
A total of six bullet wounds were found in the body, he said.
The bullet-riddled body was flown back to Germany last week and the body has been under examination in the western city of Cologne.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who is visiting Ghana as part of his African tour, said Thursday that " this crime must not be allowed to go unpunished."
"His abductors...finally put an end to his life is a criminal manner," he said.
The government is trying everything it could to free the second hostage who is reportedly suffering from high blood pressure and need regular medication, said the minister.
Al Jazeera television on Tuesday broadcast a video showing the German begging for help from the German government in a hilly area.
The video was a deliberate attempt to intimidate German government, said German Foreign Ministry.
The purported Taliban group has demanded the departure of all German soldiers from Afghanistan and the release of captured Taliban militants.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel had reaffirmed Friday that Germany will not give in to blackmails and will not withdraw its troops from Afghanistan.
Germany now has about 3,000 soldiers stationed in Afghanistan under the command of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), most of them in the relatively stable northern region.
The two German nationals and five of their Afghan colleagues, who are civil engineers working on a dam project in Afghanistan, were reportedly abducted Wednesday in Wardak province, about 100 km southwest of Kabul.
Source: Xinhua




Rudolf B. appears in good health and negotiators believe he is stable. al-Jazeera


SPIEGEL ONLINE - August 1, 2007, 02:00 PM
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,497610,00.html
PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE
Taliban Ramp Up Pressure on Germany with Hostage Video

Negotiators continue to work for the release of German hostage Rudolf B. following the broadcast of a video showing the engineer. However sources say that the video was likely made days ago.
Rudolf B. appears in good health and negotiators believe he is stable.
German officials appeared nonplussed Wednesday following the broadcast of a video showing German hostage Rudolf B., who was kidnapped on July 18 in Afghanistan, surrounded by armed fighters in the mountains of southwest Afghanistan.
In a statement Wednesday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Jäger called the video, which was broadcast Tuesday night on the Arabic channel Al-Jazeera, "a targeted ... document designed to intimidate." Terrorism expert Rolf Tophoven agreed, telling the news agency Associated Press that it was clear hostage-takers wanted to use the one-minute video to "up the pressure massively."
Representatives of the Afghanistan government and local leaders have made regular trips into the mountain region near Wardak in southern Afghanistan, where Rudolf B. and four Afghanis have been held for almost two weeks, to talk with the hostage-takers.
Speaking on German broadcaster ZDF, Social Democrat floor leader and former defense minister Peter Struck said he believed the 62-year-old engineer had a chance of survival because it's unclear "whether we're dealing with a political group or a simple criminal organization."
'Local Criminals' Responsible
German government officials told SPIEGEL ONLINE they believe the latter. Though such a video is normally used by hostage-takers to push their political demands, officials continue to believe Rudolf B., along with the four Afghanis he was travelling with, find themselves in the hands of a band of local criminals lead by Mullah Nissam. Though he has ties to the Taliban, Nissam is not believed to be a Taliban leader.
The sources also said they believed the video to be days old. The USB memory stick on which it was sent to the broadcaster showed that the video was last altered on July 28. However the video cannot be older than a few days, as the fleece jacket Rudolf B. is wearing was sent to him through the negotiators by the German embassy in Kabul at the end of last week.
Rudolf B. was kidnapped along with colleague Rüdiger Diedrich and five Afghanis on July 18. Diedrich died shortly after his kidnapping of unknown causes. German doctors are conducting an autopsy in Cologne this week to determine his cause of death.
Based on daily conversations via satellite telephone with Rudolf B., officials at the German Embassy in Kabul have gotten the impression that he is stable and in good health, something now confirmed in part by the video.
In it, Rudolf B. speaks in barely audible English. According to Al-Jazeera, the hostage victim read a list of demands, which included the pull-out of German troops in Afghanistan. The broadcaster denied reports that the release of 12 Taliban prisoners was also among the demands.
Tophoven said he believes the video was intentionally released a few days after it was made, for maximum effect. "The timing on such a video is important," Tophoven told AP. "It's a type of psychological warfare, a game of nerves."
Military Operation to Free Korean Hostages?
In the interview, Struck added his voice to a chorus of German government officials who said they would not be blackmailed.
"We can't respond to such demands," Struck told German television broadcaster ZDF. Were Germany to do that, he said, "there would immediately be copycat crimes."
As the German government works for Rudolf B.'s release, the South Korean government is trying to take up direct contact with Taliban fighters holding 21 Koreans hostage since July 19. On Monday, Taliban killed their second Korean hostage in a week after their demands that at least eight Taliban prisoners be released went unmet.
Until now, the Korean and Afghan governments have been negotiating through middlemen in the Ghazni province in central Afghanistan. The Korean government now wants to deal directly with the group of fighters and consult more with the US government, according to the Korean news agency Yonhap.
Meanwhile, evidence began to mount that a military option might soon be underway. Afghan army helicopters on Wednesday dropped leaflets in Ghazni province -- where the Koreans were kidnapped and are being held -- warning people of a military operation in the area.

Taliban claims to have kidnapped Indian engineer


This picture taken 10 October 2004, shows Pakistani tribal leader Abdullah Mahsud offering prayers in an open space in the Chagmaly area of South Waziristan district bordering Afghanistan. One of Pakistan's top Taliban militants, wanted for the kidnapping of two Chinese engineers in 2004, blew himself up during a clash with security forces. Abdullah Mehsud killed himself with a hand grenade after troops raided a hideout in the Zhob district of southwestern Baluchistan province late Monday(AFP/File)

15:11, August 03, 2007

Taliban claims to have kidnapped Indian engineer

The Taliban on Friday claimed that it had kidnapped an Indian engineer in Baghlan province of northern Afghanistan.
A local Taliban commander Bahlol said Taliban fighters abducted the Indian engineer, who was working at a local power project, on Thursday in Puli Khumri, the provincial capital.
The engineer has been brought to the central Ghazni province, where 23 South Koreans were abducted on July 19, he added.
However, police chief in Baghlan and officials in Ghazni said they did not hear the alleged abduction.
Taliban militants have carried out kidnappings in this country over the past two years frequently, and some hostages were killed by the Taliban.
Source: Xinhua

Security forces face attacks


A Pakistani policemen mans a bunker in the Swat district of Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWFP), 15 July. The administration of President George W. Bush plans to pour 750 million dollars worth of aid into Pakistan’s tribal areas in a bid to wrest it away from Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants, The New York Times reported on its website late Sunday(AFP/Tariq Mahmood)



3 security men killed in Pakistan's tribal area

Three security men were killed Monday in Pakistan's tribal area near the Afghan border, military spokesman Major General Waheed Arshad said.
Earlier, local press reports said that militants fired rockets at the airfield of a Pakistan army base in the tribal region.
They quoted local officials as saying that security forces responded with artillery fire after two rockets hit their camp just after midnight in Miranshah, the main town in the troubled North Waziristan tribal district.
Arshad said that security forces have set up four new checkposts in Miranshah's main bazaar to prevent attacks and stop thefts and looting.
Reports said that the army's creation of new checkpoints was a major factor in the breakdown of the peace accord between the local militants and the government.
Source: Xinhua




Security forces' vehicle attacked in Pakistan's tribal area

A vehicle of security forces was attacked Tuesday in Pakistan's tribal region of South Waziristan bordering Afghanistan, causing some casualties, according to local TV reports.
Meanwhile, the military has launched attacks in the neighboring tribal region of North Waziristan, targeting militants' hideouts, the reports said.
Source: Xinhua


Five injured in bomb blast in NW Pakistan

At least five people, including a policeman and an employee of a secret agency, were injured in a bomb blast in northwestern Pakistan Friday, the police said.
The bomb was planted outside a cycle shop near a police station in the town of Srai Nurang in the North West Frontier Province ( NWFP), the police said.
The bomb exploded with huge bang, creating panic in the town, witnesses said.
Police stations have been targeted in recent series of bomb blasts and suicide attacks in the NWFP.
No group has claimed responsibility of the blast.
Source: Xinhua


Pakistani PM condemns terrorist attack on spokesman

Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on Friday strongly condemned a terrorist attack in southwestern Pakistan in which the spokesman of Baluchistan government was killed.
Aziz said that such acts of terrorism only serve the cause of anti-state elements who want to destabilize the country and create chaos.
He reiterated that these agents of terror would not be able to succeed in their evil designs as the government and the people of Pakistan are determined to eliminate such elements from the society.
Aziz expressed his heart-felt condolences over the death of Razik Bugti, the spokesman of Baluchistan government.
Two gunmen riding a motorcycle fired at Razik Bugti and killed him on Friday.
Source: Xinhua

Update on South Korean Hostages


protester (C) collects posters of the remaining 21 South Koreans held hostage in Afghanistan after a rally near the U.S. embassy in Seoul to demand negotiations between the U.S. government and the Taliban for the safe return of the hostages August 3, 2007. A South Korean delegation arrived on Thursday in the Afghan province where 21 Koreans are held hostage in an attempt to hold direct talks with Taliban kidnappers and peacefully end the two-week ordeal. REUTERS/Han Jae-Ho (SOUTH KOREA)



Taliban accepts face-to-face talks with S. Korean government

The Taliban accepted to hold face-to- face talks with the South Korean government on 21 hostages, a purported Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi told Xinhua from an undisclosed place on Thursday.
Ahmadi said the Taliban is disappointed with the Afghan government as it did not show sincerity in the negotiations.
He also said 16 hostages are not in good condition, while two female hostages are in very serious condition.
Earlier Thursday, some media reports quoted Afghan officials as saying South Korean diplomats in Afghanistan were seeking face-to- face talks with the Taliban.
Meanwhile, Sharif Mangal, spokesman for Ghazni governor, told Xinhua that local tribal elders are facilitating and seeking a place for a direct meeting between Taliban commanders and the South Koran ambassador to Kabul.
Waheedullah Mujadidi, chief negotiator for a delegation of local tribal elders talking with the Taliban, said he had resigned from his job as the Afghan government failed to ensure his security. "Some bombs were found before my house," he said.
Taliban rebels killed two male South Korean hostages on July 25 and July 30 separately to press Afghan and South Korean authorities to meet their demands.
Up to now, the Afghan government has not agreed to release Taliban prisoners as the Taliban has demanded to exchange for the hostages.
A total of 23 South Koreans were kidnapped by Taliban militants on a road in the central Ghazni province on July 19.
Source: Xinhua





Body of second slain S. Korean hostage back home

The body of Shim Sung-min, who was killed by Afghan kidnappers Monday, was transported to South Korea on Thursday.
Shim, kidnapped by militants in Afghanistan with 22 other South Koreans on July 19, was found shot dead in central Afghanistan Tuesday, five days after another South Korean hostage was executed.
Shim's body arrived at the freight terminal of Incheon International Airport aboard an Emirates flight and was received by his tearful younger brother Hyo-min and officials from the church that organized the trip, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported.
Shim's family said Shim's body will be donated for medical research after a funeral ceremony on Saturday.
The Taliban are still holding the remaining 21 hostages and warned of more killings if the Afghan government does not release jailed Taliban members.
Source: Xinhua



Foreign Muslims look at the South Korean conservative activists' protest, demanding the safe return of Korean hostages in Afghanistan, after their Friday prayers in front of a mosque in Seoul August 3, 2007. A South Korean delegation arrived on Thursday in the Afghan province where 21 Koreans are held hostage in an attempt to hold direct talks with Taliban kidnappers and peacefully end the two-week ordeal. REUTERS/Han Jae-Ho (SOUTH KOREA)

U.S. vows to win release of South Korean hostages

The United States said Thursday that it will make "all pressures need" to free South Korean hostages held by the Taliban militants in Afghanistan.
"All pressures need to be applied to the Taliban to get them to release these hostages," Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Richard Boucher said.
He said the United States will have cooperation with Afghanistan and South Korea "to get these people released unharmed, to get them released peacefully and safely."
Boucher declined to elaborate on what pressures or efforts were being used or considered but said they included the option of military force.
Boucher made the remarks ahead of a weekend visit by Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who will meet with U.S. President George W. Bush at Camp David.
The coming U.S.-Afghan summit is expected to discuss some issues of mutual interests including the war on terror, counter narcotics and the U.S. contribution towards rebuilding of the post- Taliban Afghanistan.
Taliban militants abducted 23 South Koreans on July 19, and have shot dead two of them so far. They threatened to execute the remaining if the Afghan government fails to meet their demand which includes the release of their eight Taliban comrades.
Source: Xinhua


Seoul seeks direct talks with Taliban

A South Korean delegation arrived yesterday in the Afghan province where 21 Koreans are held hostage in an attempt to hold direct talks with Taliban kidnappers and peacefully end the two-week ordeal.
The Taliban have killed two Korean hostages, accusing the Afghan government of not negotiating in good faith and ignoring their demand to release rebel prisoners. The Taliban have insisted on direct talks with the Koreans, but Seoul has no power to free prisoners from Afghan jails.
"The team, including the Korean ambassador, which has come for the release of Korean nationals, say they have come to speak to the Taliban about choosing a venue for talks," Ghazni Provincial Governor Mirajuddin Pathan told reporters.
"They say they have come to hold direct talks with the Taliban," he said.
The Taliban kidnapped 23 South Korean church volunteers, 18 of them women, in Ghazni province on the main road south from Kabul on July 20. Two male Koreans have since been killed.
The South Korean government is under intense pressure to bring the captives home, but has no power to meet the key Taliban demand - the release of rebel prisoners.
The Afghan government has refused to give in to the demand, saying that would only encourage further abductions.
Instead, Seoul has gone on a diplomatic offensive to try to find a way out of the crisis that avoids either a risky military rescue bid or further Taliban killings of captives.
South Korea and the United States, which has more than 20,000 troops in Afghanistan, agreed not to use force to free the hostages, but Afghan troops also warned villagers of a possible offensive in the area where the captives are held.
Source: China Daily/agencies


S.Korea denies to give ransom to Afghan kidnappers

The South Korean government has never paid money to Taliban militants for the safe of South Korean hostages, said South Korean Presidential Spokesman Cheon Ho-seon on Friday.
Cheon made the remarks in response to a report by the weekly magazine Newsweek, which cited an alleged senior Taliban commander as saying that a Taliban group received money from South Korea after the kidnapping. It also reported that a South Korean envoy, a Ghazni member of Afghan parliament and some government negotiators may have been talking to the Taliban group.
"The Newsweek report is groundless," Cheon said.
"The South Korean government is not in a position to give a direct answer to the Taliban's demand that its prisoners be swapped for South Korean hostages. Through the direct contacts, we intend to stress that our capabilities to meet Taliban demands are limited," he added.
Taliban militants kidnapped 23 South Koreans in Ghazni on July 19. They have killed two South Korean hostages so far.
Source: Xinhua


Withdrawal of S.Korean troops from Afghanistan to be conducted as schedule: S.Korean official

South Korean Presidential Envoy for the hostage issue in Afghanistan said Friday that the withdrawal of South Korean troops from Afghanistan would be implemented by the end of this year as scheduled.
Baek Jong-chun, who returned from Afghanistan without apparent progress in the solution of the hostage issue in Afghanistan, told reporters upon his arrival to the Incheon International Airport that South Korea will not change its schedule of the pullout of its troops despite the Afghan kidnappers demand an immediate withdrawal.
Baek said the South Korean government is still determined to do its utmost to secure the release of the hostages through direct contacts with the Taliban.
"I met with Afghanistan's president and key cabinet ministers in Kabul and obtained their agreement to do their best for the swift release of the Korean hostages," said Baek, who is also the chief secretary to President Roh Moo-hyun for foreign and security policy.
"I'll disclose more details later. I want the media to approach the hostage crisis more carefully as many lives are at stake," he said.
On the way back to South Korean, Baek paid a brief visit to Pakistan and met with officials there. But Baek didn't give any comments on his visit to Pakistan. South Korea's Presidential Office said Thursday that Baek visited Pakistan was aimed at seeking Pakistan's cooperation in the hostage issue.
Baek left for Kabul on July 26 and left there on Aug. 1.
Source: Xinhua


S.Korean political leaders to visit U.S. to seek resolution on hostage crisis

South Korean political leaders announced on Wednesday their plan to travel to the United States this week to seek resolution for the release of 21 South Korean hostages in Afghanistan.
"We politely appeal to the U.S. government and the United Nations to shift their stance and help prevent these imminent killings," said leaders of five major South Korean political parties at a joint statement.
The party leaders issued the statement after a rare emergency meeting here.
"The humanitarian support is desperately needed from the international community in order to save the lives of these innocent civilians," the statement said.
Afghan militants demanded for release of Taliban prisoners in exchange for the release of South Korean hostages. However, the Afghanistan government has repeatedly announced not to conduct any prisoner-for-hostage deal with the kidnappers. The South Korean political party leaders' statement and their planned U.S. visit are widely regarded as an effort to urge the U.S. side for more flexibility on the hostage crisis.
According to the local media, the party leaders are expected to leave for Washington as early as Thursday and will meet with U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and UN. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to discuss the hostage issue.
They also plan to visit Afghanistan or other concerned Asian countries such as Saudi Arabia and Pakistan after the trip to the U.S., said local reports.
A total of 23 South Koreans were held as hostages in Afghanistan on July 19. The kidnappers have executed two male hostages so far as a warning to the South Korean and Afghan government.
The families of the hostages on Wednesday visited the U.S. embassy in Seoul to appeal for U.S. help in resolving the hostage issue.
Source: Xinhua


S.Korea denies meeting between hostages and S.Korean negotiators

The South Korean government on Wednesday denied a report that South Korean negotiators will meet with South Korean hostages in Afghanistan.
South Korean government negotiators have been stationed in the southern Afghan province of Gazni since the beginning of the hostage crisis, said an official of the Presidential Office.
The negotiators have never received any notice from the Taliban that they would be allowed to meet with the hostages, he added.
An earlier report by the Afghan Islamic Press said that South Korean negotiators would be permitted to meet with South Korean hostages.
A total of 23 South Koreans were kidnapped by Taliban militants on July 19. The militants killed two male hostages separately on July 25 and July 30 and threatening to kill more hostages if their demand was not fulfilled.
Source: Xinhua

Police foil suicide bomb attack in Eastern Pakistan

Police foil suicide bomb attack in Eastern Pakistan

16:05, August 02, 2007

A suicide bomber and a police man were killed in a failed suicide attack on a police training center in Pakistan's eastern Punjab province Thursday, police said.
The security men tried to stop a suspected bomber when he climbed the wall of the training center and entered the building in the city of Sargodha.
Police said that the suspect first fired at the policemen, killing an assistant sub-inspector and injuring another policeman.
The elite police force returned fire, killing the attacker at the scene.
The police found an explosive-laden jacket when they searched the body of the suspect, who wanted to blow himself up in the center.
The police also recovered a pistol and a hand grenade from the suspect.
District Police Officer Sheikh Muhammad Omar said that the alleged bomber, who was in the age of 22, was being identified.
He said that a police parade was the main target of the bomber, which was scheduled to begin after 10 minutes of the attack. Some 900 police recruits were supposed to take part in the parade.
He said that when the policemen tried to stop the attacker, who tried to run towards the parade area.
In another incident, five policemen were injured in a bomb blast near a traffic police headquarters in the city of Gujranwala, some 60 kilometers from Lahore, the provincial capital of Punjab.
Iqbal, a commander of the bomb disposal squad, said that a time device was used for the blast.
Attacks on police training centers have increased in parts of Pakistan in recent days especially after the army stormed the Islamabad's red mosque last month.
Source: XinhuaA suicide bomber and a police man were killed in a failed suicide attack on a police training center in Pakistan's eastern Punjab province Thursday, police said.
The security men tried to stop a suspected bomber when he climbed the wall of the training center and entered the building in the city of Sargodha.
Police said that the suspect first fired at the policemen, killing an assistant sub-inspector and injuring another policeman.
The elite police force returned fire, killing the attacker at the scene.
The police found an explosive-laden jacket when they searched the body of the suspect, who wanted to blow himself up in the center.
The police also recovered a pistol and a hand grenade from the suspect.
District Police Officer Sheikh Muhammad Omar said that the alleged bomber, who was in the age of 22, was being identified.
He said that a police parade was the main target of the bomber, which was scheduled to begin after 10 minutes of the attack. Some 900 police recruits were supposed to take part in the parade.
He said that when the policemen tried to stop the attacker, who tried to run towards the parade area.
In another incident, five policemen were injured in a bomb blast near a traffic police headquarters in the city of Gujranwala, some 60 kilometers from Lahore, the provincial capital of Punjab.
Iqbal, a commander of the bomb disposal squad, said that a time device was used for the blast.
Attacks on police training centers have increased in parts of Pakistan in recent days especially after the army stormed the Islamabad's red mosque last month.
Source: XinhuaA suicide bomber and a police man were killed in a failed suicide attack on a police training center in Pakistan's eastern Punjab province Thursday, police said.
The security men tried to stop a suspected bomber when he climbed the wall of the training center and entered the building in the city of Sargodha.
Police said that the suspect first fired at the policemen, killing an assistant sub-inspector and injuring another policeman.
The elite police force returned fire, killing the attacker at the scene.
The police found an explosive-laden jacket when they searched the body of the suspect, who wanted to blow himself up in the center.
The police also recovered a pistol and a hand grenade from the suspect.
District Police Officer Sheikh Muhammad Omar said that the alleged bomber, who was in the age of 22, was being identified.
He said that a police parade was the main target of the bomber, which was scheduled to begin after 10 minutes of the attack. Some 900 police recruits were supposed to take part in the parade.
He said that when the policemen tried to stop the attacker, who tried to run towards the parade area.
In another incident, five policemen were injured in a bomb blast near a traffic police headquarters in the city of Gujranwala, some 60 kilometers from Lahore, the provincial capital of Punjab.
Iqbal, a commander of the bomb disposal squad, said that a time device was used for the blast.
Attacks on police training centers have increased in parts of Pakistan in recent days especially after the army stormed the Islamabad's red mosque last month.
Source: Xinhua



Taliban attack kills Afghan policeman, wounds three

A Taliban attack killed one policeman and wounded three others in Afghanistan's central Ghazni province, the police said Thursday.
Taliban militants ambushed a police van in Rashidan district on Wednesday evening and caused the casualties, Hajji Zaman, a local senior police officer, told Xinhua.
Ghazni has witnessed rising Taliban violence this year. Taliban militants abducted 23 South Koreans on July 19 and have executed two of them.
Due to Taliban insurgency, over 3,600 people have been killed in Afghanistan this year.
Source: Xinhua

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Pakistani cop, militant die in suicide attack


A Pakistani police commando escorts Lal Masjid chief cleric Abdul Aziz (second right) and his legal team upon their arrival for an appearance at an anti-terrorist court in Rawalpindi yesterday. Some 11 soldiers and 75 people, mainly militants, inside the mosque complex were killed during the raid on Islamabad’s Lal Masjid, which ended a month-long standoff with the mosque’s followers who wanted the imposition of Shariah in Pakistan


Pakistani cop, militant die in suicide attack
Published: Friday, 3 August, 2007, 01:57 AM Doha Time



LAHORE: An Islamic militant and a policeman died yesterday when officers foiled a suicide bombing at a Pakistani police school, the latest attack since the army stormed a radical Islamabad mosque.
The attack in the central city of Sargodha in Punjab province comes amid a wave of violence that has killed more than 200 people across the country in recent weeks, piling pressure on key US ally President Pervez Musharraf.
The Islamic militant tried to enter the police training facility with seven kilograms (15 pounds) of explosives strapped to his body as dozens of recruits ended their morning parade, Sargodha police chief Sheikh Omar said.
“He was a suicide bomber but police foiled his attempt,” Omar said, adding that casualties would have been “heavy” had he succeeded in entering the training area.
He said security officials at the gate of the school stopped the suspect, in his early 20s, who pulled out a pistol and opened fire, killing one police officer and wounding another. A hand grenade was also found on his corpse.
“A constable on duty shot him dead. His presence of mind saved many lives,” local police officer Nasar Hayat said.
“The bomber apparently had full details about the morning’s drill schedule but it was just by chance that the person in charge today called off the drill about five minutes early,” Hayat added.
Police said the attack appeared to be a “continuation” of attacks on police and the army in apparent revenge for the siege and storming of the pro-Taliban Red Mosque in the capital, in which more than 100 people died.
Fifteen people were killed on Friday when a suicide bomber attacked a group of policemen during fresh protests at the mosque.
In another incident yesterday, a small bomb placed under a cart exploded near a traffic police office in the industrial city of Gujranwala, near Lahore, wounding eight people, including four police, police said.
Pakistan’s military said that General Sir Richard Dannatt, chief of the general staff of the British Army, called on a senior army commander in Peshawar yesterday before visiting the restive tribal area bordering Afghanistan.
It said in a statement that Dannatt met with Corps Commander Lieutenant General Mohamed Masood Aslam at the Peshawar corps headquarters and later travelled to North Waziristan, in Islamist North West Frontier Province.
There, he was briefed by local government and military officials on steps being taken to curb extremism and terror-related activities in the region.
Fresh violence erupted in the tribal belt overnight, with militants firing six rockets at a security forces checkpost in the troubled Bajaur district which borders Afghanistan, security officials said.
Rebels also targeted a checkpost along the frontier in North Waziristan, they said. Neither attack caused casualties, they added.
A local lawmaker, Nek Zaman Haqqani, in a statement urged the government to “stop treating tribesmen as enemies.”
He said 18 people killed in clashes in the area on Tuesday were tribesmen and not militants, as the army had claimed.
Religious scholars and Muslim clerics in Miranshah, the main town of North Waziristan, said they would launch a protest campaign today to press their demand for the withdrawal of troops from regional checkposts.
Black flags would fly in markets and on rooftops, and they would wear black armbands until their demand was met, local cleric Sadar Abdul Rehman said, adding that troops should be deployed only at the border.
The area has seen some of the bloodiest attacks in the past month since pro-Taliban militants scrapped a 10-month-old peace deal with the government on July 15, days after the carnage at the Red Mosque. – AFP

Drive to check unauthorised sale of SIM & 3G WiMAX

The News - International, Pakistan

Drive to check unauthorised sale of SIM
By our correspondent

KARACHI: The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has started checking unauthorised sale of new subscriber identity module (SIM) from August 1 across the country to ensure that new mobile connections are issued after proper documentation.
“Various teams of PTA Zonal offices at Lahore, Karachi, Quetta, Peshawar and Multan would carry out surprise checks and inspections in their respective areas,” said a statement on Thursday.
“The PTA would start sealing those franchises which were not complying with PTA regulations on issuance of new cell phone SIM and concerned company will be asked to cancel its franchise. After these inspections, companies will also be asked to take remedial measures and ensure implementation of PTA directives in this regard.”
It said the PTA had taken a number of steps to deal with this issue and has directed cellular mobile companies to ensure that new SIM were sold only through its franchises or authorized dealers.
“Similarly, mobile companies are running ads in the press wherein they have advised their users to get their connections transferred in their names if they have not as yet done so. Companies are also sending short messages to subscribers in this regard,” added the statement.
It said the PTA had directed the mobile companies to get their data streamlined at their end by August 31, 2007. The companies would provide complete data of their subscriber’s to NADRA for verification purposes, added the statement.



3G WiMAX coming to Pakistan soon
By our correspondent

LAHORE: The Chairman, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), Major General (Retd) Shahzada Alam Malik, has said that 3G technology WiMAX would get its way into Pakistan market within a couple of months.
“A Gulf-based company is rolling out this technology in the region soon to help introduce eight-digit mobile phone numbers,” he said while speaking at the Lahore Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) on Thursday.
He urged the local businessmen to benefit from the opportunities in mobile phone handset manufacturing by setting up units as Pakistan is presently spending huge foreign exchange on the import of millions of sets every year.
Talking about the rising mobile phone density in the country, he said that the number of mobile phone subscribers had swelled to 65 million as two million new subscribers are added every month.
He said that mobile teledensity in Pakistan had touched the enviable mark of 45 percent in just few years.
About fixed line phone growth in the country, Malik said that the growth in this conventional telecom system was now stagnant. “More lines were being laid to provide triple play facilities to the people i.e. internet, telephone and TV in the towns like Lahore and Islamabad.” Responding to a question, the PTA chief said that the Authority’s efforts to curb the mobile phone theft in the country had started yielding positive results. The use of IMEI system had led to blocking of 100,000 stolen mobile phones in the country over a very short period of time.
He said that the business friendly policies had attracted foreign direct investment worth $1.9 billion each during the fiscal years 2006 and 2007.
He said that new entrants in the mobile phone sector had led to great competition in this vital segment of the Pakistani economy, development of more physical infrastructure and creation of jobs.” The number of cell sites in Pakistan has touched the level of 11,800 in June 2007 from 360 in 2003.” Speaking on the occasion, the LCCI President, Shahid Hassan Sheikh, urged the chairman PTA to ensure the provision of DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) service to industrial zones in Pakistan that are suffering because of inadequate DSL services.
The LCCI President said that it was generally observed that whenever there is rainfall, a large number of phone lines go out of order for having connection with underground cable; this is an issue of prime importance for any business firm or industrial concern.
The PTA should give the issue a special consideration as it is pre-requisite for keeping pace with fast growing economy.
Shahid Hassan Sheikh said that line rent being charged by the PTCL was too high so it should be curtailed as in the year 2006, the PTCL earned a profit of Rs20.77 billion.
He urged the PTA Chairman to direct mobile operators to improve quality of their services as the services of some of the mobile operators is not up to the mark.
He also invited the attention of the Chairman towards the repeated disconnection of internet services being provided by ISPs through PTCL.
The LCCI President said that all the banks are charging 15 per cent interest on loans for whole year, the PTCL is charging a surcharge of 10 per cent on late payment.
This is too high surcharge for late payment, this surcharge is totally unjustified and tantamount to exploit the customers, it is suggested that the surcharge is reviewed and brought at par with bank rate.

British general lauds Pak efforts to combat terrorism


Chief of General Staff of UK Army General Richard Dannatt


British general lauds Pak efforts to combat terrorism
By our correspondent
The News - International, Pakistan
PESHAWAR: Chief of General Staff of UK Army General Richard Dannatt called on NWFP Governor Lt-Gen (retd) Ali Muhammad Jan Orakzai here on Thursday and lauded Pakistan’s efforts to combat terrorism.
They exchanged views on the law and order situation in the region and the steps taken by the government to control militancy and terrorist activities.
The governor said that the use of force in certain parts of Fata was a part of the overall strategy of the government. However, he said, they were simultaneously focusing on developing social sectors and creating economic opportunities on a wide scale so as to protect the young generation from falling prey to militants.
For this purpose, he added, they have chalked out a very comprehensive plan costing two billions dollars, which is envisaged to be implemented over the next nine years or so.
Replying to a question, the governor said that the problems in Fata are the outcome of the developments in Afghanistan, especially after 9/11. “The area has been in the grip of tension ever since.”
Orakzai said the government had done much more than any other country to check terrorism.
The same level of commitment should be displayed by Afghanistan as well, he added. General Richard Danatt appreciated the efforts of Pakistan in the fight against terrorism and assured the governor of his country’s continued support to Pakistan in all its endeavours. Talking about the situation in Afghanistan, the general stated that reasonable progress had been made by Nato forces. He stressed the need for social sector development in the war-torn country.

554 foreign students deported from madrassas




Provinces to check mushroom growth of madrassas: 554 foreign students deported from madrassas, NA told

* Rs 469.5m compensation paid to families of terror victims
Daily Times, Pakistan
ISLAMABAD: The government has so far deported 554 foreign students from seminaries across Pakistan, while cases of another 717 such students are under consideration for deportation, the Ministry of Interior told the National Assembly (NA) in a written reply to a question on Thursday.
It said that all the foreign students failing to submit no objection certificate (NOC) from their respective governments would be deported and no foreign student allowed admission in Pakistani seminaries in future.
The ministry said that 12,395 of the total 13,500 madrassas across Pakistan had been registered during the government’s drive to regulate seminaries and no religious school could be opened without the government’s NOC under the new rules. It informed the House that the government had paid Rs 469.54 million compensation to the families, who lost their members in terrorism incidents during 2006-07.
In reply to another question, Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao said that the provincial governments had been directed to maintain biometric record (database) of all prisoners in different jails with the assistance of NADRA. He said that biometric equipment would be installed at all prisons, which would help improve the overall law and order situation. Sherpao said the government had also decided to update red book on quarterly basis and develop information-sharing mechanism at the district level. He said the provinces had been asked to collect information about seminaries fanning extremism or militancy and media campaigns should be arranged to discourage suicide attacks. He said that Fatwas (edits) of reputed religious clerics denouncing extremism should be given space and time in print and electronic media respectively.
Sherpao said that the provinces had been ordered to re-arrest all terrorists released from jails under the Anti-Terrorism Act and check mushroom growth of seminaries. The provinces had also been asked to propagate “rational” interpretation of Quranic verses on Jihad by religious scholars. He said that since July last year the government had launched a campaign against extremism and militancy, hate literature and Khateebs fanning sectarian hatred.
He said a modern immigration control system “PISCES” was being installed at 18 entry/exit points to check the entry of terrorists in the country. The system is functional Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Quetta, Peshawar, Multan and Faisalabad airports, KPT and Ghass Bandar seaports in addition to Wagah Railway Station and Wagah land route. Sherpao said the government had also launched Rs 1.1 billion fingerprints identification project, under which the FIA had so far taken 240,000 fingerprints. staff report

Tribesmen get visas for Pak-Afghan jirga

Tribesmen get visas for Pak-Afghan jirga

Staff Report
Daily Times, Pakistan
PESHAWAR: Pakistani tribesmen nominated for the joint Pak-Afghan peace jirga starting on August 9 in Kabul visited the Afghan consulate on Thursday to receive travel documents required for a visit to Afghanistan.
“Are you a jirga member?” an Afghan guard asked a tribesman from North Waziristan while welcoming him to the consulate. Afghan diplomats were seen enthusiastic while dealing with jirga members.
Despite strong pessimism that the Pak-Afghan jirga cannot succeed without the participation of the Taliban, Pakistan’s delegation members and Afghan consulate staff looked hopeful.
“Inshallah, the jirga will deliver the desired results,” a jirga member from North Waziristan told Daily Times at the consulate where special arrangements were made to issue visas to tribesmen. The Interior Ministry has directed all passport offices in the NWFP to prepare passports for jirga members on a priority basis.



Inclusion of women in peace Jirga sought
By our correspondent
The News - International, Pakistan
PESHAWAR: Civil society organisations have asked the government to give representation to women in the Pak-Afghan Peace Jirga being held in Kabul in the second week of August.
In a press release issued here on Thursday, the Alliance for Protection of Human Rights (APHR), a group of civil society organisations, flayed the exclusion of women from the three-day peace Jirga to be held from August 9 to 11.
The alliance said that women constituted 48 per cent of the population of Pakistan. It pointed out that women were also the victims of the violence gripping Afghanistan and parts of Pakistan.
It was highly regrettable that the Pakistani authorities did not nominate women for the Jirga, depriving them of the chance to air the grievances and suggest steps for bringing about a durable peace in the region, it added.
The HPHR members, including the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, Aurat Foundation, Khwendo Kor, Shirkat Gah, Sungi Foundation, Human Resource Management and Development Centre, Strengthening Participatory Organisation and Noor Education Trust, deplored that the Pakistan government had totally ignored women while appointing delegates to the Jirga, while at the same time the Afghan government gave due importance to women by including them in the proposed peace forum.
The APHR asked the Pakistan government to forthwith name woman delegates for the Jirga so that the whole population of the country is duly represented. It said the lack of women would make the Jirga a fruitless exercise. It urged the government to give 33 per cent representation to women on the Jirga to make it a truly representative gathering.

Two key al Qaeda militants arrested in Pakistan


ATTACK FROM ABOVE: Anti-Taliban fighters sit on a ridge as smoke billows from an area near Tora Bora, Afghanistan, Dec. 15.(2001) KEVIN FRAYER/CP/AP - see below for detail


Two key al Qaeda militants arrested in Pakistan
Malaysia Sun
Thursday 2nd August, 2007
(ANI)

Peshawar, Aug 2 : Two important aides of al Qaeda and the Taliban were arrested from different places in Pakistan, sources said.
Muhammad Rahim was picked up from Lahore, while Sheikh Ilyas Khel was arrested at a bus-stand in Peshawar.
Sources said Rahim was Osama bin Laden's special aide, and hailed from Afghanistan's Nangarhar province, while Khel worked for Laden as translator and guide during his stay in Afghanistan.
Rahim was the head of the al Qaeda team that was engaged in negotiations with the Afghanistan Government-nominated commanders including Hazrat Ali in early 2002.
Ilyas Khel was an active commander of the late Maulvi Younas Khalis of the Hizb-e-Islami Afghanistan, The Nation reported.
After the collapse of Taliban regime, Ilyas joined Hazrat Ali and was posted on an important route, connecting Tora Bora with Jalalabad, through which most of the al-Qaeda militants escaped from Tora Bora.
Qari Bahadar, son of Ilyas Khel, was recently killed when the US-led allied troops attacked the hideouts of the al-Qaeda and Taliban fugitives in Tora Bora.
Leading political figures in Afghanistan confirmed to the media reports that both Rahim and Ilyas were in US custody.
However, it couldn't be ascertained whether or not Pakistan has extradited them to Bagram or to Guantanamo prison.
Meanwhile, the US-led forces have decided to establish a permanent military camp at Tora Bora to eliminate al-Qaeda and Taliban militants.




Pakistan: Al Qaeda, Taliban Leaders Arrested
August 02, 2007 14 25 GMT
A high-ranking al Qaeda member and a Taliban leader were arrested in separate incidents in Pakistan on Aug. 2. Muhammad Rahim was apprehended in Lahore and was allegedly once Osama bin Laden's special aide. Sheikh Ilyas Khel allegedly worked for bin Laden as a translator and guide and was arrested at a bus stand in Peshawar, Daily India reported, citing unnamed sources.


from the March 04, 2002 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0304/p01s03-wosc.html
How bin Laden got away
A day-by-day account of how Osama bin Laden eluded the world's most powerful military machine.

By Philip Smucker | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
TORA BORA, AFGHANISTAN - All 1,000 of the regional tribal leaders rose to their feet and shouted " Zindibad, Osama!" ("Long Live Osama!").
The Al Qaeda chief placed his right hand over his heart, the ethnic Pashtun sign for being honored, while 15 of his elite guards flanked him.
In the last public speech given at the Jalalabad Islamic studies center on Nov. 10, Osama bin Laden painted the battle lines black and white. "The Americans had a plan to invade, but if we are united and believe in Allah, we'll teach them a lesson, the same one we taught the Russians," he said, according to two tribal leaders who attended the speech.
Mr. bin Laden, with that speech, was laying his plans to stay a step ahead of the US campaign. He would travel to his favored fortified redoubt in Tora Bora, as the US expected him to, but he would also pave a way out. After his rousing speech, he bestowed cash gifts on key people who could later help him escape.
The US-led war in Afghanistan was going exceedingly well up to that point. The Taliban regime had been pushed from the northern half of the country; the capital of Kabul and much of the rest of Afghanistan would fall within the next few days.
It was a war like no other. In an evolutionary leap powered by Information Age technology, US ground soldiers were mainly employed as observers, liaisons, and spotters for air power - not as direct combatants sent to occupy a foreign land. The success of the US was dazzling, save for the fight for Tora Bora, which may have been this unconventional war's most crucial battle. For the US, Tora Bora wasn't about capturing caverns or destroying fortifications - it was about taking the world's most wanted terrorist "dead or alive."
In retrospect, it becomes clear that the battle's underlying story is of how scant intelligence, poorly chosen allies, and dubious military tactics fumbled a golden opportunity to capture bin Laden as well as many senior Al Qaeda commanders.
Moreover, as the US military conducts new strikes with its Afghan allies in nearby Paktia Province, sends special forces into Southeast and Central Asia - and prepares for a possible military plunge into Iraq - planners will need to learn the lessons of Tora Bora: Know which local leaders to trust. Know when to work with allied forces on the ground. And know when to go it alone. "Maybe the only lesson that is applicable is: whenever you use local forces, they have local agendas," says one senior Western diplomat, now looking at options for invading Iraq. "You had better know what those are so that if it is not a reasonable match - at least it is not a contradiction."
Bin Laden rallies followers
It was just two days before the fall of Kabul on Nov. 12, that bin Laden rallied his forces five hours east by road in the city of Jalalabad - a long-time base of his operations. It was mid-afternoon, bombs were falling all over the city, and tribal leaders had just finished a sumptuous meal of lamb kebabs and rice.
After a rousing introduction by an Arab speaker with wavy black locks, bin Laden entered the Saudi-funded institute for Islamic studies, which had been hastily converted into a Taliban and Al Qaeda intelligence center only days after the World Trade Center bombing.
He was dressed in loose gray clothing and wearing his signature camouflage jacket. His commandos were garbed in green fatigues, and their shiny, new Kalashnikovs were specially rigged with grenade launchers. As bin Laden held forth, several Arabs shouted from the middle and back. "God is Great! Down with America! Down with Israel."
Blending his theological and martial message, bin Laden made one final appeal. "God is with us, and we will win the war. Your Arab brothers will lead the way. We have the weapons and the technology. What we need most is your moral support. And may God grant me the opportunity to see you and meet you again on the front lines."
With that, bin Laden stepped away from the podium. The 15 guards closed ranks and shuffled out the door behind him.
Malik Habib Gul, who sat in the second row in the basement of the Taliban's intelligence headquarters that night, did not soon forget the evening; a lavish one by Pashtun standards. Like the other tribal elders in attendance, the chief received a white envelope full of Pakistani rupees, the thickness proportional to the 30 extended families under his jurisdiction in Upper Pachir, which lies against the Pakistani border. His "spending money," he says now, did not run out until last week. Mr. Gul says he received about the equivalent of $300; other leaders of larger clans received up to $10,000.
Flight to Tora Bora
By the next day, US aerial bombing became much heavier, and the mood was dismal in the streets of Jalalabad. The ancient trading center, situated on the old Silk Road, has long been a meeting place for Pashtun tribesmen who come from hours away - and from across the border in Pakistan - to barter weapons, purchase mules, and negotiate political loyalties.
"We saw Osama while standing here in front of our guesthouse at 9 p.m. on that Tuesday," says Babrak Khan, a Jalalabad resident who once worked as a guard at a nearby base for Islamic militants. Mr. Babrak says he's sure of the time, because he listened to part of the BBC Pashto language news broadcast that begins at 9:30 p.m. in Afghanistan.
As Babrak and three other city residents describe it, bin Laden rapidly exited the sixth or seventh car, a custom-designed white Toyota Corolla with an elongated, hatchback, in a convoy of several hundred cars. Bin Laden cradled a Kalakov machinegun, a shortened version of a Kalashnikov, as he barked orders to his man.
A little later, he stood beside a mosque under a tree, surrounded by about 60 armed guards, but quite visibly nervous. Maulvi Abdul Kabir, the Taliban governor of Jalalabad, was holding his hand, as is customary for Muslim men who are spiritually close. The two men were speaking briskly with the son of Younus Khalis, the city's aging patriarch with links to both bin Laden and the Taliban.
Not long after this rare sighting of bin Laden, the convoy, mostly four-wheel drive trucks but followed up with six armored vehicles in the rear, hastily left town. The fleeing Al Qaeda and Taliban members snaked their way down a bumpy dirt road that runs through ancient battlefields and tattered villages and into the Al Qaeda base.
In the foothills of Tora Bora, about 30 miles southeast of Jalalabad, the convoy split up. One group went to the village of Mileva and the other group to the village of Garikhil as they prepared to take up their positions in the nearby cave complex.
"They were scornful and in a hurry, and sat there on a stoop, dividing up the fighters and assigning them to different caves," says Malik Osman Khan, chief the village of Garikhil. "Our people were terrified, because we thought the planes would hit the Arabs as they stopped in our village. We sent the women and children into another village for their own safety."
The bombing heats up
On Nov. 16, three days after Al Qaeda and Taliban forces headed into their trenches, caves, and dugouts, US bombing of the base, which had been ongoing since October, intensified.
In fact, this was when reports of civilian casualties in the region began circulating. Wahid Ullah, the 16-year-old son of Mr. Khan, the tribal chief of Garikhil, was one of more than 100 civilians killed. He had been playing stickball on Nov. 16 or 17, when a cruise missile shattered the earth around his feet. "At first, we thought that the US military was trying to frighten the Arabs out, since they were only bombing from one side," Khan says.
US draws up its battle plan
As the US intensified its airstrikes on Tora Bora, US and Afghan helicopters started to arrive with supplies for the Afghans. Also - as was its pattern elsewhere in Afghanistan - the US began enlisting local warlords. Two - Hazret Ali and Haji Zaman Ghamsharik - would become notorious in the battle for Tora Bora.
Both Mr. Ali and Mr. Ghamsharik say they were first approached by plain-clothed US officers in the middle of November and asked to take part in an attack on the Tora Bora base.
"We looked at the entire spectrum of options that we had available to us and decided that the use of small liaison elements were the most appropriate," says Army Col. Rick Thomas in a phone interview from US Central Command Headquarters in Tampa, Fla.
"We chose to fight using the Afghans who were fighting to regain their own country," Colonel Thomas says. "Our aims of eliminating Al Qaeda were similar."
Ali is a short, cocky fighter who won control over most of Jalalabad when the Taliban vacated on Nov. 13. He then became security chief for the Eastern Shura, the self-proclaimed government here. With only a fourth-grade education, he can sign documents, but he has trouble reading them. As an anti-Taliban fighter allied to former Northern Alliance commander Ahmed Shah Masood, who was assassinated just before Sept. 11, Ali and his band of hillbilly fighters fought against the Taliban in the north for six years. Local Pashtuns in Jalalabad complain that Ali's men went on a looting spree during their first days in town.
As a counterbalance to Ali, the US chose another powerful regional warlord, Ghamsharik, whom they had lured back from exile in Dijon, France, in late September. Known to many as a ruthless player in the regional smuggling business, Ghamsharik was given a rousing party on his return, including a 1,000-gun salute. He became the Jalalabad commander of the Eastern Shura. But he still didn't have the support of his own Afghan tribesmen (Khugani). Many of them, in fact, were proud to admit that they worked for Al Qaeda inside the Tora Bora base as well as in several nearby bases.
From the start, Ghamsharik was clearly uncomfortable with the power-sharing arrangement. Ali's men were Pashay - no relation to Ghamsharik's own Pashtun followers. He called his rival Ali "a peasant," and said he could not be trusted.
The rift between the two men would seriously hinder US efforts to capture Al Qaeda's leadership. Although backed by the United States, the Jalalabad warlords would have to determine by themselves - while sometimes arguing fiercely - how best to go after Tora Bora's defenders.
Moreover, in the early stages of the Eastern Shura discussions about Tora Bora, these leaders talked about "asking the Arabs to leave," not about attacking them outright. A key powerbroker, Maulvi Younus Khalis, a Jalalabad patriarch who supported bin Laden, had stacked the Shura with his own sympathizers. "The Americans can bomb all they want, they'll never catch Osama," he quipped to the Monitor on Nov. 25.
While ceding some power to the two competing warlords - Ali and Ghamsharik - Khalis, who had been temporarily handed the key to Jalalabad when the Taliban vacated, made sure that his personal military commander, Awol Gul, retained the heavy fighting equipment. Mr. Gul and another Khalis man, Mohammed Amin, traveled into Tora Bora on several occasions beginning Nov. 13, according to Ghamsharik.
The Afghan warlords estimated that Tora Bora held between 1,500 and 1,600 of the best Arab and Chechen fighters in bin Laden's terror network.
Ghamsharik said on Nov. 18 that the fight would be a tough one: "[Al Qaeda fighters] told us through our envoys that 'We will fight until we are martyred.' "
They also suspected that bin Laden himself would be directing the battle. After all, it was the place from which he had most successfully fought the Soviets in the 1980s.
And on Nov 29, Vice President Dick Cheney told ABC's "Primetime Live" that, according to the reports that were coming in, bin Laden was in Tora Bora."I think he was equipped to go to ground there," Mr. Cheney said. "He's got what he believes to be a fairly secure facility. He's got caves underground; it's an area he's familiar with."
An exodus begins
Meanwhile, in the weeks following bin Laden's arrival at the Tora Bora caves, morale slipped under the constant air assault. One group of Yemeni fighters, squirreled away in a cave they had been assigned to by the Al Qaeda chief, had not seen bin Laden since entering on Nov. 13.
But they say bin Laden joined them on Nov. 26, the 11th day of Ramadan, a warm glass of green tea in his hand. Instead of inspiring the elite fighters, he was now reduced, they say, to repeating the same "holy war" diatribe.
Around him that day sat three of his most loyal fighters, including Abu Baker, a square-faced man with a rough-hewn scruff on his chin."[Bin Laden] said, 'hold your positions firm and be ready for martyrdom,' " Baker told Afghan intelligence officers when he was captured in mid-December. "He said, 'I'll be visiting you again, very soon.' " Then, as quickly as he had come, Baker says, bin Laden vanished into the pine forests.
Between two and four days later, somewhere between Nov. 28 to Nov. 30 - according to detailed interviews with Arabs and Afghans in eastern Afghanistan afterward - the world's most-wanted man escaped the world's most-powerful military machine, walking - with four of his loyalists - in the direction of Pakistan.
On Dec. 11, in the village of Upper Pachir - located a few miles northeast of the main complex of caves where Al Qaeda fighters were holed up - a Saudi financier and Al Qaeda operative, Abu Jaffar, was interviewed by the Monitor. Fleeing the Tora Bora redoubt, Mr. Jaffar said that bin Laden had left the cave complexes roughly 10 days earlier, heading for the Parachinar area of Pakistan.
Jaffar, whose foot was blown off by a cluster bomb, was traveling with his Egyptian wife. He stayed in Upper Pachir one night, before fleeing north, then east toward the famed Khyber Pass.
Bin Laden phones home
Bin Laden, according to several fighters and the Saudi financier, later phoned back to the enclave, urging his followers to keep fighting. He also reportedly told them he was sending his own son, Salah Uddin, to replace him. Bin Laden's talk with his followers in Tora Bora just a few days after his departure may explain why US intelligence officials said that they thought they heard his voice on Dec. 10, probably on a short-wave transmission.
The escape accelerates
The slow but growing exodus from Tora Bora now became a mad rush. Mohammed Akram, who had occasionally cooked for bin Laden, says he was fixing dinner in a cave at the end of November, when a huge bomb exploded at the base and blew him some 30 feet back into the mouth of the grotto. Two of his colleagues were killed, and he, along with another Saudi and a Kurdish fighter, decided to flee.
His flight, he stated in February, began about the same day at end of November as bin Laden escaped. "We received a lot of Iranian currency, and the commanders distributed it to the soldiers," he said, adding that he had received 700,000 ($1,400) rials for his own personal use. "Our own Chechens were killing people who tried to leave so we left at night and traveled into Paktia [the province to the south] near to Gardez and onto Zarmat."
As panic overtook the fighters inside the enclave, local villagers who had been regularly paid off by bin Laden's men were available to help.
Malik Habib Gul, who had attended bin Laden's Nov. 10 speech in Jalalabad, says he was happy to arrange mule trains. He says the Al Qaeda fighters paid between 5,000 and 50,000 Pakistani rupees for mules and Afghan guides, which moved stealthily along the base of the White Mountains, over a major highway, and into the remote tribal areas of Pakistan.
"This was a golden opportunity for our village," he said in Jalalabad last week. "The only problem for the Arabs was the first 5 to 10 kilometers northeast from Tora Bora to our village of Upper Pachir. The bombing was very heavy. But after arriving in our village, there were no problems. You could ride a mule or drive a car into Pakistan."
He and other villagers say that from about Nov. 28 to Dec. 12, they probably escorted some 600 people out, including entire families. "Our main responsibility was getting people across the Kabul River at Lalpur. To do this, we had to cross the main road, but there was no one guarding it. To the south [in the direction of Parachinar, Pakistan], only walkers, mostly young fight- ers crossed. The snow was deep and the climb was difficult."
Intelligence lapses or flawed strategy?
Pir Baksh Bardiwal, the intelligence chief for the Eastern Shura, which controls eastern Afghanistan, says he was astounded that Pentagon planners didn't consider the most obvious exit routes and put down light US infantry to block them.
"The border with Pakistan was the key, but no one paid any attention to it," he said, leaning back in his swivel chair with a short list of the Al Qaeda fighters who were later taken prisoner. "And there were plenty of landing areas for helicopters, had the Americans acted decisively. Al Qaeda escaped right out from under their feet."
The intelligence chief contends that several thousand Pakistani troops who had been placed along the border about Dec. 10 never did their job, nor could they have been expected to, given that the exit routes were not being blocked inside Afghanistan.
The proxy war is launched
Meanwhile, back in Jalalabad, the Afghan warlords enlisted by the US to attack Tora Bora were also cutting deals to help the Al Qaeda fighters escape.
In the shoddy lobby of the Spin Ghar Hotel in downtown Jalalabad on Dec. 3, Haji Hayat Ullah - a member of the Eastern Shura who, according to both Afghan and Pakistani sources had long ties to bin Laden - asked for the "safe passage" for three of his Arab friends.
After a 20-minute discussion with Commander Ali, which was overheard by the Monitor in the empty hotel lobby, a deal was struck for the safe passage of the three Al Qaeda members.
About the same day as the 10-day offensive was launched - on Dec. 5 - nearly three-dozen US special forces, their faces wrapped in black and white bandanas, watched the fighting unfold from behind boulders on mountainsides, their trusted laser target designators in hand. They were "painting" the mouths of caves and bunkers inside the complex. The US bombing became markedly more accurate - almost overnight, according to Afghan civilians and local commanders.
The battle was joined, but anything approaching a "siege" of Tora Bora never materialized. Ghamsharik says today that he offered the US military the use his forces in a "siege of Tora Bora," but that the US opted in favor of his rival, Hazret Ali.
Indeed, Mr. Ali paid a lieutenant named Ilyas Khel to block the main escape routes into Pakistan. Mr. Khel had come to him three weeks earlier from the ranks of Taliban commander Awol Gul.
"I paid him 300,000 Pakistani rupees [$5,000] and gave him a satellite phone to keep us informed," says Mohammed Musa, an Ali deputy, who says Ali had firmly "trusted" Khel.
"Our problem was that the Arabs had paid him more, and so Ilyas Khel just showed the Arabs the way out of the country into Pakistan," Mr. Musa adds.
Afghan fighters from villages on the border confirmed in interviews last week in Jalalabad that they had later been engaged in firefights with Khel's fighters, who they said were "firing cover for escaping Al Qaeda."
As a Russian-made tank commandeered by US-backed Afghans blasted the valleys dividing snow-capped peaks, American B-52s rained down bombs from above, sending giant mushroom clouds that hovered over the pine forests.
The remaining Arab fighters - now reduced to a few hundred from the original 1,500 to 2,000 - continued to hold out, and could be overheard speaking on their radio handsets on Dec. 6. "OK. You can come out shooting," said one Al Qaeda fighter, speaking to another. "The US planes have flown out of the area again."
"The Sheikh [bin Laden] says keep your children in the caves and fight for Allah. Give guns to your wives as necessary to fight against the infidel aggressors."
But talk of surrender came quickly and unexpectedly on Dec. 11, amid heavy gunbattles in the bombed-out pine forests here. Arab fighters used an Afghan translator earlier in the day to convey their wishes: "Our guest brothers want to find safe passage out of your province."
Ghamsharik responded: "Our blood is your blood, your wives our sisters, and your children our children. But under the circumstances, I am compelled to tell you that you must either leave or surrender."
When Ali, whose men had paid Khel to guard the rear nearly two weeks earlier, complained that no deals should be cut, Ghamsharik shot back: "If you want to hold this ridge, send your own men up here. You are down there with the press and the pretty ladies, and I'm stuck up here." Both men chuckled.
On Dec. 13, Al Qaeda-backer Younus Khalis sent his own man into the fray - this time on the US side of the battle.
Awol Gul was calm and relaxed as B-52s pummeled a mountain behind him and Al Qaeda sniper fire rang out in the distance. "They've been under quite a bit of pressure inside there," he said. "It is likely that they have made a tactical withdrawal farther south. They have good roads, safe passage, and Mr. bin Laden has plenty of friends.
"We are not interested in killing the Arabs," Mr. Gul went on to say. "They are our Muslim brothers."
By Dec. 11, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld sounded unsure about how effective Pakistan's military could be in blocking the border. He said: "It's a long border. It's a very complicated area to try to seal, and there's just simply no way you can put a perfect cork in the bottle."
On Dec. 16, Afghan warlords announced they had advanced into the last of the Tora Bora caves. One young commander fighting with 600 of his own troops alongside Ali and Ghamsharik, Haji Zahir, could not have been less pleased with the final prize. There were only 21 bedraggled Al Qaeda fighters who were taken prisoners. "No one told us to surround Tora Bora," Mr. Zahir complained. "The only ones left inside for us were the stupid ones, the foolish and the weak."
Epilogue
While the hunt for Osama bin Laden and his top lieutenants has become increasingly invisible, it continues nonetheless. The ongoing fighting in Paktia Province, as well as the deployment of US troops to nations as far-flung as Georgia, Yemen, and the Philippines ensures that US pressure will stay on Al Qaeda's many cells - and that eyes around the world will remain open for "the Sheikh" and the $25 million bounty the US has attached to his head.
And while the US has taken justifiable pride in its ousting of the Taliban and supporting Afghanistan's fledgling interim government, President Bush's aim of catching the world's most wanted terrorist "dead or alive" has not been accomplished.
"There appears to be a real disconnect between what the US military was engaged in trying to do during the battle for Tora Bora - which was to destroy Al Qaeda and the Taliban - and the earlier rhetoric of President Bush, which had focused on getting bin Laden," says Charles Heyman, editor of Jane's World Armies. "There are citizens all over the Middle East now saying that the US military couldn't do it - couldn't catch Osama - while ignoring the fact that the US military campaign, apart from not capturing Mr. bin Laden was, up the that point, staggeringly effective."
Who's who at Tora Bora
MAULVI Younus Khalis: A patriarchal leader of the Jalalabad area and senior member of the Eastern Shura, the self-proclaimed government in the region. In the 1980s, he was a key ally to the US - and was even invited to the Reagan White House - during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Khalis later cultivated ties with Osama bin Laden, hosting the Al Qaeda leader when he returned to Afghanistan from Sudan in May 1996.
Hazret Ali: One of the two most powerful warlords under Khalis, and one of the two US point men in the fight against Tora Bora. Ali, with his strong ties to the Karzai government in Kabul, became the Eastern Shura's security chief after the fall of Jalalabad.
Haji Zaman Ghamsharik: The other key US pointman in the battle for Tora Bora. He returned from exile in France to become the Eastern Shura's Jalalabad commander. Ghamsharik's Khugani tribesmen (a Pashtun subsect) live in and near the White Mountains. The Pashtun, whom he represented, have divided loyalties among Khalis, Ali, and Ghamsharik.
Awol Gul: Military commander for the Al Qaeda-linked patriarch of Jalalabad, Younus Khalis.
Ilyas Khel: He worked under commander Gul during the Taliban era. When Ali took control of Jalalabad, he began to work for him. He knew Ali from Soviet-occupation days.
Haji Hayat Ullah: A member of the Eastern Shura with Al Qaeda ties. A personal friend of Osama bin Laden, Ullah ran orphanages in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Haji Zahir: Afghan commander, and the nephew of slain anti-Taliban fighter Abdul Haq. He is also the son of the new governor of Jalalabad, Haji Qadeer.
Malik Habib Gul: An Afghan tribal chief who attended bin Laden's last public speech on Nov. 10 and later helped hundreds of the Al Qaeda fighters escape.

Arrested ‘terrorists’ confess to involvement in four incidents

The News - International, Pakistan - Aug 1, 2007

Arrested ‘terrorists’ confess to involvement in four incidents
By Javed Aziz Khan
PESHAWAR: Three alleged terrorists nabbed by the city police near the General Bus Stand have confessed before the interrogators at the Special Investigation Unit (SIU) their involvement in four more terrorism incidents, reliable sources confided to The News here Wednesday. Mohammad Ayaz, Bahadur and Keyaz, all real brothers belonging to Serai Naurang in Lakki Marwat, had been arrested on July 27 when, according to police, they were planning to blow up the busiest Pir Zakori Sharif Bridge at the Ring Road-GT Road intersection. Cases were registered against them at Gulbahar police station under 3/4 Explosive Act, 7 ATA, 5 Explosive Act and 427 PPC. Investigators consider the arrests as a major breakthrough in investigating terrorism cases that had struck the provincial capital since last year. It would be really a great achievement if the gang’s confession were not just because of the “special treatment” at SIU, previously known as CIA. “The gang has confessed their involvement in blast outside Greens Hotel on March 26 and an explosion at the canteen of Peshawar airport on April 28. Besides, they have confessed their partial hand in seven explosions in a godown of goods being transported to Afghanistan for Nato forces on Ring Road on June 28,” reliable sources disclosed while talking to this scribe. Another bomb, sources continued, that they had planted in a bus stand on GT Road did not go off for technical reasons. Senior police officers, soon after the arrest of the three brothers, alleged the network had been working for the spy agency of a neighbouring country that had promised to give them $20,000 for blowing up key targets in Peshawar. Capital City Police Chief Abdul Majeed was hesitant to confirm anything about the confession of the alleged terrorists when approached on his cellular phone. Later he admitted the three have confessed their involvement in blasts outside Greens Hotel and in the canteen of Peshawar airport.

MMA, MQM exchange hot words in NA

paktribune.com
MMA, MQM exchange hot words in NA

ISLAMABAD: Muttahida Majlis Amal creating a rumpus in the lower house on Tuesday over the criticism of Muttahida Qaumi Movement Parliamentary leader Farooq Sattar on MMA staged a walk out of the house in protest.
The situation was created when MQM leader Farooq Sattar was debating over the law and order situation and while talking about the Lal Masjid he laid the blame on MMA and said that these people are responsible for the operation and now they are just shedding crocodile’s tear and are hypocrites.
He also said that MMA is responsible for the killing of Abdul Rashid Ghazi and these people are responsible for planting a seed of terrorism and extremism and making mosques weapons dens.
Upon these remarks the MMA members stood upon their chairs and started shouting slogans against MQM terming them killers and hoodlums and demanded arrest of MQM quaid Altaf Hussain.
Due to the rumpus created by the MMA the chairman Riaz Pirzada found it hard to run the house in orderly manner due to which the speaker came out of his chambers and controlled the situation.
However the MMA members continue to stand over their seats, thumping of desks and slogan shouting.
During this hot words were also exchanged between MMA and MQM MNAs.
After Farooq Sattar the speaker gave the floor to Liaqat Baloch but the MQM members did not allow him to do so and started shouting.
Upon this the MMA staged a walk out in protest. No other opposition party participated in the walkout.

Provincial govt suggests Afghania as new name for NWFP

Provincial govt suggests Afghania as new name for NWFP

* Law minister says renaming needs amendment to Constitution
Daily Times, Pakistan
By Akhtar Amin

PESHAWAR: NWFP Law Minister Malik Zafar Azam said on Tuesday that most members of a committee formed by the provincial government had suggested “Afghania” as the new name for the North West Frontier Province.
“The committee has sent its recommendation to Chief Minister Akram Khan Durrani for consideration in the upcoming meeting of the inter-provincial coordination committee,” Azam told Daily Times. “Renaming of the NWFP as Afghania requires an amendment to the Constitution through the federal government since the province’s name has been written as NWFP in the Constitution,” the minister said. “It is important to give the province a proper identity. The province has lacked a proper name since 1947 and the new name will resolve the issue.”
The committee members include NWFP opposition leader Shahzada Gustasip Khan, Environment Minister Shahraz Khan, Mian Nadir Shah of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), Mushtaq Ahmad Ghani of the Pakistan Muslim League, Naeema Kishwar of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl, Syed Murid Kazim of the Pakistan People’s Party-Sherpao, and Qurban Ali Khan of the Pakistan People’s Party.
The Awami National Party’s Bashir Bilour had been included in the committee, but he pulled out, saying there was no need for deliberations since the NWFP Assembly had already passed a resolution demanding the province’s renaming as ‘Pakhtunkhwa’. He said that his nationalist party would not participate in the committee’s activities.
However, ANP NWFP President Afrasyab Khattak told Daily Times that the party did not oppose ‘Afghania’ as the new name of the province. “It is not a new thing ... the provincial assembly proposed several names for the province in the last five years but the federal government rejected them. For the first time the ANP has agreed to a name other than Pakhtunkhwa,” he said.
The ANP and other nationalist parties have asked successive governments to rename the province Pakhtunkhwa, but pro-centre parties, mainly the Pakistan Muslim League, opposed the name saying other ethnic groups may feel left out. The chief minister formed a committee a few months ago to decide whether the NWFP should be renamed Pakhtunkhwa or any other name. Some of the names proposed for the province include Pakhtunkhwa, Pakhtunistan, Abaseen, Afghania and Khyber. The ANP-led nationalist parties are in favour of Pakhtunkhwa, while the smaller parties prefer Afghania – a name chosen by the late Chaudhry Rahmat Ali for the NWFP when he coined the word Pakistan as the name of the new Islamic state.