PAKISTAN ON Ramp Despite Rampage, Classic Case Study in Free Market Democracy Promoted by US Corporate WAR Economy Zionist!
Troubled Galaxy Destroyed Dreams, Chapter 416
Palash Biswas
http://indianholocaustmyfatherslifeandtime.blogspot.com/
While we see events with a VISION to look through the Geopoltics, Beyond Power Politics and Political Borders, we may realise what Free Market democracy means.
Major Siddharth barves informed me that MULNIVASI KARMACHARI SANGH plan to DEMONSTRATE in the Heart of Indina Commerce Capital on November, 22nd.It is quite a REFRESHING News. He also told me what ARUNDHATI Ray has written in OUTLOOK India, it exposes the Ruling Hegemony naked. Chidambaram Waging WAR against our people,we may not feel as the Blood touches us no where. I told Barves that I Never Contradict the Facts but simply I object that the Social Activists and Intelligentsia toes the line of Ruling Hegemony and the Toilet Media to DEFINE the Tribal people only as ABORIGINAL and Indigenous. thus, they break our solidarity while the Brahaminical System isolets the Triballandscape and Humanscape from rest of the country, specilly the SC,OBC and Converted Minority. Nationalism and Ethnonationalism so blind close the doors and windows of Humanity to see around and feel the BLOOD Spilled all over the Divided Geopolitics to accomodate Brahamin bania, Corporate Manusmriti apartheid raj ZIONIST under the TRI IBLIS satanic Order.
Free Market Democracy launched MONOPOLISTIC Aggression against BlackUntouchables worldwide and the GLOBE bleeds. My dear friends, it is BLOOD spilled all over we have to swim across to feel the Relax and Luxury of the GLOBAL Village on the Super Highway of ETHNICCleansing. We would not perhaps understand SOMALIA, Nigeria, Indonesia, Rawanda, Latin America, East europe, Phillipnes under FREE Market democracy as we never did understand Middle east Stand Off and the Oil War, Nuclear Biologicaland ChemicalWar fare and the Civil War and War Economics! We never Consider the Defence Budget and internal security Budget, Strategic Realliance, Nuclear Energy, India Incand Extra constitutionalPolicy Making, Legislation and day today Governance guided from Washington and Tel AVIV in dircet Supervision of CIA and Mossad, UNESCO and World bank, Gatt and WTO, IMF and FIIs!We are MIND Controled People who never know about Resource and revenue Management. We did never understand the SENSEX GLITTERING Economy as we donot play with indices! We are easily duped with Flagship Welfare Progrrammeand do support a Disasterous Unique Identity Number Project led by former INFOSIS Man! We Never did oppose AFPSA in the entire Himalayan Zone! We Never realised that we are subject to ethnic Cleansing and Mass Destruction on name of Development and Economics. We entertain in Parliamentary Reality Soap opera and Subvert in Communalism, casteology and Ethnonationalism! WE believe in the simple logic of RECESSION,Infalted Statics,manipulated Mandate, Sell OFF PSU to set right the Foreign Borrowing with foreign capiatl inflow destrying our Nature, Indigenous Production system, Livelihood and Economy. We feel proud to see Moon Mission flop and Nuclear Muscles FLEXED, group photos of Miltary Rulers!
But simply ,provided we see beyond Political Borders, we may see what happens today in pakistan, Srilanka, Bangladesh, Afganistan and Nepal, we share the SANE Destiny.
Thus Pakistan on Ramp Despite Rampage may proveto be a CLASSIC Case Study in US PROMOTED ZIONIST FREE MARKET Democracy which we may acceptly as Plastic Money boom, SEZ Drive, Displacement, Jobloss, Ethnic Cleansing, Defence Budget, IT and Technolgy Boom, realtyBoom,Knowledge economy and Privatisation of Services in Shopping Mall,Mutiples, Fashion Show, SPA, BRAND, ICON, CRICKET, retailchain, Bonded farming, Modigfied Genetic SEEDS and Chemical package, NuclearEnergy and Knowledge Economy!
Just , lookinto pakistan and you will get the INEVITABLE Resuts!
DEAR ALL,
760 KILOMETERS LONG MARCH HAS COVERED 30 DAYS SUCCESSFULLY AND 16 DAYS ARE STILL TO WALK.
SOME MEDIA COVERAGE IS ATTACHED FOR YOUR REVEIW AND COMMENTS.
REGARDS
KALAVANTI RAJA
English Media Coverage-Long March.pdf English Media Coverage-Long March.pdf
2055K View Download
Pl see:
Awami Tahreek (Peoples Movement of the masses of Sindh)
announces Long March
The Awami Tahreek (Peoples Movement of the masses of Sindh) announces
46 days historical Long March 8th Oct to 22 Nov 2009 (from Kandhkot to
Karachi) for Autonomy, NFC, Water, Education and Resources and Rights of
Sindh and against Corruption, Lawlessness, Terrorism, Unemployment and
man-made Inflation. Prior to this mega event the annual central elections of
Awami Tahreek, shall be held on 28th September 2009 at Yesrab Hall
Qasimabad, Hyderabad, Sindh.
Awami Tehreek Long March
KARACHI: The Rasool Bux Palijo-led Awami Tahreek (AT) announced on
Friday that it would organise a long march in first week of October against the
alleged settlement of outsiders in the Sindh as well as other issues faced by
the province. AT President Abdul Qadir Ranto made this announcement while
addressing at a protest rally at the Karachi Press Club. A number of women
activists belonging to AT women wing Sindhyani Tahreek also participated in
the rally. Ranto said that the planned protest long march would begin from
Kandhkot and end in Karachi. "Besides settlement of outsiders in Sindh, the
party would also record its protest on other issues, including restraining Sindhi
students from admissions in educational institutions in Karachi and the
allotment of millions of acres of provincial land to non-Sindhi population," said
Ranto. Sindhyani Tahreek's Zahida Shaikh as well as AT's Abdul Hakeem
Halepoto, Hakim Zangejo, Mazhar Rahujo and others also spoke on the
occasion.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009%5C08%5C08%5Cstory
_8-8-2009_pg12_7
http://docs.google.com/gview?a=v&pid=gmail&attid=0.1&thid=124c918a00ab61ff&mt=application%2Fpdf&url=http%3A%2F%2Fmail.google.com%2Fmail%2F%3Fui%3D2%26ik%3D9e0ec3292c%26view%3Datt%26th%3D124c918a00ab61ff%26attid%3D0.1%26disp%3Dattd%26realattid%3Df_g1othr3m0%26zw&sig=AHBy-ha73AMRaRk_9eIyKsy5ihEbTJ5bGQ&pli=1
Obama's quest for a Pakistan policy Thursday, November 05, 2009
Mushahid Hussain
Hillary Clinton's visit with a difference was probably the most significant event in Pakistan-American relations since the advent of President Barack Hussein Obama. She came, she saw, but while she did not quite conquer the "hearts and minds" of Pakistanis, Hillary at least earned their grudging admiration. She showed more guts than the bunkered-up Pakistan rulers, who refuse to leave the comfort and safety of their "5-star prisons" in Islamabad.
Unlike the aloof and abrasive Holbrooke, Hillary reached out to the "real" Pakistan. She got a peep into the emerging Pakistani society -- dynamic, vibrant, outspoken and self-confident. She seemed taken aback, used as visiting high-level Americans are to a sanitised Islamabad, where the officially-certified truth of the fawning ruling elite links sycophancy and servility to their self-perpetuation.
A profile of this "new" Pakistan is instructive, with three key ingredients. First, while the "old" Pakistan was politically a "one-window operation" -- monolithic and centrally-guided -- today's multiple power centres go beyond the military-security Establishment or the traditional political elite, and these now include the fiercely-independent media, an assertive civil society, confident young men and women with faith in their country's future, and a free judiciary that for the first time is truly an autonomous player.
Second, in contrast to the "old" Pakistan where the political elite was united in its belief that the road to Islamabad lies through Washington, the "new" Pakistan has little time for 'business-as-usual' political shenanigans, an absence of fear of power and authority, and no "Holy Cows."
Third, there is a broad popular consensus woven around a rejection of the mediaeval mindset and terrorism of the extremists, the corruption and capitulation of the ruling elite, and the hubris and diktat emanating from Washington.
While Pakistan's fourth flirtation with the United States goes through its predictable course of romance-disillusionment-distance, there is some good news and bad news regarding Washington's Afghanistan policy. First, the good news. Unlike Lyndon Johnson and George W Bush, Barack Hussein Obama is not allowing his generals to lead him to "Vietnamistan," as critics are calling the escalation in Afghanistan. As seven meetings of his "war council" demonstrate, Obama has bid goodbye to the non-starter that was his "Af-Pak" strategy. The smart politician that he is, Obama would not want his presidency to sink in the mountains of the Hindukush, hence the "review and reflect" mould.
But the bad news is that the Obama administration remains clueless on Pakistan and Afghanistan. They know what they don't want to do -- not escalate to such an extent that the US will end up facing another quagmire. But they still don't know what they should be doing or how to go about it.
After "Afpak" is dead and hopefully buried, here's what Pakistan should tell Washington on how to go about a doable strategy:
-- Trust Pakistan as an ally, and treat Pakistanis with the respect and dignity they deserve. After all, they have the highest stakes and suffered the most as the "eye of the storm" since the 30-year unrelenting war in Afghanistan (attempts at encouraging a civil-military divide amongst "good" and "bad" Pakistanis won't work);
-- Don't make Afghan policy hostage to a failed and flawed ruler in Kabul, who neither has credibility nor any legitimacy. Cobble together a government of national unity in Afghanistan, and do it quickly. Karzai today is just another Babrak Karmal;
-- Stop treating terrorism in Pakistan and Afghanistan as only a "Pakhtun problem." The Pakhtuns, on either side of the Durand Line, are suffering the most. They have faced death, destruction and displacement with fortitude. The Pakhtuns are the most hardworking of the ethnic groups living in Pakistan, with a deeply democratic and egalitarian ethos. During a conference at NATO headquarters in July 2007, Khalid Pashtoon, an Afghan MP from Kandahar, told the gathering that notwithstanding tall clams of expansion of the Afghan National Army (ANA), representation of Pakhtuns from the troubled southeastern Afghanistan in the ANA was still less than 1 percent;
-- Remember, the road to stability in Kabul now lies through Pakistan, so its security and strengthening should be paramount, not the other way around. Pakistan, with a functioning, modern, state infrastructure, is doable with greater intelligence coordination and fashioning of a fresh, comprehensive counter-terrorism strategy, which the country still lacks. American-style "nation-building" in Afghanistan is not doable.
"Af-Pak" lies buried for a combination of reasons. It was cobbled together in a hurry based on certain assumptions, notably a distrust of Pakistan military-security establishment's intentions regarding extremism, and confidence in the Kabul administration's ability to serve as an anchor of US political strategy in Afghanistan. Both have been disproved by subsequent developments.
Much has happened in the region since then. Pakistanis have demonstrated unprecedented resolve, unity and determination to protect the vision of their Founding Fathers regarding their country, as the successful military operations in Swat-Malakand and South Waziristan demonstrate. The US now has no political prop to its military strategy, especially after the disastrous election fiasco in Afghanistan.
There has been the first official interaction between the Indian government and the ISI, and a softening of the Indian stance on Kashmir, with a renewed willingness to "talk to all, without preconditions." This change of heart in New Delhi is partly premised on a fear of the resurgent Maoists (who now influence 20 of India's 29 states) and on the fiery polemics between China and India, the first such strident exchange in 30 years.
For the future, three core areas of distrust and conflict remain in Pakistani-American relations. And unless these are resolved by the Obama administration, neither the bilateral relationship nor any US strategy in Afghanistan will succeed.
First, the two sides view their enemies differently -- the US does not view our enemies within as their foes nor do we view their adversaries in Afghanistan as our threats. Hence, a mutual lack of cooperation in tackling each other's enemies, whose most recent manifestation was the US/NATO forces in Afghanistan timing the closure of check posts on their side with the Pakistan strike in Waziristan.
Second, India and its role in Afghanistan are viewed differently in Islamabad and Washington, with the latter brushing aside Pakistani concerns and taking no interest or measures to stop the growing proxy war between the two rivals in Afghanistan.
Third, the US views the Pakistan military and security services essentially in an adversarial light, to be contained, controlled and "cut down to size." Washington conveniently overlooks the fact that the main threat to the democratic dispensation is not from any budding Bonapartists waiting in the wings, but from the same reasons – "bad governance and increasing corruption" -- that Obama mentioned in his stern phone call to Karzai on Nov 2. These issues, vital for Pakistan's stability and democracy, were in the original Biden-Lugar bill, but are strangely missing from the final legislation, for reasons best known to Washington.
Irrespective of what Obama decides for Afghanistan, the Pakistani state is already in the process of reinventing itself, a process that has been hurt by US ignorance and arrogance regarding its much-maligned ally. The challenge for Obama is to fashion a Pakistan policy that matches the new realities in the region, rather than reflecting an old, outmoded mindset.
The writer is a senator and senior political analyst. Email: mushahid. hussain@gmail.com
http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=20680
Who are Behind the Chaos in Afghanistan?
Dhu al-Qi'dah 14, 1430 A.H, November 02, 2009
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
Source and Author Unknown
In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate
The Americans follow contradicting programs in Afghanistan. These contradictions have greatly contributed to the chaos and corruption now rampant in the country. After invasion in 2001, Americans announced the Disarmament, Demobilization and Reconstruction (DDR) program which was aimed at encouraging former warlords and gunmen to surrender their arms for cash incentives, employment opportunities and vocational training. After a time, they left the program uncompleted, and opted to raise their own militias under the name of Campaign and Security Guards.
These so-called security guards escort American and other NATO member countries military and logistical convoys from one province to another, particularly to Uruzgan, Helmand, Farah and other provinces in the south. Some militias are used to detain suspected Afghans.
Recently, New York Times disclosed that following the American invasion of Afghanistan, Wali Karzai created the Kandahar Task Force which is involved in various human rights violations.
According to the Times Weekly, Wali Karzai frequently used the Kandahar Task Force against his opponents and on one occasion, they killed police chief of Kandahar province. Similarly, Americans pay tens of millions of dollars to private militia annually for escorting their convoys.
The private militias extort money from common people and levy agricultural tax on farmers named Ushar. They are involved in burglary, kidnapping and other unscrupulous activities. All these are overlooked by the invaders as the militia support them in their fight against so-called terrorism.
Applying The Sons of Iraq replica to Afghanistan, the invading Americans have created militia from among the Afghan minorities in the north of the country. Recently, they created such militia in Qazal Qila and appointed a Turkmen as commander. The Turkmen and Uzbek are ethnical minorities and their militias are notoriously known for human rights violations during the Russian invasion of Afghanistan.
To many observers who closely monitor developments in Afghanistan, these moves by the invading Americans can be part of plan dubbed as Chaostan, which was unveiled by Mc Crystal, American top commander in Afghanistan during his recent speech in London. According to this plan, the Americans want to create chaos in Afghanistan by plunging the country into geographical, racial and religious fighting once again.
Mullah Brader Akhund, Deputy-Amir of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan in one of his interviews said that Mujahideen had captured several groups of armed men who were involved in destroying schools and bridges. They admitted that they were paid by foreign intelligence agencies to do so. In this year Eid ul Fitre message, the Amir ul Momineen, Mullah Omar Mujahid instructed all Mujahideen of the Islamic Emirate to disarm armed groups who are involved in encroachment on people's life, property and honor on the provocation of the enemy.
Similarly, the bomb blasts in congested places, which have killed hundreds of innocent civilians, is of great concern to the Mujahideen and the Afghan people. This year in the holy month of Ramadan, a bomb went off in Kandahar just at the time when people were to break their fast. More than 50 people were killed in the explosion.
The Islamic Emirate denied having hand in the explosion and condemned it as a horrendous and despicable event. Later Dawa Khan Mina pal, a Radio Liberty reporter was detained by police of the Kabul puppet regime when he was trying to investigate the blast to find out who were behind this gruesome event.
Many observers agree that foreign intelligence agencies are involved in anti-human activities to malign the good name of the armed Mujahideen who are fighting Americans and other forces of the NATO member countries. Recently, the Afghan surrogate president Karzai complained in a press conference that unknown helicopters were airdropping armed men in the north.
According to him, these armed men disturb peace and security there. But Mujahideen in the area say, the foreign invaders airdrop the militia there to target Mujahideen hide-outs during the night and they also attack ethnically sensitive areas in order to provoke racial fighting.
The Americans think, by doing so, they can justify the presence of their troops and enlist supporters from among Afghan minorities against Taliban. These hidden agendas are driving our country into an unknown direction. Unequivocally, the foreign military presence in Afghanistan is part of the Afghan problem.
The more they stay in our country, the more, they will plunge our country into chaos and uncertainly. The only solution is that the invaders leave Afghanistan and let the Afghans to form an Islamic government where people from all ethnicities can participate in the government making on the basis of their talent and services to the people. This will vault out the country from the current vortex of conspiracies and ensure peace and stability in Afghanistan and the whole region.
Pak on ramp, despite rampage
NASIR JAFFRY
Islamabad, Nov. 6: The big names from the West refused to come and the event had to be pushed back by over a fortnight after a chain of terrorist attacks, but Pakistan still managed to unveil its second fashion week.
The four-day event — the last was held in 2005 — was scheduled to start on October 15 but started on November 4.
Ayesha Tehmina, the chief executive officer of Fashion Pakistan, said in Karachi that security fears and over 300 deaths in a series of suicide attacks and explosions in October had rattled the industry.
"Fashion Pakistan, which has organised the event, has invited 32 designers from across the country," said Tehmina Khalid, a spokeswoman for the organisers, adding that designers and models were not coming from abroad because of security reasons.
The Marriott hotel in Karachi, the venue, falls in a red security zone and has been heavily guarded since the fashion week began.
The event is part of Fashion Pakistan's objective to encourage and promote the fledgling industry that struggled for four years to put together this fashion week. Karachi is known as one of Pakistan's more fashionable cities.
The first fashion week in 2005 was dubbed a success, though the industry has no figures recording sales.
Fashion shows and events have been organised in Pakistan for the past few years. Several small shows are held every year by individual designers.
Fahad Hussain, a young designer, said the event was nothing less than a treat for him and he was delighted to see the "lovely amalgam" of East and West, which is the basic philosophy of his designs.
Pakistan's top designers Sonya Batla, Imbias, Aeisha Varsey, Fahad Hussain and Shameel Ansari marked the opening with low necklines and slim-fits, though the skin show was understandably restrained.
No Islamic organisation has issued an edict against the fashion week yet.
Pakistani celebrities, TV and sports stars as well as politicians buy the creations of Tariq Jamshed, Freiha Altaf, Deepak Perwani, Imbias, Maheen Karim, Junaid Jamshed, Nadya Mistri and many others.
The Pakistani media too have promoted the event. English-language papers like Daily Times, The News, The Nation and Dawn have separate Sunday editions dedicated to fashion and new trends. Most private TV channels have telecast shows on the fashion week.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1091107/jsp/nation/story_11709405.jsp
Wars pierce heart of US army
- Battlefield-set doctor kills 13 in texas base
Texas, Nov. 6: An army psychiatrist facing deployment to one of America's war zones has killed 13 people in the largest active duty military post in the US in the worst mass shootings ever at a base in the country.
Major Nidal Malik Hasan, the suspected gunman of West Asian descent, has been shot four times and is on ventilator in a hospital after the rampage at the Fort Hood army post in central Texas. Of those killed, one was a civilian and 12 were soldiers.
Less than 24 hours later, another shooting struck an office building in Florida. At least eight people were injured but local media said two were killed. ( )
Hasan, 39, was about to be deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan, and shouted "Allahu Akbar" before opening fire, a witness said.
Clad in a military uniform and firing an automatic pistol and another weapon, Hasan, a balding, chubby-faced man with heavy eyebrows, sprayed bullets inside a crowded medical processing centre for soldiers returning from or about to be sent overseas.
The victims were cut down in clusters, officials said. Witnesses told military investigators that when the gunfire stopped, soldiers schooled in battlefield medicine ripped their clothes to make tourniquets and bandages.
Sirens typically used to warn of tornadoes sweeping across the plains alerted residents, schools locked down and the Fort Hood community struggled to understand what had just happened.
Fort Hood, named after a general and 160km south of Dallas-Fort Worth, is a virtual city for more than 50,000 military personnel and 150,000 family members and civilian support personnel. It has been a major centre for troops being deployed to or returning from service in Iraq and Afghanistan and is considered one of the safest places in the world.
A woman police officer is being credited with stopping the shooting rampage. Responding within three minutes of an alert, Fort Hood police sergeant Kimberly Munley shot the gunman four times despite being shot herself. Munley's condition is said to be stable.
Born and reared in Virginia, the son of immigrant parents from either Jordan or Palestine, Hasan joined the US Army right out of high school, against his parents' wishes.
Military records indicated that Hasan was single, had never served abroad and listed "no religious preference" on his personnel records.
Fox News quoted a retired army colonel, Terry Lee, as saying that Hasan, with whom he worked, had voiced hope that President Barack Obama would pull American troops out of Iraq and Afghanistan, had argued with military colleagues who supported the wars and had tried to prevent his own deployment.
Obama called the shootings "a horrific outburst of violence" and urged Americans to pray for those who were killed or wounded.
The Muslim Public Affairs Council, speaking for many American Muslims, condemned the shootings as a "heinous incident" and said: "We share the sentiment of our President."
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE AND AGENCIES
India and EU sign nuke pact
OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
New Delhi, Nov. 6: India and the European Union today signed a pact on a nuclear energy project and decided to conclude their long-delayed free trade treaty by next year.
The two sides also agreed to expand cooperation in countering terrorism by speeding up negotiations between Europol, the EU's top criminal intelligence organisation, and Indian agencies. The agreements followed talks at the 10th India-EU summit here between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and leaders of the 27-member bloc.
The EU team included Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, whose country currently heads the rotating EU presidency, and European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso.
India will participate in the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor project. The project on fusion energy is said to be the costliest experiment of its kind costing 10 billion euros (around Rs 70,000 crore).
The first reactor is expected to be ready in Cadarche, France, by 2016.
The pact was signed by Atomic Energy Commission chairman Anil Kakodkar and Benita Ferrero-Waldner, the EU's external relations commissioner who represented the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom).
The discussions between Singh and the EU leaders covered a broad spectrum of issues, including the global financial crisis, energy security, climate change, trade and counter-terrorism. The situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan also came up.
On terror, Swedish Premier Reinfeldt said: "India and the EU stand together in combating terrorism, which is a serious threat to international peace and security."
Trade was also high on the list. It was decided that the talks for a free-trade pact, launched in 2007, should be wrapped up next year.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1091107/jsp/nation/story_11711218.jsp
