Naming..Shaming..and Taming pakistan-Full Version

Anikastha

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Students' body in PoK holds massive protest rally demanding freedom from Pakistan

A massive rally has been organised by the Jammu Kashmir National Students Federation in Jandali area of PoK (Pakistan-occupied Kashmir) to demand freedom from Pakistan.

Local leader Liyaqat Khan said, "Pakistan sends terrorists here to ruin this peaceful place". In a video shared by ANI, the protestors are seen raising pro-freedom slogans and raising banners to demand freedom from Pakistan.

This is not the first time that demands of freedom from Pakistan have been raised from the troubled region. In the past as well, anti-Pakistan protests have taken place across Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). The Pakistani forces have been accused of committing human rights violations and inflicting atrocities on the people of PoK.

On April 24, 2017, hundreds of locals in Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir's Kotli area took to the streets to protest against the forcible land-grabbing by Pakistan Army. The protesters raised anti-Pakistan army and anti-Pakistan government slogans.

On February 5, 2017, Islamabad observed the annual Kashmir Solidarity Day in support of the Kashmiri people. Enraged at Pakistan's high-handedness and denial of basic human rights in their region, PoK residents took to the streets to express their ire at the corridors of power in Islamabad.

PoK residents claimed that the Pakistani government, via its intelligence agency Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and the administration, was committing atrocities on innocent citizens.

On October 22, 2016, Kashmiris across PoK held a protest demanding immediate withdrawal of the Pakistani forces from their territory.

The Pakistani Army on October 22, 1947, disguised as tribal invaders, attacked Jammu and Kashmir, killing thousands of people. The tribals, known as Kabailies, were employed by Pakistan to change the demography of Jammu and Kashmir by executing genocide on the people. It was an attack by Pakistani Pathans on the Kashmiri people.

On October 24, 2015 as well, a'Black Day' was observed in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). An 'anti-Pakistan' protest was organised by the National Students Federation.

In April, 2016, anti-Pakistan protests erupted in various parts of Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (PoK) over Islamabad's discrimination in employment to local youth.

The protesters raised issues regarding lack of jobs in PoK where the Pakistani youth were being preferred to Kashmiri youth.

About 100 individuals owing allegiance to Jammu and Kashmir National Students Federation (JKNSF), along with some members of Jammu and Kashmir National Awami Party (JKNAP), carried out a demonstration rally in Muzaffarabad area of PoK, condemning the oppressive rule by Pakistani authorities and the local PoK government.

The protesters carried placards which read "Kashmir Bachanay Nikley Hain, Aao Hamaray Saath Chalo".

PoK has witnessed a series of protests by residents in the past against the Pakistan government for the atrocities and human rights violation by Pakistani forces.''''


http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/...knsf-rally-pro-freedom-slogans/1/1029198.html
We must record such incidents and smuggle those videos into india and post it on internet.
 

Anikastha

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Indus Waters Treaty is a Brahmastra against Pakistan : Talks to begin on technical issues


India and Pakistan today started high-level talks on technical issues of the Indus Waters Treaty here, a senior World Bank official said.

"These meetings are a continuation of a discussion on how to safeguard the Treaty for the benefit of the people in both countries," a World Bank spokesperson told PTI.

The meetings between India and Pakistan on the technical issues of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) are taking place in Washington on September 14-15, the spokesperson added.


The World Bank in August had said that under the IWT, India is permitted to construct hydroelectric power facilities on tributaries of the Jhelum and Chenab rivers with certain restrictions.

Pakistan opposes the construction of the Kishanganga (330 megawatts) and Ratle (850 megawatts) hydroelectric power plants being built by India, it had said in a fact sheet issued at the conclusion of secretary-level talks between the two countries over the IWT.

The IWT was signed in 1960 after nine years of negotiations between India and Pakistan with the help of the World Bank, which is also a signatory.

The World Bank's role in relation to "differences" and "disputes" is limited to the designation of people to fulfil certain roles when requested by either or both of the parties, the fact sheet said.

http://www.business-standard.com/ar...talks-on-technical-issues-117091500023_1.html
Apart from these , IG should have included another point.
If pakistan , attacks India. We will shunt down each and every dam in western india.
 

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Terrorists targetting U.K. find origin in Pak's Swat Valley, say experts at U.N.
The experts at the United Nations underlined the involvement and link between the British Sunni Muslims and the Pakistani-armed Islamic groups that are responsible for spreading terrorism from South Asia to Britain and beyond Europe, while also adding that the terrorist threats targetting the U.K. have roots in the Swat Valley (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province of Pakistan).

"The British Islam is historically bound up with Islam in Pakistan, which has also meant that problems or issues in Islamabad have at times become problems and issues in the U.K. When the international terrorist groups gained influence in Pakistan, they were successful in directing attention towards Britain and Europe," Dr. Paul Stott, from the University of Leicester, the Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy at the SOAS London and an expert on Jihadism of South Asian-origin in Britain and mainland Europe, said.

The experts also discussed the link between South Asia and global terrorism at the event organised by the European Foundation for South Asian Studies (EFSAS), a policy research institution based in Amsterdam, held side-event on "Terrorism in South Asia" during the 36th Session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. They also talked about the complexities of terrorism in South Asia, Indo-Pak relations and Jammu and Kashmir conflict.

Dr. Stott argued that "historically, the terrorist threats targetting the U.K. have originated in the Swat Valley (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province of Pakistan) than in Damascus and that the strength of the Pakistani diaspora within the British Islam will keep ensuring that there is a ready welcome for visiting speakers from Pakistan to Britain, who advocate discrimination and violence. He also remarked that Britain cannot look to represent organisations within British Islam to take the lead on addressing support among British-Pakistanis for terrorist groups in Pakistan or individuals like Mumtaz Qadri."

Dr. Stott used the term "British Jihadism" to refer to the "involvement of a highly significant number of the British Sunni Muslims with the Pakistani origin in armed Islamic groups since the early 1990s in Bosnia, Jammu and Kashmir and in Afghanistan."

"Britain's focus on terrorism should not disregard the challenges imposed by the relations between London and Islamabad," Dr. Scott said.

Prof. Rob McCusker, the Head of Division for Community and Criminal Justice at De Montfort University in Leicester, said, "In the Afghanistan-Pakistan region (AFPAK region), there exists a nexus between terrorism and organised crime that flourishes in failed states which are governed by warlords, militias and other violent non-state and state actors. It is widely believed that Pakistan has provided safe haven to terrorist groups like the Quetta Shura Taliban (QST), Haqqani network and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT)."

Prof. McCusker added that the Haqqani Network still operates along the AFPAK border and that the "Taliban maintains an annual surplus of between $110 and $130 million while it supressed cultivation of poppy in Afghanistan to manipulate the international market price

https://in.news.yahoo.com/terrorists-targetting-u-k-origin-paks-swat-valley-100204662.html
 

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India at the UN - Pakistan is now 'Terroristan', a land of pure terror
Highlights
  • Pakistan is now 'Terroristan', with a flourishing industry producing and exporting global terrorism: India at the UNGA
  • It is extraordinary that the state which protected Osama Bin Laden should have the gumption to play the victim: India
  • India doesn't require lessons on democracy and human rights from a "failed state" like Pakistan

India on Friday went hammer and tongs at Pakistan for its policy of sponsoring terrorism and said the country has now become "Terroristan", or a land of "pure terror".


"Pakistan is now 'Terroristan', with a flourishing industry producing and exporting global terrorism," India said while exercising its 'right of reply' at the United Nations General Assembly.

Taking a dig at the prefix "Pak", which means "pure" in Urdu, India said Pakistan has long abandoned its aspirations to be moral and virtuous as a nation and instead, its name has become synonymous with terror.

"The quest for a land of pure has actually produced 'the land of pure terror'. In its short history, Pakistan has become a geography synonymous with terror," India's first secretary to the UN Eenam Gambhir said.

Citing the example of Hafiz Saeed, a UN-designated terrorist who has floated a political party to contest the next general election in Pakistan, India underscored how the neighbouring country was providing safe havens to terror leaders in its military town or protecting them with political careers.

India's statement was in response to Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi's maiden speech at the UNGA on Thursday, in which he had defended terrorism and once again sought to Pakistan's PM rakes up Kashmir issue at UN, urges intervention+

India pointed out that raising the Kashmir issue has been a long-established tactic of Pakistan to deflect attention from the terror outfits it harbours on its soil.

"It is extraordinary that the state which protected Osama Bin Laden and sheltered Mullah Omar+ should have the gumption to play the victim. By now, all Pakistan's neighbours are painfully familiar with these tactics to create a narrative based on distortions, deceptions and deceit," Gambhir said.


Abbasi had demanded an international investigation into the alleged atrocities in Kashmir and sending of an inquiry commission to the restive state in order to secure the punishment of those "responsible of human rights violation" and provide justice and relief to victims.

Issuing another stern warning to Pakistan to refrain from interfering in Kashmir, India said it doesn't require lessons on democracy and human rights from a "failed state" where "terrorists thrive and roam the streets with impunity."

"Pakistan must understand that the state of Jammu and Kashmir is and will always remain an integral part of India. However much it scales up cross border terrorism, it will never succeed in undermining India's territorial integrity," Gambhir said.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...calls-it-terroristan/articleshow/60789448.cms
 

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India replies to Islamic Republic of Pakistan after Kashmir remark in UN, calls it 'terroristan'

AGHANISTAN and BANGLADESH SLAMMING PAKISTAN

Afghan : From 3: 15

 

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Pakistani Army triggered 1971 ‘Genocide’ : Sheikh Hasina at the UN

Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has hit out at Pakistan, saying its army launched a “heinous” military operation in 1971 which triggered a “genocide” during the liberation war, killing three million innocent people.

In her address to the UN General Assembly on Thursday, Hasina said her country’s Parliament had recently declared 25 March as “Genocide Day” to pay homage to the victims. The war in 1971 broke out after a sudden crackdown at midnight on 25 March 1971 in the erstwhile East Pakistan by the Pakistani troops and ended on 16 December.

That same year, Pakistan conceded defeat and unconditionally surrendered in Dhaka to the allied forces comprising the freedom fighters and the Indian soldiers. Officially, three million people were killed during the nine-month long war. “In the 1971 war of liberation, we endured an extreme form of genocide. In the nine-month-long war of liberation against Pakistan, three million innocent people were killed and more than 200,000 women were violated,” Hasina said. “The Pakistan military launched the heinous ‘Operation Searchlight’ on 25th March which was the beginning of the 1971 genocide. The 1971 genocide included targeted elimination of individuals on the ground of religion, race and political belief. The intellectuals were killed brutally,” Hasina said.

Exercising its right to response, Pakistan rejected Hasina’s statement. “Prime minister for our Bangladeshi brothers and sisters, let me add that they have to come out of the narrative of hate and dispel the twisted notions of history. There are no takers for their contentions,” Pakistan said late last night. “The issues of 1971 agreed were and settled under the budget agreement of 1974 which was signed by India and Bangabandhu of Bangladesh. Hate berates hate. We have to move on,” Pakistan said.

Hasina also said that terrorism and violent extremism had become a major threat to peace, stability and development. “Terrorists have no religion, belief or race. Having been a target of a number of terrorist attacks myself, I personally empathize with the victims of terrorism and appreciate their need for protection. We denounce the use of religion to justify violent extremism,” she said.

Hasina reiterated her call to stop supplying arms to the terrorists and to stop terror financing, besides settling all international disputes peacefully. “I also urge the UN to address the growing threats emanating from the cyber space to prevent money laundering, terrorist financing and other transnational organized crimes,” she said.

http://www.livemint.com/Politics/xh...my-triggered-1971-genocide-Sheikh-Hasina.html
 

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China snubs Pakistan at UN: You are on your own in fight with India over Kashmir

China on Friday reiterated its stand that the Kashmir issue was for India and Pakistan to solve, declining to back its "all-weather ally" which has been attempting to raise the dispute at several United Nations fora this past week.

While Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi on Thursday asked the UN General Assembly to appoint a special envoy for Kashmir, Pakistan has also been raising the issue using the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), with the 57-member group's contact group for Kashmir meeting on the sidelines of the UNGA on Thursday.

India last week had slammed the OIC for its statements on the issue that were cited by Pakistan at a UN human rights congress in Geneva, with India's Permanent Mission in Geneva pointing out it had "no locus standi on India's internal affairs". India had said it "strongly advises the OIC to refrain from making such references in the future".

Asked about the OIC's backing to Pakistan's calls for UN involvement, China on Friday offered no support, instead reiterating its long-held stated position that the matter was for India and Pakistan to resolve.

"China's position on the Kashmir issue is clear-cut," Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang said. "The Kashmir issue is an issue leftover from history. China hopes India and Pakistan can increase dialogue and communication, and properly handle relevant issues and jointly safeguard peace and stability."

While China is going ahead with investments in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir under its $46 billion China Pakistan Economic Corridor plan, which India has opposed, Beijing has at the same time not been in favour of Pakistan's attempts to internationalise the issue. China has also rejected Pakistan's calls in the past to raise Kashmir at the UN Security Council.

In May, China's envoy to India Luo Zhaohui said Beijing had "no intention" of getting involved in disputes between India and Pakistan, and said "China supports the solution of the disputes through bilateral negotiations between the two countries". "Take Kashmir issue for example, we supported the relevant UN resolutions before 1990s," he said. "Then we supported a settlement through bilateral negotiation in line with the Simla Agreement."

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/india-pakistan-un-general-assembly-china-kashmir/1/1053608.html
 

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Pak's request to host the next SAARC Summit openly rejected by all member countries

Terrorism was one of the key issues to arise during the SAARC Ministerial Meet, held on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly session in New York on Friday.

Mail Today has learnt from senior diplomats, who attended the meet, that Pakistan wants to host the SAARC summit sometime soon.

However, another diplomat confirmed that one of the representatives commented, 'The atmosphere right now was not conducive' to hold the summit [in Pakistan]. Everybody in the room is said to have concurred.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahom...RC-solidarity-India-Pakistan-offers-host.html
 

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India creating IT network all across the world, Pakistan Haqqani network: Sushma Swaraj at UNGA

Updated: Sep 23, 2017, 09.57 PM IST

NEW DELHI: A day after India bashed Pakistan at UN terming it 'Terroristan', External Affairs MinisterSushma Swaraj today asked Pakistan's leaders to introspect as to why India is recognised as a global IT superpower while Pakistan is infamous as the "pre-eminent export factory for terror".

Addressing the 72nd UN General Assembly for the second consecutive time, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said: "India is fighting against poverty, but Pakistan is fighting against India through spreading terror.

Replying to Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi's allegation that India is violating human rights, Swaraj accused Pakistan of waging a war against India and said a country that has been the world's greatest exporter of havoc, death and inhumanity became a champion of hypocrisy by preaching about humanity from this podium.

Swaraj said Pakistan is responsible for no bilateral talks and not India.

"I would like to tell Pakistan's politicians that perhaps the wisest thing they could do is to look within," she said

"I want to ask Pakistan that India and Pakistan became independent together but India is today known as IT super power, and:pound::pound: Pakistan is recognised only as the export factory for terror:pound::pound:," Swaraj asks in her fiery speech.


"We established scientific and technical institutions like IITs & IIMs which are the pride of the world. But what has Pakistan offered to the world and indeed to its own people apart from terrorism?" she said.

:pound::pound:"We produced scientists, scholars, doctors, engineers. What have you produced? You have produced terrorists...you have created terrorist camps, you have created Lashkar-e- Taiba, Jaish-e-Mohammed, Hizbul Mujahideen and Haqqani network," she said, adding that if Pakistan had spent on its development what it has spent on developing terror, both Pakistan and the world would be safer and better-off today.:pound::pound:

Describing terrorism as an "existentialist danger" to mankind, Swaraj wondered how the international community will fight the menace if the UN Security Council cannot agree on the listing of terrorists.

Yesterday, India said Pakistan has become synonymous with terror.

"In its short history, Pakistan has become a geography synonymous with terror. The quest for a land of pure has actually produced "the land of pure terror". :bounce:pakistan is now ''Terroristan', with a flourishing industry producing and exporting global terrorism," India said. :bounce:

India also exposed Pakistan by citing Hafiz Mohammed Saeed's recent move to contest polls there. "Its current state can be gauged from the fact that Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, a leader of the UN designated terrorist organization Lashkar-e-Taiba, is now sought to be legitimized as a leader of a political party," India has said.

India also said that it does not need a lesson on human rights from a failed state.
Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...ofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst



And the bashing continues.
Told ya..pakistan will be untouchable and any thrust by India into pakistan will be taken in its right spirit by the Intl.community, if in case.
 

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Donald Trump humiliates Pakistan at UN, refuses to meet PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi for this reason

US President Donald Trump reported ly humiliated Pakistan by refusing to meet Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi. The Dawn reports that Trump refused to meet Pakistan PM over the “pretext of being busy”. Trump’s decision has not gone down well with Pakistani leaders, who have termed the US President’s decision as “degrading” to Islamabad. The Pakistan PM is now expected to meet US vice-president Mike Pence on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session.

According to Dawn, Pakistan Senate Chairman Raza Rabbani has said that there is no point in Abbasi meeting Pence if Trump has no time to meet the Pakistan PM. He also asserted that the “US approach towards Pakistan is ‘degrading'” reported Dawn. The relationship between Pakistan and the US has soured ever since Trump came to power. In its new Afghanistan policy, the US recently accused Pakistan of “harbouring agents of chaos” and providing safe havens to terrorist”.

In his maiden speech to the UNGA today, Trump took a veiled dig at Pakistan and other terror-supporting countries. He said, “it is time to expose and hold responsible” nations that provide funding and safe havens to terror groups, weeks after he warned Pakistan for supporting “agents of chaos.”

Trump said that all responsible nations must work together to confront terrorists and “the Islamic extremist that inspires them.”

“We will stop radical Islamic terrorism, because we cannot allow it to tear up our nation and, indeed, to tear up the entire world,” he said, adding, “It is time to expose and hold responsible” nations that provide funding and safe havens to terror groups, Trump said without naming any country.

Trump also targeted North Korea, saying the US will be forced to “totally destroy” the country unless Pyongyang backs down from its nuclear challenge. He also mocking North Korean leader Kim Jong-un as a “rocket man” on a suicide mission.

North Korea’s latest ballistic missile launches and nuclear tests have rattled the world. Unless North Korea backs down, he said, “We will have no choice than to totally destroy North Korea.”

“Rocket man is on a suicide mission for himself and his regime,” he said. Trump also urged United Nations member states to work together to isolate the Kim government until it ceases its “hostile” behavior.


Stop support to Taliban ::

During his speech, Trump warned of strong action against countries that support or finance organisations like the Taliban.
“It is time to expose and hold responsible those countries who support and finance terror groups like Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, Taliban and the others that slaughter innocent people,” he said. The US President, however, stopped short of naming countries other than Iran unlike in the last month’s speech outlining the Afghan strategy when he named Pakistan saying it had much to lose by harbouring terrorists.




http://www.financialexpress.com/wor...fuses-to-meet-pm-shahid-khaqan-abbasi/862260/
 

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'Terrorism affecting Afghanistan is product of Pakistan's policy,' says Afghan foreign minister at UN

Highlights
  • Afghanistan said that the roots of terror in the country "are located in terrorist sanctuaries and safe havens outside" its borders
  • Afghanistan further said that while it has tried to resolve issues with Pakistan, the latter hasn't responded positively
  • Afghanistan's foreign minister said the new US strategy for the country has generated new hope among people across his country
Afghanistan today didn't mince words in declaring at the UN that terror in Afghanistan is the "product of (a) long-standing policy" of Pakistan.

Afghanistan also said that that terror's "roots are located in terrorist sanctuaries and safe havens outside" its borders.
With its unequivocal declarations, Afghanistan today joined US President Donald Trump, the BRICS countries, Japan and India in naming and shaming Pakistan, a country many have come to call a "terrorist state".

"The scourge of terrorism affecting Afghanistan is (a) product of (the) long-standing policy by a neighbouring State to keep Afghanistan unstable," said Afghan foreign minister Salahuddin Rabbani at no less a forum than the UN Security Council (UNSC).

The minister further said - at the UNSC's open debate on Afghanistan - that while Afghanistan has tried to resolve issues with Pakistan, the latter hasn't responded positively.

"Despite being on (the) receiving-end of provocative actions, we have maintained a principled position in seeking to resolve differences through dialogue, diplomacy and peaceful means...Pakistan has so far failed to respond positively at its own cost, particularly in relation to its global reputation and standing," added the Afghan foreign minister.

Rabbani's comments came a little over a month after Trump outlined his administration's strategy for Afghanistan where the US has been involved in a long drawn out conflict, since 9/11/2001.

In a rare prime-time address to the nation, that showed how serious the US-Afghan situation is, Trump flat out said Pakistan is a major cause of continued terrorism in Afghanistan, no thanks to the terror safe havens it harbours. This, he said, is hampering peace efforts in Afghanistan.

Trump was referring to the Haqqani Network and the Taliban, which multiple reports - from credible organisations across the geopolitical divide - have said are getting support from the Pakistani government. Both these groups are said to regularly carry out terror attacks in Afghanistan, killing army personnel - including US troops - and civilians.

The US President berated Pakistan in his Afghan policy speech for having "sheltered the same organisations that try every single day to kill our people". He also threatened to cut off funding to Pakistan if it continues to provide "safe havens for agents of chaos, violence and terror."

Trump's unequivocal condemnation of Pakistan was met with a sigh of relief by Afghanistan. Kabul has been telling Washington for years about Pakistan's role in terror in Afghanistan.

Today, Afghanistan's foreign minister mentioned Trump's Afghan policy. He said the new US strategy for Afghanistan has generated new hope among people across his country.

"We welcome the fact that the new strategy recognizes the critical need to address the lingering problem of terrorist safe-havens and sanctuaries in our region; and for more determined efforts to end political, logistical and financial support enjoyed by terrorist groups," said Afghanistan's Rabbani.

In fact, Afghanistan is getting diplomatic support from more and more countries - except for from China - that are coming out openly against Pakistan-based terror.

Earlier this month, India convinced Japan to condemn Pakistan-based terror groups Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Muhammed (JeM) in an India-Japan joint statement. The 2008 Mumbai terror attacks were carried out by LeT operatives. And the JeM's Masood Azhar was the mastermind of last year's terror attack in Pathankot.

India also got other BRICS countries to name these groups at a summit in China earlier this month. The BRICS statement, called the 'Xiamen Declaration', mentioned the Taliban, al-Qaida and the Haqqani Network, in addition to the LeT and the JeM

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...-un-security-council/articleshow/60837637.cms
 

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India targets safe havens in Pakistan by seeking UNSC sanctions on Afghan terror funding
NEW DELHI: India yesterday urged theUNSecurity Council (UNSC) to use sanctions to cripple the source of funds for terrorists inAfghanistan, many of whom have safe havens across the border inPakistan
.

By emphasising that sanctions are the most effective way to stamp out terror safe havens in the region, India was none-too-subtly targeting international action against Pakistan, which is home to the Afghan-oriented terror groups, the Haqqani Network and the Taliban, and the India-focussed groups Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed.


In an address at the UNSC, Syed Akbaruddin, India's permanent representative at the UN, didn't name Pakistan once, but name-checked all the terror groups based there. Akbaruddin also spoke of the need to safeguard Afghanistan's sovereignty and stability that "anti-government terrorist elements are trying to undermine from their safe havens across the borders" of Afghanistan.

"We support the determination to overcome the challenges of security faced by Afghanistan and the willingness of many in the international community to effectively deal with the issue of safe havens enjoyed by the terrorist organizations that pose a threat to the region and beyond," said Akbaruddin.

"The Security Council must act on the funds which the terrorists in Afghanistan are generating through their illicit activities," said Akbaruddin.

Sanctuaries for terrorism cannot exist "anywhere and at any level", emphasised Akbaruddin.

"We must not differentiate between good and bad terrorists, or play one group against the other. The Taliban, Haqqani Network, Al-Qaeda, Daesh, Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jaish-e-Mohammed and others of their ilk are all terror organizations, many of them proscribed by the UN. They should be treated like terrorist organizations with no justifications offered for their activities," he said.


Akbaruddin then urged the UNSC to consider the Resolution 1988 sanctions regime which was adopted in 2011. This resolution targeted the Taliban by using methods like freezing of assets, travel bans and an arms embargo to cripple the terror group.


"These are significant instruments and must be utilized to their full capacity," said Akbaruddin.


India called the situation in Afghanistan "painful" and "disturbing" and added the security atmosphere there is worsening.


"The multiple crises that have been inflicted on Afghanistan have made Afghan territory attractive for criminal and terrorist groups, who are well connected to international terror and crime networks. These groups are stealing the resources of Afghanistan which ought to belong to the people of the country," said India's Akbaruddin.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...fghan-terror-funding/articleshow/60850481.cms
 

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Pakistan gives in to 'international pressure', opposes registration of Hafiz Saeed's JuD's political arm as political party

Pakistan’s interior ministry has opposed the registration of Hafiz Saeed's Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) political wing Milli Muslim League (MML), putting brakes to Hafeez Saeed’s political ambitions. The banned outfit, a front for the terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba that had carried out the 2008 Mumbai attack, launched a political party in August, days after authorities extended its chief and Mumbai attacks mastermind Saeed's "house arrest" for two months fearing threat to public order.

The interior ministry cited international pressure and refusal of security clearance by intelligence agencies as the reason for refusing to register MML, The Hindu reported.


According to The Nation Pakistan’s election commission had sought for interior ministry’s comments on the registration of MML in August. The paper further wrote that the ministry in its reply to the election commission said that MML is an affiliate of Lashkar-e- Taiba, the JuD and Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation, and ideologically is of the same hue.

News 18 reported that the ministry had even referred to "some countries" raising the issue "diplomatically". Meanwhile, Pakistan's foreign minister Khawaja Asif at an event in New York, referring to Saeed, said: "You mentioned a name. It's a proscribed organisation. The gentleman's under house arrest. But I agree with you that on that score we have to do more. We have to do more. There are people in Pakistan who can be a liability in times of crisis for Pakistan and (for) the region. I don't disagree with that."

Saifullah Khalid, who claimed to be the president of the new party, had said at the time of the launch that the new party will strive to make Pakistan a "real Islamic state" and demanded the immediate release of Saeed, who is under "house arrest" since January.

The party, political observers said, seems as an effort to set up a front which is acceptable to moderate Pakistanis. However, there appears to be little chance of electoral success for religious parties in Pakistan as the share of such political outfits have have gradually shrunk in parliament.

Currently, Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazal of Maulan Fazlur Rehman is one of the largest such party with about a dozen elected members in the National Assembly, whereas the Jamaat-e-Islami has about half a dozen in the 342-member house. Reuters had earlier reported that the party's launch was in line with a plan put forward by the Pakistani military last year to mainstream militant groups.

In its first political outing, MML had fielded a candidate in an independent capacity last month in a by-election for NA-120 Lahore, the seat vacated by former Pakistan prime minister Nawaz Sharif and managed 5 percent votes. The by-election was won by Sharif's wife Kulsoom Nawaz Sharif.

http://www.firstpost.com/world/hafi...international-pressure-as-reason-4087027.html
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Now,if pakistan itself accepts the fact that JeM is a terror organization so is Saeed, how longer can china hold on to protecting a TERRORIST in pakistan which pakistan itself say is a terrorist
:D

Shows china is a rogue state using undernourished state like NoKo and pakistan for its terror policies
 

sorcerer

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Is this the Pakistani sunset?

Brigadier S K Chatterji (retd)

The Americans have apparently distanced themselves from Pakistan, for good.
‘The Chinese are feeling the heat with the gradual rise in the number of nations viewing Pakistan as the nursery of global terror,’ says Brigadier S K Chatterji (retd).


It’s not Pakistan, but the North Koreans who are garnering all the global attention, these days.

The testing of a whole family of missiles, topped up by a Hydrogen bomb has grabbed all the eye balls. But, nearer home for south and south Asian countries, another scene of an old play continues to be enacted.

Pakistan continues to calibrate terrorism in Afghanistan and India. A state has been reached where most of the world has begun to hyphenate ‘Pakistan & North Korea’ together as rogue states.

In the case of North Korea, at least their internal situation is very much under control, be it by means fair or foul. However, in Pakistan’s case the internal situation is in turmoil.

For too long have they harboured too many terrorist organisations. Now, these establishments have found firm anchorage and challenge the authorities.

Their leadership roams at will, often makes statements to the press and seem to be unaffected by the law enforcement agencies or the honourable legal institutions that can otherwise get a Pakistani prime minister to resign.

Parallel with the tanzeems finding firm anchorage in Pakistan, has gone on this business of exporting terror to neighbours. The Afghans are fed up. India has been informing the whole world. The Americans have off late stated it loud and clear. Even its all-weather friend China joined the chorus in the BRICS summit on September 4 to name the terrorist organisations that operate from its soil.

The American President’s speech on the new Afghan policy chastised Pakistan unequivocally. His stark statement conveyed that at least 20 organisations, in the American list of terrorist groups, operate from Pakistan.

Trump also promised to cut off aid that has so long been used to target American service personnel in Afghanistan. Pakistan, a nation living on doles even after seven decades of independence, has been justifiably shaken.

Pakistan has reacted to Trump’s threat with varying tones, tenors and pitches. While the foreign minister talked about distancing themselves from terrorists, the defence minister reiterated the old parody; these organisations are the strategic partners of Pakistani Army. The new prime minister has kept his own counsel.

Perhaps an equally harsh blow was delivered in the BRICS meet in Beijing, when the joint statement of the participating countries named terrorist outfits operating out of Pakistan by name.

The role of honour included Lashkar-e-Tayiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed. The fact of even China, Pakistan’s sole all-weather friend, teaming up with the rest, surely causes enough consternation at Islamabad.

In the recent past, the Russians have seemingly gone soft on Pakistan. The Indians leaning the American way may have been one of the primers. It surely is also driven by the desire to make Afghanistan more costly for the Americans.

However, it’s doubtful whether the correct payback time is now for all that the Americans did to them when they ran Afghanistan in the 1980s. The reasons are simple. The USSR broke up in part due to its overreach, with Afghanistan being the biggest bleeding wound. No one knows why not to get into Afghanistan, better than the Russians.

While relating with Pakistan, Russians will surely understand the losses it will incur in terms of its most lucrative arms market and a long history of a robust relationship.

Pakistan has been a frontline state in the US lead Global War Against Terror. For the frontline state to lose its pole position and being identified as being part of the problem, is a huge shift.

An equally big issue is the tap being closed for funds to flow. Pakistan received US $3.5 bn in 2011 as compared to less than US $1 bn in 2016. Other than West Asians donors, there is only China left to fund.

There are sound reasons for the Pakistani GDP growth rate to tumble. If the new American approach gathers momentum in the days ahead, Pakistan could be headed for sanctions that might just hasten the process.

If they do try and stage another major attack in India, the sanctions may not be too far away.

In the interim, with American funding on the wane, Pakistan has opted for the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) bandwagon.

The China-Pakistan-Economic-Corridor (CPEC) is the crown jewel of BRI. It passes through Gilgit-Baltistan, a territory that’s disputed between India and Pakistan, and then traverses across the length of Pakistan to terminate at the Chinese funded Gwadar Port on the Arabian Sea that’s been leased to a state run Chinese company for 40 years.

The Pakistani government has not been able to sell the CPEC concept to its people. Pakistanis are not inclined to believe that CPEC will prove to be a high octane growth driver for their economy.

On the contrary, they are worried about landing in a debt trap, losing their strategic autonomy, detrimental impact on social cohesion and aggravation of insurgent/ violent movements in Baluchistan and other regions that the CPEC arteries will pass through.

Of all CPEC’s impacts, the affect on an already fragile social cohesion is the most worrisome. As CPEC progresses, attacks on the assets being created will only increase, thus prompting the Pakistani state to respond in a heavy handed manner.

It will, sooner or later, initiate a vicious cycle of violence between government forces and Islamist tanzeems.

The Americans have apparently distanced themselves from Pakistan, for good. The Chinese are feeling the heat with the gradual rise in the number of nations viewing Pakistan as the nursery of global terror.

Pakistan, barely has any other staunch supporters other than USA and China. Under the circumstances, can sanctions follow, quite on the pattern that the other rogue state, North Korea faces. Such a step will only aggravate centrifugal forces in Pakistan; the existing fractures between Pakistan’s provinces will only run deeper and the chasms spread wider.

The writing is on the wall for Pakistan. Either they switch over to combating terrorism and stop aiding terrorist groups, or international opinion against them swells leading to greater isolation and measures being initiated to rein in a state identified as rogue.

For the world, the option that Pakistan decides to adopt is critical. At the end of the road, the stakes include the ownership of a nuclear arsenal that can cause havoc.


http://www.thenorthlines.com/is-this-the-pakistani-sunset/
 

sorcerer

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Work on mega hydel project on Chenab river that flows into Pakistan to start in 2 months

:india:Work on the Rs 4,640.88-crore Kiru hydroelectric project on the Chenab river, which flows into Pakistan, would start within two months, a senior government official said. :india:

District Development Commissioner (Kishtwar) Angrez Singh Rana and General Manager of Kiru project, Varinder Salman, visited the 624-megawatt Kiru and 540-MW Kwar hydroelectric project sites yesterday.

"Various bottlenecks causing hindrances in the execution of the projects were discussed at length and immediate directions were issued for its resolution at the earliest," Rana told PTI.

He said the major work of the "run-of-the-river" Kiru project, near Patharnakki village in Kishtwar district, will start within a period of two months.

A run-of-the-river project is a type of hydroelectric plant, where a river's water is not held back in a reservoir, but flows back into the river after generating electricity.

The project proposed on the Chenab river, a tributary of the Indus, envisages construction of a 123-metre high dam with an underground powerhouse consisting four units of 156-MW each.


Rana said the affected families said they had not received compensation for their land, structures and fruit trees which were acquired for the projects.

Salman said non-payment of compensation was one of the reasons behind the delay in the execution of infrastructure work.

He directed revenue officials to identify a chunk of state land for the rehabilitation of affected families, who were assured by him of timely compensation.

Rana said the families would get proper training,so that they get jobs when the work on the project starts.

The Union environment ministry had given its nod to the Kiru and Kwar hydroelectric projects in July last year and April this year respectively. Both the projects are expected to be completed in 54 months each.

The projects would be developed by the Chenab Valley Power Projects (CVPP)--a joint venture among National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC), state power body JKSPDC and Power Trading Corporation (India).


http://www.business-standard.com/ar...tart-in-2-months-official-117100100240_1.html
 

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