Archive for December, 2008

2008: The Year of Jesuit Leadership in India

By Joseph A. Gathia

 

New Delhi, Dec 31, 2008: In independent India the year 2008 has been full of turmoil and anxiety for the minorities. While the Muslims felt the heat of “anti- national and terror “accusation it was really the Christian community which really bear the burnt of hate campaign by a section of people. The Christians through out the country felt “insecure” and were really surprised that why a peace loving and law abiding community should be target of violent attack, killing and even public rape of a nun. Our brethren and sisters in Karnataka, and Orissa were on the frontline of the fire. On the even of the year 2009 I pray for them.

 

During the crisis several groups and individuals stood up and defended the human rights. The Archdiocese of Delhi under the leadership of Archbishop Vincent took a lead in organizing series of meetings and protests. Rev.Fr. Dominic’s; Dr. John Dayal, AICU; AC Michael, Mr.Chenappa, Jenis Francis, the young dynamic lawyer; Sr. Mary Zachariah and many others took active part in raising their voice against atrocities against Christians.

 

All these efforts are appreciated.

 

We all know the Jesuits’ contribution in India in the field of education, science and in defending human rights. However, the Jesuits contribution is far more wide ranging than thee sectors mentioned above. In year 2008 the Jesuits provided leadership of consciousness to the Christian community in India. I would particularly like to mention few names: Fr. TK John, Fr. John Chattanat, (Vidhya Jyoti) Fr. Jimmi Dabi (Indian Social Institute), Mike T Raj, (the Provincial of Jamshedpur), Xavier Jeyraj, Prakash Luis and S Tony Raj (Orissa). The list is not exclusive. The Jesuit Province of Karnataka and Kolkatta also played crucial role. The most important lesson of their leadership has been that civil society in India and international community are important partners in defending human rights. The Bombay Province Jesuits did commendable work in ‘making aware “those who matter.

 

The Jesuits efforts have been like stone in the plinth that silently provide strength to the building.

As the Near Year 2009 dawns let us give the Jesuits in India special thanks. Let us pray for them and let us join hands with them in nurturing the new self confidence to face future challenges.

A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR (2009) TO YOU ALL

 

With regards,

Sincerely

Joseph Gathia

Email: josephgathia@yahoo.co.in

 



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The Political & Economic Outlook for Pakistan in 2009

cid_2289671161web56606mailre3In strategic terms, much will depend on the policies adopted by the incoming US administration of President-elect Barack Obama. If the US and NATO military campaign in Afghanistan intensifies, unaccompanied by a political settlement to bring parts of the Taliban into a closer relationship with the Kabul government, the pressure on Pakistan’s adjacent tribal areas could be exacerbated — at a cost to Pakistan’s own economic and political stability.

 

KEY INSIGHTS

  • The government of President Asif Ali Zardari faces mounting security, economic and political pressures that could cause it to fall during 2009.
  • Zardari’s position will be weakened if the recent intensification of US attacks into Pakistan continues under President-elect Barack Obama.
  • The conditions attached to an IMF lending package will meet fierce political resistance.
  • The economy will slow and unemployment will rise, potentially bringing serious civil instability.
  • This will contribute to rising political opposition, which may coalesce around the issue of deposed judges.

 

ANALYSIS

2009 will be a year of great uncertainty for Pakistan, with all eyes on the policies of the new administration of US President-elect Barack Obama.

 

Obama’s pre-election pledge to scale down US commitments in Iraq and concentrate military efforts on Afghanistan carries serious implications for Pakistan. The new administration’s decisions regarding cross-border attacks into Pakistan will affect a key source of pressure on the government of President Asif Ali Zardari, which also faces major difficulties stemming from a deteriorating economy and a likely resurgence of political opposition.

 

FATA CHALLENGES

The present US-imposed emphasis on military operations in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) is proving costly in terms of Pakistani military personnel and morale, not least with regard to the important Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency. Under former President Pervez Musharraf, the activities of the ISI -­known for using terrorist groups as instruments of foreign policy – were brought under firmer control. Yet since Musharraf’s resignation and the effective splitting of his authority between Zardari and army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, there are indications that the ISI has returned to its old ways (see US/PAKISTAN: US frowns on ISI counter-terror strategy – October 28, 2008). If so, problems of command and authority that have long plagued governance in Pakistan may be returning.

 

Equally, Musharraf’s resignation in August may have exacerbated the situation in another way. Musharraf possessed greater confidence in Washington than his successors do and was able to stave off US desires to extend cross-border raiding and bombing. Between December 2007 and his resignation in August, only nine incidents of bombing from US unmanned aerial vehicles in FATA were reported. Such attacks have multiplied in the past three months, accompanied by the first reported raid by ground forces and the first reported missile attack into North West Frontier Province.

 

This intensification of US activity is putting Zardari under severe strain. It has started to bring allegations in the Pakistan media that he is complicit with it, which could prove fatal to his political reputation. Zardari may struggle to survive the year without losing his parliamentary majority or falling victim to one of Pakistan’s recurrent military coups.

 

Another source of pressure during 2009 will be the deteriorating state of the economy, which threatens to bring serious civil instability. After its international reserves fell to the equivalent of just one month’s import cover, Pakistan has had to turn to the IMF for a 7.6 billion dollar lending package, which gained final approval on Monday. Yet this comes with conditionalities — notably a reduction in public expenditure and an increase in tax revenues — that are likely to meet fierce political resistance (see PAKISTAN: IMF rescue may add to instability risks – November 18, 2008).

 

Already, attempts to raise power tariffs had to be partially abandoned in the face of widespread rioting. However, the policy framework agreed between Pakistan’s government and the IMF calls for a rise in revenue mobilisation from 9% to 15% of GDP. This will be difficult to achieve without imposing an agricultural tax on they landlord classes, which dominate the political system (including the National Assembly) and are unlikely to comply without a fight.

 

The army has always seen itself as the saviour of the nation and the final authority in maintaining law and order. If parliament becomes paralysed in the attempt to rescue the economy, or if social unrest and rioting follow, the army may feel it has no alternative but to pick up the burden again — Kayani’s commitment to sustaining democracy notwithstanding.

 

DOMESTIC POLITICS

Equally, Zardari could find himself ousted or effectively paralysed by political forces within the parliamentary system itself. Since Nawaz Sharifs Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) left the cabinet earlier this year, Zardari’s Pakistan Peoples’ Party (PPP)-led government has survived only with the help of independents and small parties from the minor provinces. Yet some of these are dubious assets. For instance, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (which dominates urban Karachi) used to back Musharraf and was formerly a staunch opponent of the PPP. In this context, Zardari’s ability to command a continuing majority in the National Assembly is questionable.

 

At present, the balance of domestic power represented in the government does help to overcome one of Pakistan’s traditional problems. National politics had long been dominated by Punjab, the largest province, at the expense of the outer regions. However, Zardari’s PPP is Sindh-based and most of his allies also come from the smallerr provinces. His government is more inclusive than any of its predecessors. Yet it now risks excluding Punjab, whose provincial assembly is in the hands of the PML-N and increasingly at loggerheads with policies enunciated from Islamabad. Whether a Pakistan government can rule – or at least prove stable – in the face of concerted opposition from its most powerful province is starting to be put to the test.

 

Zardari also remains vulnerable over the re-appointment of the judges whom Musharraf dismissed last year. He is especially concerned that the re-appointment of former Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhury may lead to the re-instatement of corruption charges that stood against him until abrogated by Musharraf s National Reconciliation Ordinance of October 2007. By taking the office of president, Zardari hoped to sideline the issue. Yet it keeps being revived, not least by the New York Bar Association, which recently honoured Chaudhury for his services to judicial independence. Moreover, Sharif continues to sponsor the issue. If Zardari’s popularity fades because he is seen increasingly as overly close to Washington, the judges issue is likely to make a strong re-appearance in domestic politics. It could even lead to impeachment proceedings against him.

 

Uncertainties over US policy, the war in the tribal areas and the party political situation make 2009 a year when simple survival will be the main goal for Pakistan’s present government.

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Indian intelligence network in Afghanistan main cause of destabilization in Pakistan


Akhtar Jamal


raw1

According to informed sources Indian intelligence officials working in the disguise of diplomats in Embassy and Conslates in Afghanistan have set up a vast network to destablise FATA, Northern Areas and Baluchistan engaging dezens of Afghan-Indians, drug dealers and Afghan warlords.


 

According to sources several agents hired by the RAW but captured recently in FATA, Wazistan and Southern Eastern areas have provided extensive details claiming that the Indian had managed to penetrate deeply in collaboration with Indian allies in the region.


According to one spy who was recently killed by Taliban an Indian intelligence official named as C.R. Garg working as Attaché and P.S. to Indian Ambassador in Kabul had recently offered as much as US$2000-3200 per foreigner killed in Pakistan.


The spy was given a telephone number for urgent contacts. Another Indian senior official named as Malkit Chand also working as Third Secretary (Education) & Director (Indian Cultural Center) was engaged in transferring Pakistani Baluch students from Afghanistna to India for special training and financial assistance. Baluchi students particularly the children of Baluch refugees are being offered upto US200-300 per month if they agree to proceed to India.


Chandra Mohan Mishra a Third Secretary at Indian Embassy in Kabul and J. Baby working as an Attaché (Technical) have also held several meetings with Baluch militants during mid-2008.


Other Indian intelligence officials engaged in financing and sending Pakistani youths from tribal areas to several other Central Asian states and Middle East are posted in Consulate General of India, Mazar-i-Sharif are Dinesh Behari working as a Consul and D. N. Dutta working as a Vice Consul in Mazar-i-Sharif. Two spies recently arrested in tribal areas were carrying Thuraya satellite phone numbers 00-873-763095858 and 00-873-763095867 and 0700501385 which belonged to Indian intelligence officials inside Afghanistan.


Another Indian agents Sanjay Asthana working as Vice Consul in Habibabad,, Jallalabad was in touch with his “assets” using phone/fax number of 0797638744.


An Indian official based in Herat, Manohar Gangesh working as Consul and posted at the Indian Consulate. He was in contact with local agents who organize secret meetings and trainings for so-callled Islamic militants.

 

A mlitant leader claimed that he discovered the telephone number of a senior Indian intelligence official Raju Balakrishnan working as a diplomat and Vice Consul in Herat 0799427738 from the possession of a recently captured spy after his detailed interrogation.


According to a reliable sources early this year Indian agents working as Muslim militant leaders by the name of Yasin Khan (Original Indina name Amat Verma) and “Nasir” identified as “Santosh” were operating a massive network of terrorists in Jallalabad while another so-called “Islamic militant leader (original name Sudesh ) was also ad been operating in Khost. Local Afghan commanders, drug dealers and military commanders of foreign country were well aware of their activities but overlooking the covert operations against Pakistan.

 

Akhtar Jamal can be reached at pakpress@yahoo.com

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6,000 Die Daily Due to Open Defecation

clip_10“I remember the time when I’d get up to the chirping of the birds, walk across to a nearby field, relieve myself in the fresh, open air -undisturbed – go to the nearby canal, take a bath and then come home to a hearty breakfast. before going off to work in the fields,” said an old farmer.
 
 ”This is the mind-set against which we are working,” said Wasim Aslam, an activist striving to make 564 villages in Pakistan open defecation free (ODF).
 
 Aslam is from Lodhran, one of the implementers of the Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) campaign initiated by the World Bank’s Water and Sanitation Programme (WSP), and one 1,500 activists who have been trained to get the CLTS movement off the ground.
 
 According to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), an estimated 6,000 people globally, mainly children under five, die every day due to poor sanitation, hygiene and contaminated water. Over one billion people in South Asia are still without improved sanitation services. Globally1.2 billion people are defecating in the open; two thirds (778 million) are in South Asia (SA).
 
 ”When such an alarming number of young children die due to preventable diseases, there is no reason to remain abashed,” said Irfan Saeed Alrai, water and sanitation specialist at the WSP-SA.
 
 Women drive progress  
 The 1,500 trained activists are mostly men, but their success is in large measure due to the women behind them. Irfanullah, a local counsellor in Peshawar, said that had it not been for his wife, he would not have made any headway.
 
 ”Whenever I so much as tried to broach the subject of the vices of defecating in the open, I was stopped immediately,” he said.
 
 Duree Iman thought it would be easy to convince his community. “I went around three villages near Baggarian, in Abbotabad District, Punjab Province, but people just got angry and told me to stop sermonising. I decided to give up,” said the ex-army officer.
 
 However, his daughter, who is a door-to-door health worker, said she and her four colleagues would help him.
 
 ”In two months she had brought about a revolution and the first two villages became ODF. It was easy once they were convinced, because people already had toilets in their homes, but were using them as store rooms,” Iman said.  Some well-to-do villagers have funded the construction of latrines for those who cannot afford to build their own.
 
 The two men were sharing their experiences and their successes at a workshop organised by the World Bank WSP-SA in Islamabad recently.
 
 Behavioural change  
 The activists start by organising village meetings with the aim of provoking shame, shock and disgust among the villagers. They then explain the virtues of having indoor latrines and the problems of open defecation.  ”I explain to them how healthy sanitation practices help avert disease and lead to less spending on medicines. We take a walk around the village and mark out the spots where people have defecated and then tell them how the faeces reach their homes and eventually their food,” said Aslam.
 
 ”For most this is the first time they have understood the concept of hygiene and sanitation and are naturally shocked. And then it is easy to convince them of the need for a toilet,” said Tariq Mehmood Sher, a master trainer from Kotli Satiyan, a village near Islamabad.
 
 The aim of the CLTS is to stop open defecation through behavioural change, rather than supporting toilet construction for individual households.
 
 ”We want people to need a toilet. We don’t just give it to them as they may not necessarily use it. We work on their psychology,” said Aslam, adding that CLTS was first introduced in Pakistan in 2004.
 
 NGO initiates change
 
 The Integrated Regional Support Programme (IRSP), a local NGO supported by UNICEF, decided to try out the concept in 2004 in some villages in Mardan, North West Frontier Province. By the end of the year it had made 11 villages ODF free.
 
 ”The WSP-SA then facilitated assessing the approach, progress and methodology. The outcome of this project helped IRSP in promoting the CLTS to ensure sustainability at the grassroots level in Mardan District,” World Bank sanitation specialist Alrai said.  In 2006 WSP decided to scale up the CLTS with support from local government.
 
 Perhaps the biggest success of CLTS is that there is no concept of external funding for the construction of latrines. “You just prod their feelings of disgust and pride,” said Alrai.
 
 ”A significant aspect of the programme’s success and scaling-up. is partnership with support organisations like the Rural Support Programme Network (RSPN) and the Khushal Pakistan Fund which have helped to take the programme to scale,” said Alrai.
 
 Statistics  
 According to Javed Ali Khan, director-general of the Ministry of Environment, ODF initiatives have benefited about 1.12 million people. The practice of open defecation in rural areas came down from about 74 percent of the rural population in 1990, to 45 percent by 2006.
 
 According to the Ministry of Environment, 73 percent of the population now has access to a latrine – 96 percent in urban areas, and 62 percent in rural areas.
 
 CLTS is now included in the national sanitation policy, said Alrai. The focus of this policy is safe disposal of excreta through the use of latrines; the creation of an ODF environment; safe disposal of solid waste and effluent; and the promotion of health and hygiene practices.

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Amim Fahim’s Daughter Appointed as 1st Secretary

0Maliha Makhdoom, daughter of the Commerce Minister Makhdoom Amin Fahim (MAF), has been appointed as first secretary to Ireland. She has been hired as a Foreign Service official without fulfilling the prerequisites of appearing in the CSS examination and going through 18-month training in two different academies. Her appointment has been facilitated at the behest of the Prime Minister Gilani. While following PM’s verbal orders, Foreign Secretary’s office moved the summary for appointment of Amin Fahim’s daughter. Maliha Makhdoom confirmed that she would be leaving for her high profile job of a diplomat in the first week of January. When asked Maliha Makhdoom if she had taken the CSS examinations as a must requirement, she refused to respond. When  told that she had been appointed on the verbal orders of the PM, she said there was no harm in it. When confronted by asking her if it was the right way to occupy a challenging post of a diplomat. To this she said, “Ask the relevant department.”

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Zardari Unlikely to Last Long

  • 47491845lx0The ten biggest blunders that will ultimately take Asif Ali Zardari down:

    Failure to show any enthusiasm to track down Benazir’s killers. The mysterious and tragic apathy shown by him towards her assassination is a sore in every heart. The top PPP leadership every
    evening sits in cosy drawing rooms and speaks in derisory language about what he is doing and how.

    Failure to support the judiciary sacked by Musharraf, and adopting a hostile attitude towards Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry. He lost the chance to build grand support.

    Unnecessary and grossly counter-productive support shown for Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar.

    Failure to make any move towards repealing the 17th Amendment and strengthening Parliament. In fact, Zardari has taken the system to a super-presidential model with a PM now cribbing regularly about his lack of powers.

    Betraying his political coalition partners [PML-N, MQM, ANP, JUI-F] by refusing to follow the Charter of Democracy and cheating them with false promises.

    Opening himself and his party to blackmail by smaller coalition parties [MQM, ANP, JUI-F] to an extent that the entire Government has become a hostage, thus unable to take any major
    initiative.

    Boasting about his capacity to get economic and financial aid from the so-called friends of Pakistan, making repeated visits to world capitals and finally, opting for the most damaging and least acceptable option of going to the IMF, thus admitting failure.

    [Conditions Attached to IMF "Bailout" will Exacerbate Slump and
    Poverty in Pakistan]
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/dec2008/paki-d16.shtml

    Keeping petty political bickering alive in Punjab through a nonsensical presence of Governor Salman Taseer, a Musharraf appointee.

    Turning into a widely disliked person in Pakistan within months by letting Musharraf go scot-free and adopting all his sins and drawbacks.

    Humiliating and then forcing loyal PPP leaders into submission.

  • My considered opinion is that the present Zardari-led set-up will not last long as it has been structured on a wrong and distorted political premise as a result of which the key players, who have emerged as main power wielders were never in the picture, neither of Benazir Bhutto’s PPP, which actually got the votes and won the seats in the February 18, 2008 elections, nor anyone else. And these new players have failed to establish their political legitimacy and moral
    authority through their actions after coming to power.

    These power players do not have any political ideology, they do not believe in the established principles of democracy and parliamentary process enshrined in the Constitution and most important of all, they do not have a following among the masses, which is necessary for any political government worth its name.

    What has happened is that in extraordinary turbulent circumstances, the Zardari Group of the PPP has taken over the party, out-manoeuvring the others through opportunities created by circumstances followed up cleverly by a web of deceit, chicanery, and in some specific cases simple lies and cheating. Taking full advantage, Zardari formed a group of his cronies who had nothing to do with the PPP or its politics for years. Who could imagine that Rehman Malik, Farooq Naek, Babar Awan, Salman Farooqi, Husain Haqqani, Abdullah Hussain Haroon, Dr. Asim, Dr. Soomro, Riaz Laljee, Siraj Shamsuddin, Zulfikar Mirza, Agha Siraj Durrani and many other smaller, but tainted friends and associates of Zardari would suddenly take over
    every important position and start calling the shots?

    His attempt to take over the ISI were foiled but he was asking for too much, too early. But given his nature, he will try again to control not just the ISI, but will also try to stuff the superior courts with pro-PPP jiyala judges loyal to him and, if he gets the chance for which he will try his best, he will try to stuff the top Army hierarchy with his loyal pro-PPP generals.

    This is where Zardari will be stopped. That point may come as quickly as he tries to grab power. So in a way his own survival is in his own hands. But knowing Zardari, I can predict he cannot stop himself. The unfortunate fact is that he cannot fathom what the judges movement has done to the body politic of the country and he cannot imagine what transformation the media has brought in the thinking of every man and woman in the country. He still lives in the 1990s and cannot come out of that syndrome.

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Has Adnan Sami Khan Brought Disgrace to Pakistan?

Letter to Mr Adnan Sami Khan, the young Pakistani singer who, in a fit of rage, left Pakistan and traveled to India, settled there, and turned his back on his homeland and his people. Today, he learns the hard way the value of the motherland.

Dear Mr Adnan Sami Khan,

I am your fellow citizen from Pakistan, writing you to ask you: How much more disgrace you are going earn from

Adnan, trust me, you don't even look Indian!

Adnan, trust me, you don’t even look Indian!

your so-called friends in “India”. You have made your singing career in India, every one admired you but when it came to filing a case for nationality in India, they reminded you that you are a Pakistani and treated you the way they treat their suppressed class known as the untouchables.


Now in your very words, your friend Jagjit Singh has dumped you. How much more you’ll disgrace your legacy, your heritage and your green identity?


Therefore, I, being Pakistani fellow citizen, invite you to come back and start afresh in your own country. Allah will help you in making your way up. The amount of respect you’ll earn by working for your green passport and green flag will be enormous.

The time is right. We welcome you back home to Pakistan. That’s why we call Pakistan “Home”. Home is the place where one can be at peace like nowhere else.


Below is the news report that provoked to write this letter and offer a piece of advice to you to come back home, to
Pakistan.

Adnan Sami can’t sing: Jagjit Singh
http://www.thenews.com.pk/updates.asp?id=62618

MUMBAI: Singer Adnan Sami refuses to believe that Indian ghazal maestro Jagjit Singh criticised him by saying “he can’t sing and should go back to Pakistan”.

“I can’t believe Jagjit would talk like this about me. He’s always been so sweet to me. I’m his biggest fan. And why would he say I came to India to become an actor?

“When I came here, I weighed three times more than what I am. And why would he accuse me of sending my money to Pakistan? I earn and pay taxes in Mumbai, I can show you my PAN card,” said Adnan.

Singh, who openly acknowledges Mehdi Hassan as his main inspiration, told a website in an interview that Adnan can’t sing and should go back home.

Jagjit Singh was quoted as saying, “He (Adnan) became a singer by mistake. He had come here to become an actor and by mistake he became a singer. He can’t even sing. People like him should be sent back to work there (Pakistan) because they make money in India and send it to Pakistan.”
——————————
Best Regards,

Kazem Al Yaldram
PakMission

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Zardari Annoys the Chinese

presidency1-81Pakistan—Zardari-Gilani government’s first fascination is with ISI. The second one is with China. In both cases, President Zardari’s policy strangely overlaps with that of Washington’s, which wants to dismantle the ISI and contain China.

The recent U.N. Security Council resolution that linked Pakistani individuals and organizations to terrorism – including a man who is long dead, so much for the accurate Indian-American intelligence – raised questions about why China did not veto a resolution that affected its close ally, Pakistan.

The Chinese are already disturbed at the extreme pro-U.S. leaning of the government headed by President Zardari and Prime Minister Gilani. And you can’t blame the Chinese if they are suspicious of the government in Islamabad.

 

The Zardari-Gilani government ignored China after coming to power and spent time chasing the Americans and the British, the two benefactors of the current ‘democratic’ government in Islamabad. America and Britain are also two countries where powerful members of this government reside and own businesses and houses. Mr. Zardari also created a mini diplomatic stir in Beijing this summer when he cancelled the appointment of a new ambassador to Beijing despite the fact that President Hu Jintao had accepted the new envoy’s credentials. Also for the first time, Beijing remained without a Pakistani ambassador close to four months. Apparently Mr. Zardari was consulting Mr. Husain Haqqani, his America adviser and envoy to Washington, on appointing someone in Beijing who would lessen Pakistan’s tilt toward China. Thank God they failed in this scheme. Eventually, China declined to help financially bail out Mr. Zardari’s government, refusing to help strengthen his pro-U.S. setup. If it was not for the recent visits to China by Gen. Tariq Majeed and Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, not to mention a group of other Pakistani politicians (Shahbaz Sharif, Marvi Memon, etc.), we might have totally lost China.

 

On Dec. 17, I reported on my website how the Zardari government did not let China veto the U.N. Security Council resolution, a resolution that could tempt the Indians and the Americans to move to the next stage of demanding a ban on ISI itself, not to mention the Pakistani military. I wrote:

“We have information that both Mr. Husain Haqqani and Mr. Husain Haroon, our ambassadors to the U.S. and U.N. respectively, were instructed by the Zardari-Gilani government to coordinate with the British and the American ambassadors to ensure that the name of former ISI chief Hameed Gul, in addition to other Pakistani citizens and organizations, are included in a Security Council resolution. We have a government with shady characters in key places, strongly backed by the Bush administration, acting and behaving as if they were representing a U.S. occupation government in Pakistan.”

On the same day and quoting other sources, Dr. Shireen Mazari confirmed this report in her newspaper column.

 

Four days later, on Dec. 20, The News International ran a report filed by its correspondent in Washington that confirmed, in detail, how Mr. Zardari’s two envoys in America, Mr. Husain Haqqani and Mr. Husain Haroon, have deliberately opened the first door to possible future international sanctions on Pakistan and its military under the pretext of fighting ‘terrorism.’

 

The Chinese diplomats in New York at the U.N. Security Council were basically told by the Zardari government not to object to the resolution.

 

The correspondent, Mr. Azim Mian, referred to official sources, most probably either Mr. Haqqani or Mr. Haroon, that tried to spin this by saying that China was “respecting Pakistani desire more than before” in letting a damaging resolution pass unopposed by either Pakistan or China.

 

The truth, as Mr. Azim wrote, lied elsewhere:

“Did China change its friendly stance for Pakistan and supported western countries to include names of some Pakistani individuals and organizations in the UNSC committee’s list of terrorists?

That is one question under discussion; but some knowledgeable sources claim that during these tough times for Pakistan, China is respecting Pakistani desire more than before as China wants to see her friendly country to overcome its multi-prong troubles, in a smooth manner.

Sources say that in May last, the US circulated names of some Pakistani individuals and organizations to be included in the UN list of terrorists that would make it mandatory for all member countries of the UN to “freeze their assets, ban their movement and deny sale or supply of arms” as it happened in Pakistan after committee’s resolution 1267 on December 10. This decision was made possible only when China removed her “technical hold” that was placed on the issue for the last few months.

Why China put this list in the cold storage for months by exercising its right to put a “technical hold” to save Pakistan from troubles? Why China blocked such a move that was unfavourable for Pakistan in May last and now why China removed it’s “technical hold” and not only paved the way for inclusion of these names in the terrorists list; but also sided with America in the decision?

Some knowledgeable Chinese and Pakistani sources at the UN say that China did what Pakistan asked in May and again in December 2008, China did what President Zardari asked China on December 4, after his meeting with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

“US wanted to defuse India- Pak tensions and sooth India after Mumbai Incident of terrorism. During her one day unscheduled visit to Islamabad, US Secretary of State’s meeting with President Zardari was direct, tough and demanding. She asked Pakistan must show proof of being serious in combating terrorism and suggested few actions,” according to knowledgeable diplomatic sources.

On the US suggestion, President House approached China to withdraw its “technical hold” on the US circulated list for inclusion in the committee’s list. “On a request from the Pakistani President House, on December 4, China directed its mission to the UN in New York to remove its “technical hold”. On December 5, it was removed, which paved the way for the committee’s decision,” diplomatic sources at the UN told ‘The News.

It was Friday, December 5, when some Pakistani diplomats got this surprise of withdrawal of the ‘technical hold” by China. A message was sent to Islamabad that the UNSC committee had no scheduled meeting or informal meeting on the list. So, Pakistani diplomats focused on the visit of PPP Chairman Bilawal Zardari, who had arrived in New York to receive a UN award on behalf of his mother.

On December 10, he received the award at the same UN Headquarters, where some secretarial staff was busy in preparing a statement that UNSC committee has included names of three Pakistani nationals and three organizations in the list of terrorists.

Since China had removed its objection and other 14 members of the committee had not raised any objection, thus it was treated as the unanimous decision of the committee. It is not clear if the President House had consulted Foreign Ministry experts on the issue before requesting China.

However, a source close to the presidency denied that Islamabad asked Beijing to withdraw its objection in the UNSC. He said this claim is without foundation and meant to defame the democratic government of Pakistan.

When asked whether the government enquired from China the reason for its decision to withdraw its objection, he said he was not aware about it and could say anything only after contacting the presidency.”

When I wrote my column, This Government Is Committing Treason, some sympathizers of the government sent angry retorts. But it is clear from this example and a list of recent others that this government has failed in – or is deliberately not – protecting Pakistan’s legitimate national interest and is tilted in favor of countries that insist on making hostile acts against Pakistan. In this the government is in violation of the constitution. When this happens, should this ‘American’ democracy be allowed to run its course even if it means irreparably damaging Pakistan for a long time to come?

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What is Nawaz Sharif’s Game?

slide0002_image012So happy are the Indians with Mr. Sharif that they ordered their ambassador to travel to Lahore and personally deliver Manmohan Singh’s regards to him. Meanwhile, the disgruntled former premier continues to play the ‘Daughters Game’, distracting Pakistanis as the nation prepares for a possible war.

By AHMED QURAISHI

Monday, 22 December 2008.

WWW.AHMEDQURAISHI.COM

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—Even a lamppost would look better compared to President Asif Ali Zardari, so please don’t make much out of the fact that Mr. Nawaz Sharif commands more respect these days. This is how bad the situation is that we Pakistanis are left to choose between dumb and dumber.

As if the Zardari government’s defeatist posture and weak diplomacy in front of India were not enough, Mr. Sharif has just confirmed in an interview with an Indian media outlet that the alleged Ajmal Kassab is a Pakistani citizen and, taking a swipe at the Pakistani military, wondered why Mr. Kassab’s alleged Pakistani town was sealed by security officials.

So happy are the Indians with Mr. Sharif that they sent their ambassador in Islamabad all the way to Lahore to convey a special message of regards from the Indian prime minister to the disgruntled Pakistani former prime minister. Indian politicians and media commentators spent the weekend cheerfully quoting Mr. Nawaz Sharif and jubilating at this unexpected Pakistani admission of guilt.

This is how Online news service, an independent Pakistani news agency, described Mr. Sharif’s statements in a wire story over the weekend:

“This irresponsible attitude of a former PM and one of the major politicians only manages to reinforce the already poisoned ‘global perceptions’ of Pakistan being involved in almost all kinds of ‘terrorists attacks’.”

[The daily 'Ausaf' said that Sharif's comment has given the Indian media further pretext to train their guns on Pakistan. The News has said in an editorial, 'The latest disclosures are embarrassing for Mian Nawaz Sharif.]

Meanwhile, Mr. Sharif continues to play the ‘Daughters Game’, throwing mud at the daughters of both the Chief Justice and the Governor of Punjab. To an outsider, this circus gives the impression we are living in Switzerland and not Pakistan and the only thing on people’s minds here is where to buy good cheese for the weekend.

First, Mr. Sharif decided to hit the Chief Justice below the belt and dig out dirt on how the Justice used his influence to fix the college marks of his daughter Farah Dogar. And then, a minister in Mr. Sharif’s own provincial government in Punjab decided to prey on the private pictures of the daughters of the PPP governor and release them online, showing them dancing, swimming and partying.

Then came payback time for Mr. Sharif, when his opponents dig out dirt on his daughter, Maryam Nawaz. Someone leaked the information about how Mr. Nawaz Sharif’s own daughter benefited twice from her father’s influence to get into medical schools. If that’s not enough, Mr. Sharif’s main hero figure, the former chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, is yet to explain how his son jumped the line to clinch a lucrative government job, apparently thanks to his father’s influence. Unfortunately, the hysteria that some elements in the Pakistani political elite and the media created against the Musharraf government allowed Justice Iftikhar to escape accountability.

I fail to understand the politics of Mr. Nawaz Sharif. His political career is already reduced to his hometown, Lahore, and some parts of Punjab. If that is not enough, now he is playing dirty politics, owning Kassab to get back at the government and the military, and playing the ‘Daughters Game’ and poisoning national politics.

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Was Dawood Ibrahim involved in the Mumbai Attacks?

Jeremy R. Hammond
Foreign Policy Journal
December 21, 2008

dawood-ibrahimIndian police last week arrested Hassan Ali Khan, who was wanted for investigations into money laundering and other illicit activities, and who is also said to have ties to Dawood Ibrahim, the underworld kingpin who evidence indicates was the mastermind behind the terrorist attacks in Mumbai last month.

Ibrahim is also alleged to have close ties with both Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) agency and the CIA.

Another character linked to the CIA whose name is now beginning to figure into the web of connections between the Mumbai attacks, criminal organizations, and intelligence agencies is Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, of Iran-Contra infamy. Khashoggi has been implicated in arms deals with drug traffickers and terrorist groups, including within India.

Dawood Ibrahim is a known major drug trafficker whom India claims is being protected by Pakistan. As Foreign Policy Journal previously reported, there are also some indications that the CIA has a similar interest in preventing Ibrahim from being handed over to India. Ibrahim is wanted by India for the recent Mumbai attacks as well as for bombings that occurred there in 1993.

Ibrahim is a native of India who rose through the ranks of the criminal underworld in Bombay (now Mumbai). According to media reports in India, he got his start as an undercover informant for the police at a young age and thus has an intimate knowledge of Indian law enforcement and intelligence, and is alleged to have fostered close ties with individuals within the political system.

Another known associate of Ibrahim’s in Mumbai, Mohammed Ali, is suspected of assisting the terrorists, who were met by an individual in Uran before continuing on to Mumbai, where inflatable rubber dinghies had been arranged to take them ashore by the same individual. Numerous earlier press accounts indicated that the dinghies, along with other logistical assistance, were provided by an associate of Ibrahim’s.

The Times of India, for instance, reported on November 28 that according to police sources the Mumbai attack “was enabled by the Dawood Ibrahim gang“, and that “It would not have been possible to carry out a terror operation on this scale without a collaborative local network and this was provided by the D Gang. As the terrorists had entered via the sea, the needle of suspicion is clearly pointing at Mohammed Ali, the new poinstman of Dawood.”

Yet Indian news reports indicate that officials have been slow to act against Hassan Ali Khan, and Mohammed Ali continues smuggling operations out of Mumbai for Ibrahim’s crime syndicate, D-Company, completely unmolested by Indian investigators and law enforcement.

As the November 28 Times of India article observed, Ali “is known to indulge in smuggling of diesel, petroleum, naptha, drugs and arms with impunity and it appears that the terrorists had used his networks to enter the city by the sea route…. Despite having a detailed dossier on him, the authorities have not taken any action against him. What is more worrying is that Ali is believed to have also penetrated naval intelligence.”

A further report from the Times of India on December 4 noted that Dawood Ibrahim is “sitting pretty in Karachi” under the protection of Pakistan and his “hawala channel between Mumbai and Karachi remains busy”.But central agencies question why the Maharashtra government has not taken any action against the D-company here.”

“‘What’s the point of asking Islamabad to hand over Dawood when we’re not doing anything to destroy his empire in Mumbai and other places in India?’ a senior official asked.”

The article observed that Mohammed Ali “continues to operate with impunity.

Again, on December 11, Times of India reported that “Mumbai police has still not called Ali for questioning”, adding that “Ali is also known to have the backing of two powerful politicians of south Mumbai and that could be the reason why he is still untouched.”

In addition to links to Ibrahim, both men are also alleged, like Ibrahim himself, to have ties to political officials in India, and there are numerous other indications emerging that the attacks were assisted by elements within India being protected by the political establishment.

Hassan Ali Khan

India’s Daily News & Analysis reported last week that it appears Hassan Ali Khan “was part of a multi-crore [Indian numerical unit equivalent to ten-millions] hawala syndicate racket and may have joined hands with the organized crime operated by underworld don Dawood Ibrahim. He is also suspected to have funded terror organizations.”

India’s Enforcement Directorate (ED) “had also told the Bombay High Court that there were indications that Ali was part of a strong international crime syndicate with money flowing in from ‘proceeds of heinous crimes like terrorism, arms trade, gun running, corruption and organized forgery’.”

A series of news reports from March 2007 in the Times of India revealed that Khan was being investigated for money laundering and other illicit activities. A laptop recovered from his home showed that he had accounts at a Swiss bank. Khan had reportedly tried to take advantage of tax waivers granted on investments originating outside India in countries with double taxation avoidance agreements with India. The funds were also be used to invest in the stock market.

Khan would send funds abroad through illegal channels and re-route them into India through shell companies in countries with such a tax arrangement with India. According to the Times of India, “Khan has no known sources of income in India but owns stud farms and often travels abroad.” His wealth is estimated to be in the billions, and he owns property in Mumbai and Pune.

Investigators from the Enforcement Directorate (ED) “had crucial input from the Intelligence Bureau, which was concerned about this unaccounted money having implications for national security.”

One of the countries used to route money back into India was Mauritius, an island chain off the east coast of Africa near Madagascar and a former British colony. The UK still maintains a military presence there. It expelled the inhabitants of the island of Diego Garcia in order to turn it into a military base, which has also been used by the US for its own military operations.

According to reports, prior to the terrorist attacks in Mumbai, a team had been sent ahead and checked into the Taj Mahal hotel, one of the key targets of the attacks, and established a control room where they had food, weapons, and other supplies waiting in anticipation of the siege of the hotel by police and special forces. An identification card from Mauritius was used to check into the room.

Hassan Ali Khan has an interest in horse-racing and trades in thoroughbreds. The Times of India reported that “he had attracted attention on the Pune racing turf where he surfaced about five years ago as a small-time punter who suddenly became one of the biggest players. His contacts, by default, were with some of the top industrialists who have an interest in horse-trading.”

Last February, the Hindustan Times reported that the Swiss bank involved in the money transfers, USB (United Bank of Switzerland) AG, was reluctant to assist Indian investigators, and the investigation had been stalled as a result. The ED had advised the Indian government not to approve a plan by UBS AG to buy Standard Chartered Bank, an Indian mutual fund business, because of its lack of cooperation in tracking Khan’s money transfers. According to the ED, Khan had $8 billion in the bank’s accounts.

Adnan Khashoggi

The Hindustan Times also revealed that there was evidence that Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi of Iran-Contra infamy had transferred $300 million to Khan from a Chase Manhattan bank account in New York. It added that Khashoggi’s “arms supplies to Tamil terrorists, the LTTE, were revealed during an investigation into the 1991 assassination of Rajiv Gandhi.”

Khashoggi acted as a middle-man during the Iran-Contra affair, brokering an arrangement for Israel to sell US arms from its own stockpiles to Iran. The CIA then channeled money from the sales to the Contras in support of their terrorist war against the democratically-elected government of Nicaragua. The World Court later condemned the United States for the “unlawful use of force” – a euphemism for international terrorism or the even greater crime of a war of aggression.

Investigative journalist Wayne Madsen recently reported that, according to Asian intelligence sources, Khashoggi was also involved with the CIA in an effort to support Bosnian Muslims that “brought [Dawood] Ibrahim and [Osama] Bin Laden into the same big CIA tent, along with Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, a key Iran-contra figure in George H. W. Bush’s global arms smuggling venture while he served as Vice President under Ronald Reagan. There have been reports that Ibrahim considers Khashoggi to be a hero figure.”

In 1991, a Defense Intelligence Agency report listed Khashoggi as “An international arms trafficker who allegedly has sold arms to the Colombian drug traffickers, especially to the Medellin Cartel.”

 

The DIA report also listed Washington’s man in Columbia, Alvaro Uribe Velez, as “A Colombian politician and senator dedicated to collaboration with the Medillin Cartel at high government levels. Uribe was linked to a business involved in narcotics activities in the US…. Uribe has worked for the Medillin Cartel and is a close personal friend of Pablo Escobar Gaviria.”

Uribe is now the President of Colombia, which receives enormous amounts of US financing and military support, surpassed perhaps only by US support for Israel, Egypt, and now Iraq.

Manuel Noriega was another infamous narcotics trafficker and CIA asset, as well as a graduate of the School of Americas (SOA), which has since changed its name to the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHINSEC). The SOA was responsible for training numerous Latin American dictators and military commanders who were responsible for torturing, murdering, or otherwise “disappearing” countless political opponents and other individuals.

Colombia is also another case where the government has been caught red-handed staging false-flag terrorist attacks. In the late 1970s, a series of bombings, kidnappings, and assassinations against leftist targets was carried out by a terrorist group known as the American Anti-Communist Alliance (AAA or Triple-A). Documents available online at the George Washington University National Security Archives confirm that Triple-A “was secretly created and staffed by members of Colombian military intelligence in a plan authorized by then-army commander Gen. Jorge Robledo Pulido.”

John Perkins, author of Confessions of an Economic Hitman, wrote in his follow-up book The Secret History of the American Empire that a second lieutenant in the US army sent to Colombia to establish a “United States-commanded Southern Unified Army” told him, “Everything we do in Colombia just makes it more attractive for the drug business. Why do you think the situation keeps getting worse there? Because we want it to, we’re behind the drug trafficking. The CIA is–just like it was in Asia’s Golden Triangle.”

One might add the “Golden Crescent” to that list. As Foreign Policy Journal previously reported, Dawood Ibrahim “is known to be a major drug trafficker responsible for shipping narcotics into the United Kingdom and Western Europe.” While most Afghan opium is smuggled to Europe over land through Iran and Turkey, much of the amount that goes to Pakistan seems to be taken either by plane or by ship directly to the Europe, principally the UK.

While Pakistan claims Ibrahim is not even in the country, India insists he has been living in Karachi under the protection of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency.

The ISI worked closely with the CIA during the Soviet-Afghan war and acted as the CIA’s intermediary to provide funding, weapons, and training to the Afghan mujahedeen. The opium trade was used to finance the CIA-backed mujahedeen, and the principle beneficiary of CIA support was Gulbaddin Hekmatyar, who was also a principle drug lord.

And while Western media accounts typically tend to characterize today’s opium trade as being under the control of the Taliban, the fact is that the estimated amount of funds going to the Taliban and all other anti-government elements combined is less than 14 percent of the total estimated export value, and US intelligence agencies are aware of the involvement of high-level officials within the Afghanistan government in the drug trade, such as Rashid Abdul Dostum, former Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief of the Afghan Armed Forces. Dostum was also among the warlords of the Northern Alliance the CIA doled out suitcases of cash to during the initial phase of the US war to overthrow the Taliban.

Viktor Ivanov, the director of Russia’s federal anti-narcotics service, said in an interview recently that “The gathered inputs testify that infamous regional drug baron Dawood Ibrahim had provided his logistics network for preparing and carrying out the Mumbai terror attacks by the militants.” He added that “The super profits of the narco-mafia through Afghan heroin trafficking have become a powerful source of financing organized crime and terrorist networks, destabilizing the political systems, including in Central Asia and Caucasus.”

A Protected Man in India

The $300 million transfer to Hassan Ali Khan from Adnan Khashoggi was “only the tip of the iceberg”, an official from ED told the Hindustan Times. There was also evidence of another $290 million, for instance, in two shell companies in the British Virgin Islands. This was among the evidence obtained from the laptop computer seized from Khan’s home in Pune.

In addition to the money transfers, the ED was investigating Khan’s possession of three Indian passports. He held passports issued from Pune, Patna, and Mumbai, and had also applied for additional passports from Guwahati and Chandigarh. He and his wife had applied for citizenship in Switzerland.

But it wasn’t only the Swiss bank’s apparent unwillingness to cooperate with Indian investigators that was slowing progress in the inquiry into Khan’s dealings. The Times of India reported in February that although the Prevention of Money Laundering Act provided for his arrest, the ED had yet to do so. The ED was “acting cautiously in this case, sources said.” The paper added that “It is shocking that Khan could have concealed all that money without Indian agencies getting to know of it.”

The report says that “The lack of evidence on the transactions seems to have prevented ED from arresting Khan”, while at the same time noting that “The alleged presence of names of Indian politicians also found from Khan’s initial questioning by the income tax and ED officials immediately after the raid last year, don’t figure anywhere in the submissions made by the ED to the HC [High Court]. The Income tax department has failed to get information from the ED on the sources of the $8 bn, despite asking for it again and again.”

In September, the Times of India reported that the intelligence community was “seething with anger for being blamed by politicians for its ‘failure’ to prevent” a series of bombings across the country. A senior intelligence official responded to the charges by telling the Times of India that it was the politicians who were at fault, and connected Khan to investigations of terrorism.

“Take the case of Hassan Ali, the Pune-based businessman,” he said. “He was under the scanner of several Central agencies, including the Intelligence Bureau, Enforcement Directorate, Directorate of Revenue Intelligence and other bodies. Finally it was found that he had handled hawala transactions valued at a mind-numbing Rs 35,000 crore through Swiss banks.”

Hawala is an informal money transfer system that is an alternative to formal banking institutions. Often, relatively little money actually exchanges hands between hawala brokers, who operate on an honor system. An amount deposited with one broker is not actually moved to another broker on the receiving end. Rather, that amount is simply taken from the receiving broker’s own reserves. The only funds that actually need be transferred are those used to offset imbalances between brokers, and there is no record of the transaction between the sender of the funds and the beneficiary.

The hawala system is thus ideal for moving illicit funds and for money laundering. According to a World Bank report, “The bulk of drug-related financial flows within Afghanistan, and also to and from neighboring countries (primarily Pakistan), occur through the ubiquitous hawala (informal financial transfer) system.”

The report also notes that “Dubai appears to be a central clearing point for international hawala activities, and various cities in Pakistan also are major transaction centers.” Dubai is a central location for the financial operations of Dawood Ibrahim’s D-Company.

The September article from the Times of India continued, “The bank accounts were traced and he [Khan] was brought in for interrogation. How was it possible for a businessman to have access to so much cash, was the question on everyone’s mind. The probe was stymied midway by vested interests with political clout. Ali has done the vanishing act. His wife and brother-in-law too are missing. ‘Why was he allowed to go scot free?’ asked an IPS [Indian Police Service] officer.

“Sources said there was no evidence of any concrete link between Ali and terror funds. ‘Nevertheless, why was he taken off the hook? In any other country, he would have been put through the grind given the volume of his transactions. But in India he has been treated with kid gloves because of the political backing that he enjoys,’ another official said.

“In another case, the Mumbai crime branch had gathered evidence about the alleged links between a famous Pune businessman and Pakistan-based brother of don Dawood Ibrahim, Anees Ibrahim.

“An eyewitness gave a detailed account of the goings-on between the businessman and Hamid Antulay, Dawood’s nephew in Dubai, and later between the trader and Anees in Karachi. However, the businessman has not been arrested despite the disclosures made more than a year ago. ‘We are expected to fight crime, but politicians do not give us a free hand,’ a crime branch officer complained.”

Mohammed Ali

The Times of India also noted that “Dawood Ibrahim’s key contact person is Mohammed Ali, who is known to control smuggling operations in city docks. ‘Any consignment can be taken out or brought into the country by Ali’s huge gang. A detailed dossier on his activities, which has serious security implications for the country, has been sent to the Union home department. But there has been no response so far,’ an official said.”

Mohammed Ali also seems to be a protected person in India. Just days after the Mumbai terrorist attacks, the Times of India stated that Mumbai residents “now know their government has done nothing at all to protect the country’s financial capital”, and again noted that “The Intelligence Bureau (IB) has sent a detailed dossier about the activities of one Mohammed Ali, who is the uncrowned king of the docks. A close aide of Karachi-based terrorist Dawood Ibrahim, Ali smuggles petrol, diesel, drugs, arms and other contraband with impunity.”

“There are strong indications,” the Times of India added, “that the D-gang actively collaborated with the terrorists in these attacks. And yet, the government is reluctant to move against Ali and his gang because he enjoys the patronage of a powerful politician, known to be a business partner of Dawood.”

The article adds, however, that “Any terror operations needs vast funds, via the hawala route. But the authorities are still to crack down on hawala operators. Recently, they picked up Hasan Ali, a racehorse owner in Pune.

“A joint probe by the IB [Intelligence Bureau], enforcement directorate [ED] and directorate of revenue intelligence revealed that Hasan Ali had handled hawala transactions worth a whopping Rs 35,000 crore, much of it belonging to two Maharashtra politicians.”

A police officer told the Times of India at the time, before his recent arrest and while he was still missing, “I will not be surprised if Hasan Ali has been done away with. He is the man who knows too much.”

Hemant Karkare and False Flag Terror

Maharashtra Anti Terrorism Squad (ATS) chief Hemant Karkare, who also formerly an officer in India’s Research Analysis Wing (RAW) intelligence agency, had been in the spotlight for leading the investigation into a series of bombings in the town of Malegaon that was originally blamed on Pakistani-based Muslim terrorists. But Karkare’s probe revealed that the perpetrators were in fact Hindu extremists. Included in the arrests was a serving army officer, Lt. Col. Prasad Shrikant Purohit.

The revelations of false-flag terrorism being carried out by home-grown elements sent shock waves through the political establishment.

As the Independent reported on November 23, just days before the attacks on Mumbai, “Bomb attacks are not uncommon in India – there has been a flurry in recent months – but police usually blame them on Muslim extremists, often said to have links to militant groups based in either Pakistan or Bangladesh. As a result, the recent cracking of the alleged Hindu cell has forced India to face some difficult issues. A country that prides itself on purported religious and cultural toleration – an ambition that in reality often falls short – has been made to ask itself how this cell could operate for so long. India’s military, which prides itself on its professionalism, has been forced to order an embarrassing inquiry.

“The near-daily drip of revelations from police has also caused red faces for India’s main political opposition, the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), ahead of state polls and a general election scheduled for early next year. The BJP and its prime ministerial candidate, Lal Krishna Advani, have long accused the Congress Party-led government of being soft on terrorism that involved Muslims. However, the BJP has refused to call for a clampdown on Hindu groups, and last week Mr Advani even criticized the police over the way they questioned one of the alleged cell members…”

Karkare was put under immense political pressure and was heavily criticized by Hindutva (Hindu nationalist) leaders and members of the BJP. He had received a number of death threats as a result of his investigation, including a threatening call just one day prior to the attacks in Mumbai last month.

Karkare was killed during those attacks. Rumors with far-reaching implications began to spread immediately that he had been deliberately targeted.

Images of Karkare putting on an ill-fitted bullet proof vest just before his death were widely shown on Indian television. Indian Express noted, “His last visuals as seen on TV showed him working with his men near the VT station [Victoria Terminus, the former name of the Chatrapati Shivaji central train station], the target of one of the attacks, although it is perplexing at this point in time why such a senior officer ended up getting exposed to a brazen terrorist attack. Initially, he was shown wearing a shoddy helmet normally seen used by constables during riots. A little later, a policeman lowers a flimsy bulletproof vest over his shoulders, one that was obviously of little protection when those fatal shots were fired at him.”

According to the Pakistan Daily Mail, Karkare and several of his colleagues “had received information that their colleague Sadanand Dutt had been injured in the gunfire at the Cama and Albless Hospital for women and children.” As they were driving their truck to the scene, according to the only police officer to survive that attack, Arun Jadhav, “two terrorists stepped out from behind a tree and opened fire with automatic rifles”.

The Daily Mail article implicated Hindutva elements and Indian intelligence in terrorist attacks, stating that Bal Thakeray, the leader of Shiv Sena, a Hindu nationalist party, has “publicly pronounced in the past to setup Hindu suicide squads to target Muslims in India and Pakistan”, and claiming that “The terrorist activities and training needs of these groups are closely coordinated by the Indian intelligence agencies, particularly RAW”, which “trained the Tamil separatists groups of Sri Lanka such as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam (LTTE) to start [a] militant secessionist movement based on terrorism in the Sri Lanka’s Jaffna peninsula.”

A government investigation into the assassination of Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, the Jain Commission, in fact confirmed that “The LTTE was getting its supplies, including arms, ammunition, explosives, fuel and other essential items for its war in northern Sri Lanka against the Indian Peace Keeping Force from Tamil Nadu. That too with the support of the Tamil Nadu government and the connivance of the law enforcement authorities.”

As noted previously, the investigation found that Adnan Khoshoggi had dealt arms to the LTTE. The commission’s report also noted that LTTE’s involvement in arms smuggling and other illicit activities “were tolerated” and that a number of murders demonstrated the “impunity with which the LTTE could operate in India.”

Earlier this week, Amin Solkar, a lawyer in Mumbai, pressed the High Court to launch an independent investigation into the circumstances under which Karkare was killed. According to India Today, “The Muslims in Malegaon have always claimed Karkare was killed by Hindutva militants and not by Qasab.”

“Qasab” is an alternate spelling for “Kasab”, a reference to Azam Amir Kasab, the only terrorist from last month’s attacks to be captured alive. A transcript of his confession to interrogators was leaked to the media and contains the following statements: “When we were coming out of the hospital premises, we suddenly saw one police vehicle passing in front of us. Therefore, we took shelter behind a bush.

“Another vehicle passed in front of us and stopped at some distance. One police officer got down from the said vehicle and started firing at us. One bullet hit my hand and my AK-47 dropped down. I bent to pick it up when second bullet hit me on the same hand. I got injured. Ismail opened fire at the officers who were in said vehicle. They got injured and firing from their side stopped.” Kasab and his companion, Ismail, then removed the bodies of three dead officers and apprehended the vehicle.

Assuming this incident is the one in which Karakare and his colleagues were killed, this characterization of events seems to cast doubt on the theory that the officials were deliberately targeted for assassination, set up and ambushed. But the Joint Commissioner of Police Rakesh Maria, who is in charge of the investigation into the attacks, Rakesh Maria, has rejected the authenticity of the confession document.

Pakistan’s The News reported earlier this week that “A Pakistani lawyer C M Farooque claimed that many people, including Ajmal Kasab, were arrested before 2006 from Kathmandu by the Indian agencies with the help of Nepalese forces.” Farooque said he was contacted by Kasab’s parents and had filed a petition with the Nepalese Supreme Court with regard to the disappeared individuals last February. “The people arrested in Nepal,” the report added, “had gone there on legal visa for business but Indian agencies were in the habit of capturing Pakistanis from Nepal and afterwards implicated them in the Mumbai-like incidents to malign Pakistan.”

Kasab is from the Punjab province of Pakistan. Rakesh Maria said last week that “He expressed his desire to write a letter to his parents. He wants to write the letter saying he was misled by the group.”

More questions about the death of Hemant Karkare were raised this week by Union Minority Affairs Minister A. R. Antulay, who also implied that he may have been deliberately targeted with the involvement of others. “Superficially speaking they [the terrorists] had no reason to kill Karkare. Whether he was a victim of terrorism or terrorism plus something I do not know,” he told reporters.

“Karkare found that there are non-Muslims involved in the acts [of] terrorism during his investigations in some cases. Any person going to the roots of terror has always been the target.” He added that “There is more than what meets the eye” with regard to Karkare’s killing.

After coming under fire for his remarks, he responded by asking, “How come instead of going to Hotel Taj or Oberai or even the Nariman House, he went to such a place where there was nothing compared to what happened in the three places?” He asked, “Why all the three (Hemant Karakre, Vijay Salaskar and Ashok Kamte) went together. It is beyond my comprehension.”

He later defended his remarks further, asking, “Who had sent them to Cama Hospital? What were they told that made them leave for the same spot in the same vehicle?” He added, “I repeat what I had said. I had not said who had killed them but only questioned who had sent them there in that direction.”

Rajiv Pratap Rudy, spokesman for the BJP party called the remarks “obnoxious” and called for a “clarification from the Prime Minister” whether this was a private view or one held by his government. Congress spokesman Abhishek Singhvi said, “we do not accept the innuendo and the aspersions cast” by Antulay’s remarks. “This should be the end of the matter. The Congress does not agree with Antulay’s statement.”

Others were more inclined to take the remarks seriously. Union Minister Vilas Paswan noted that Antulay was from Maharashtra and suggested he must therefore have “more information”.

Vijay Salaskar, who, as previously noted, was killed along with Karkare, “had closely investigated the entrenched links between a prominent gutka [a betel-nut and tobacco based product] manufacturer and the Dawood gang,” The Times of India reported in an editorial piece. “He had unearthed a mass of evidence about the manufacturer’s visit to Dubai, where he met Hamid Antulay, a nephew of Dawood, and then went on a false Pakistani passport to Karachi where he met the don and his brother Anees. The purpose of the visit was to settle a business dispute with a rival.

“Salaskar found out that the manufacturer was Dawood’s partner in the gutka business, alongside a leading politician who dabbles in real estate development. Despite Salaskar’s best efforts, he was never allowed even to summon the manufacturer for questioning.”

The editorial continued, “The details of Dawood’s vast business transactions and the man fronting it are available with the Central government. But there is inaction. Is it any wonder the security agencies are deeply cynical about enforcing law and order and protecting the country? Is it any wonder the people are enraged?”

On December 6, Maharashtra’s former revenue minister Narayan Rane alleged in a press conference that the terrorists who had attacked Mumbai the week before received “logistical and financial” support from a number of politicians. According to the Press Trust of India, Rane also alleged that former chief minister Vilasrao Deshmukh had links with a person connected with fugitive gangster Dawood Ibrahim.”

Indians Arrested in Connection with Attacks

Two Indians were also arrested in connection with the recent Mumbai attacks. One of the men, Tauseef Rahman, reportedly bought SIM cards that were used by the terrorists, which were purchased in Calcutta according to a report from the Associated Press. The other, Mukhtar Ahmed, was an undercover operative of for a special counter-insurgency unit of the Calcutta police force.

Another Indian citizen, Faheem Ansari, was arrested in February and is now being questioned about his possible involvement. According to the AP, he was found “carrying hand-drawn sketches of hotels, the train terminal and other sites that were later attacked”. According to lead investigator Rakesh Maria, “Ansari was trained by Lashkar and sent to do reconnaissance.”

India’s top law enforcement official, Home Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram, apologized for failing to stop the attacks, saying “There have been lapses. I would be less than truthful if I said there had been no lapses.”

In fact, as previously reported by Foreign Policy Journal, Indian intelligence had numerous warnings of an imminent attack, both from its own sources and from the US. The warnings were specific, including that it would come from the sea. Mumbai, and even the Taj Mahal hotel, were identified as specific targets.

Additionally, Rakesh Maria said his investigation was looking into the possible involvement of Riyaz Bhatkal, the leader of the Indian Mujahideen (IM), in the attacks. “We are looking at various possibilities about who could have provided vital local support and intelligence. Bhatkal being a local person is known to have links with terror outfits.”

In October, Indian Express reported that Bhatkal and a terrorist named “Shahrukh” might be the same individual. “Sources said that since his name was linked to the 1993 Mumbai blasts, Bhatkal may have used the name Shahrukh to protect his identity,” the newspaper said. One official said, “For the 1993 blasts, he arranged money from Pakistan through hawala channels. But he could not be arrested.” In addition, “Officials also suspect an underworld link to the blasts. ‘Since Bhatkal’s name came up in the Mumbai blasts, it is evident that he is an important financial link for the underworld,’ said a source.”

Whitewash of the Attacks

Foreign Policy Journal previously reported on indications that the role of Dawood Ibrahim and his network of organized crime in the attacks in Mumbai last month is being downplayed by both Pakistan and the US and assessed that this was “possibly the result of a deal taking place behind the scenes between the governments of the US, Pakistan, and India, to have others involved in the Mumbai attacks turned over while quietly diverting attention from a man who some say could reveal embarrassing secrets about the CIA’s involvement in criminal enterprises.”

What’s clear now, as further developments have come to light, is that there are also elements within India, both in the criminal underworld and the government, that are perfectly willing to see the role in the Mumbai attacks of an even larger shadowy international criminal network whitewashed; a network with links to numerous moneyed interests, including trafficking in drugs and arms, and to numerous intelligence agencies, including the ISI, the CIA, and India’s own RAW.

While Dawood Ibrahim is officially a wanted man in the US and India, and is on Interpol’s wanted list, the evidence emerging from last month’s terrorist attacks in Mumbai is yet another indication that what is commonly referred to as a “shadow government” or “deep state” extending well beyond national boundaries is really pulling the strings behind the scenes in countries around the world, while the public–such as the residents of Mumbai–and well-intentioned individuals within their democratically-elected governments are left paying the price, often in blood.

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