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Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts

Friday, March 13, 2009

US drone kills 21 in NW Pakistan


A US drone fires several missiles at a home in the Kurram Agency in Northwest Pakistan killing at least 21 people and injuring 16 others. Local officials and residents told Press TV correspondent that the US drone, fired seven missiles on a supposed training camp of Taliban militants in the Barjo area in the Kurram Agency, some 20 kilometers from the Afghan border, on Thursday evening. A senior Pakistani official said that he could not comment about the identity of the dead, but it is thought that they were Taliban militants. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that after the attack, two injured Taliban militants were shifted to the Mandori area where they spoke with medical doctors. He continued that the injured had said they were present outside the camp when the attack was carried out. According to the injured, as many as 58 people, including some kidnapped by the militants, were present in the five rooms of the building at the time of the incident. Following the attack, the building caught fire and it has been assumed that everyone inside lost their lives. After the attack, the drone continued its flight over the area. Local residents, using loudspeakers in the mosques, told everyone not to venture outside as the circling drone could carry out another attack. The Pakistani official said that the building was a main center for Taliban militants and an arms storage facility. "Militants were also holding meetings in the camp, which was supervised by a local commander Fazal Mabood. At the time of attack, he was present in the place," he added. However, it was not confirmed whether the commander had been killed or not. The US has not stopped drone attacks in Pakistan's tribal belt despite Islamabad's protests that such strikes are counter-productive and are a violation of the country's sovereignty. There have been more than six drone attacks since US President Barack Obama assumed office.

Pakistan police beat up Sharif supporters


Pakistani police uses sticks to beat up supporters of former Premier Nawaz Sharif and his right-wing allies in the southern port city of Karachi. Law enforcement agencies also detained several dozens protesters from PML-N and Jamaat-e-Islami party in Karachi Thursday, media reports said. 'No one will be allowed to disturb peace in the city,' Karachi police Chief Waseem Ahmed told reporters shortly after the skirmishes. Later, more than a thousand people left in a motor convoy for Islamabad where they planned to stage an open-end sit-in in the capital. But they were stopped on the main highway leaving Karachi, where the angry crowd pelted the police with stones and set fire to vehicles. Sharif has urged the masses to join a nationwide protest against the government, led by Pakistan's People Party Co-Chairman and President Asif Ali Zardari. Organizers had hoped tens of thousands of people would join a four-day protest march to Islamabad, which began Thursday in Karachi and ends in the capital on March 16. Also, activist lawyers have been demanding Zardari fulfill a pledge to reinstate judges fired by Pervez Musharraf, a general who ousted Sharif as prime minister in a 1999 coup. But the protest movement heated up last month when the Supreme Court banned Sharif and his brother from elected office. Sharif and his supporters accused Zardari of influencing the court's verdict, an allegation denied by the president. Police has arrested a large number of opposition workers in Punjab and Sindh provinces to maintain public order. The PPP-led government says the planned march is aimed at destabilizing the country. Information Minister Sherry Rehman on Wednesday described the Sharif brothers' move as a 'rebellion' against the government. Earlier, Pakistan's interior ministry had threatened to prosecute Muslim League-N chief and his brother for sedition. "Their statements fall in the (category of) sedition," Interior Ministry Chief Rehman Malik told a new conference in Islamabad on Monday. He also read out several excerpts from speeches that Nawaz Sharif and his brother Shahbaz had made since the Supreme Court disqualified them from holding public office. The developments could destabilize the central government and leave a negative impact on the violence-wracked country, raising the prospect of confrontation between the country's main political parties.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Pakistan minister escapes murder attempt


At least five people have been killed in an attempt to assassinate a provincial minister in Pakistan's troubled northwestern city of Peshawar. 

Unknown assailants on Wednesday opened fire on a vehicle carrying Bashir Bilour, senior minister of North West Frontier Province -- which is racked by militant violence. 

Bilour escaped narrowly from the attack, however, at least five passersby died in the deadly shooting, a Press TV correspondent reported. 

The minister was visiting a populated neighborhood in the city to inaugurate a project. 

Bilour, a senior member of the Awami National Party (ANP) leader, had also survived an assassination attempt last November. 

He blamed the latest incident on Taliban insurgents, saying that "those who want to see anarchy in the country are behind this attack." 

Peshawar, the capital of the NWFP, is the gateway to Pakistan's lawless tribal regions that border Afghanistan. The region has been a stronghold of insurgents since the 2001 US-led invasion in Afghanistan. 

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and Premier Yousuf Raza Gilani said that the Islamabad government will bring the perpetrators of the terror attack to justice.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Pakistan govt. cracks down on lawyers' long march


The Pakistani government has started a crackdown against political leaders and lawyers in Punjab province to stop the lawyers' long march. 

Security forces arrested hundreds of political leaders and lawyers under Section MPO on Tuesday evening to prevent the lawyers' long march for the restoration of deposed chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, which was scheduled for March 12. 

Police raided the houses and offices of various opposition parties' leaders and members of parliament in Lahore, the Press TV correspondent reported. 

"The government decided to place key politicians and lawyers under house arrest in the wake of the long march and sit-in," local media reported. 

Pakistan Muslim League-N leader Mian Nawaz Sharif, former Punjab chief minister Shahbaz Sharif, Jamat-e-Islami Qazi leader Hussain Ahmed, and Tehrik-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan will reportedly be kept under house arrest. 

Ranger forces have been called into Punjab province and the government is finalizing its strategy to deal with the agitation. 

Section 144 has been imposed in many districts of Punjab, including Lahore, banning public meetings and rallies for one month. 

Lahore official Mian Amir Mehmood said the decision was "indispensable" as the government wanted to ensure public security and safeguard properties. 

Section 144 will be effective from Wednesday and no protest march or gathering of people at one place will be allowed, he added. 

The people arrested during this period could be kept under detention for three months. 

Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) President Ali Ahmed Kurd has said that Nawaz Sharif is supporting the lawyers' movement for the cause of an independent judiciary. 

Kurd added that lawyers are peaceful and thus the long march and subsequent sit-in will also be peaceful.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Pakistan releases 12 Taliban in Swat


Pakistani officials have released 12 Taliban prisoners under a recently signed peace deal with Taliban in the troubled Swat Valley. 

Following talks between representatives of the regional government of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and the pro-Taliban militants of the Tanzim Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi group in Swat valley, 12 Taliban prisoners were freed on Sunday, a Press TV correspondent reported. 

"It was one of the demands of the Taliban. It was a goodwill gesture. We have fulfilled it and we hope now they will play their part for peace," Syed Mohammad Javed, Commissioner of Swat, said about the decision. 

Provincial Information Minister, Mian Iftikhar Hussain, told reporters that the move was a signal to secure trust and prove the government's dedication to the peace process. 

He added that violence has showed an 80 percent decrease since the signing of the controversial deal that compels the NWFP to implement strict Taliban style sharia laws in Swat Valley and surrounding areas.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

5 Momenin have been Martyred on Bypass Road Quetta


Innocent People were all belong to Hazara Community and they were working in Floor mills while they were coming to there home that unknown (Dahshadgar-Alh-e-Monafiqin) shot down. Govt really seems to be sleeping and the situation of Pakistan is getting bad day by day. 

Innocent People were all belong to Hazara Community and they were working in Floor mills while they were coming to there home that unknown (Dahshadgar-Alh-e-Monafiqin) shot down. Govt really seems to be sleeping and the situation of Pakistan is getting bad day by day. 

We appeal to all political leaders to Think about this even think about there Mother land and leave these all fights they have with each other and come together to save Pakistan. It is your own (NARA) that SUB SEY PEHLEY PAKISTAN. Visit

Media blackout on Parachinar Shia killings


Leading Pakistani scholars strongly condemn the 'western media censor-policy' over the Shia Muslim killings in the northwestern city of Parachinar. 

Political experts and religious scholars, attending a summit in the Iranian city of Qom, emphasized on the necessity to launch a regional media campaign to raise global awareness about the issue. 

The summit held in Iranian city of Qom under the banner "Holocaust of Shias in Parachinar," came in the wake of the killings of hundreds of Shia community-members over the past six months in Parachinar and Hangu. 

Pro-Taliban and al-Qaeda-linked militants, who are reportedly behind the killings, have imposed an economic blockade against the Shia-dominated population areas. 

The frequent incidents have raised concerns among human rights group, while moderate Pakistani Sunni groups have described the issue as a conspiracy against the country. 

Taliban leaders, who were toppled in the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan, took refuge to tribal regions in Pakistan and rapidly began to extend heir influence from tribes to major towns and cities. 

The pro-Taliban anti-Shia groups have launched a violent campaign against the Shia Muslims, and are stretching the campaign toward the restive southwestern Pakistan as well. 

Quetta, the capital of Pakistan's restive southwestern Balochistan province has witnessed several instances of violence directed against the Hazara Shia community in recent months. 

Several Shia religious gatherings have also been targeted in central province of Punjab over the past some months. 

Tehran has repeatedly cautioned Islamabad over the 'silent massacre' of its Shia community by the Taliban in the country. "The incidents that have occurred against Pakistan's Shia community are a plot to create conflict between the region's Sunni and Shia population," said Iran's Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani. 

"We have warned Islamabad over the incidents and we will follow up on the matter," he added. 

Shia sources say they make up one-third of Pakistan's population of nearly 160 million. Since the 1980s, thousands of people have been killed in sectarian-related incidents in Pakistan. Visit

Pakistan links Mumbai, Lahore rampage


Pakistani police are investigating the possibility of a link between an attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team and the Mumbai terror attacks. 

Authorities are considering the possibility that a banned group blamed for orchestrating last year's terror attack in India's financial capital could have been behind Tuesday's attack in Lahore that left eight Pakistanis, including six policemen, dead. 

Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militants may have intended to hijack the bus carrying the team to bargain the release of their chief operational commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, who was arrested in connection with the Mumbai rampage, a Pakistani daily reported Thursday citing police sources. 

Police say they have obtained new evidence that suggests the LeT wanted to trade hostages, releasing the sportsmen on the condition that the commander and a another five detained members were allowed safe passage to tribal areas along the troubled border with Afghanistan The News International, report said. 

The Prime Minister's Adviser on interior affairs Rehman Malik told the Associated Press on Wednesday that the preparations made by the Lahore attackers pointed strongly to a hijacking plot. The aide did not elaborate on the identity of the attackers. 

Retired General Hameed Gul, a former chief of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), however, said he believed that the firing on the Sri Lankan team was an Indian conspiracy in line with New Delhi's plans to suggest that Pakistan was a terrorist state.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Lankan cricketers hit in gunmen operation


At least five people have been killed in an attack on the bus of the Sri Lankan cricket team in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore. 

Local police officials said earlier on Tuesday that unknown gunmen detonated two bombs and then opened fire at the Sri Lankan convoy, killing five policemen. 

Several Sri Lankan players were injured in the incident and transported to the hospital. 

The attack was carried out on the road leading from the teams' hotel to the Gadaffi stadium, where a test match is being held.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Taliban sets deadline for its courts


Militants in Pakistan's Swat valley say the government must deliver its promise of implementing Taliban-inspired laws by March 15. 

Sufi Mohammad, a pro-Taliban cleric, told reporters in Swat's main town of Mingora on Sunday that Islamabad had not yet taken any practical steps toward implementing the Taliban-style judicial system in the region. 

He warned authorities of protests if the government failed to set up the courts that were agreed upon during ceasefire talks two weeks ago. 

"If Nifaz-e-Adl (a system of justice) is not enforced by March 15, protest camps will be set up in Malakand," he said. 

The peace agreement binds the government to implement Taliban-style strict laws in the Malakand division, which comprises Swat and its adjoining areas. 

In exchange, local Taliban militants promised to end their two-year violent insurgency. 

The deal, however, raised alarm among moderate forces amid concerns it will extend extremists' influence in Pakistan. 

The insurgents waged a violent campaign to enforce Wahabbi-inspired laws, which included beheading opponents and bombing girls' schools in the troubled region. 

Pakistan's President, Asif Zardari, says the Taliban is required to lay down their arms as part of the deal. 

However, local media reports said there was no sign of disarmament and that the Taliban had effectively won control over Swat. 

Swat, once a popular holiday destination, has been blighted by violence since 2007. 

Pakistan is under increasing international pressure to eliminate militant sanctuaries.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Political skirmishes go on over Sharifs


Pakistani parliamentary session to discuss disqualification of Sharif brothers has been halted after lawmakers scuffled over a court ruling. 

The parliamentary session terminated after lawmakers belonging to Nawaz Sharifs' PML-N party chanted anti-government slogans and accused President Asif Ali Zardari of influencing Supreme Court's decision in order to remove Sharif from politics, a Press TV correspondent reported. 

PML-N leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said the judiciary had become a tool for president to reach his goals. 

Last Wednesday the Supreme Court upheld an earlier ban on Nawaz Sharif and his brother, Shahbaz, from office. It also dismissed the government in Punjab where PML-N holds power and ordered Shahbaz --chief minister of Punjab-- to step down. 

The opposition lawmakers wearing black ribbons on their shoulders said what they were trying to gain is not overturning the verdict but restoration of the sacked judges. 

The PML-N anti-government remarks triggered outrage among the ruling PPP lawmakers who tried to disrupt Nisar Ali Khan's speech. 

Nisar Ali Khan also warned that the PPP would not be able to run its government in central Pakistan without PML-N mandate in Punjab. 

He also urged Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and parliament speaker Fahmida Mirza to act on the issue. 

After Nisar Ali Khan's two-hour speech, Gilani told the National Assembly that the government had no preliminary information about the court ruling.View

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Sharif: Tumult heading for Pakistan


Pakistan's opposition leader Nawaz Sharif lays direct blame on the government for the ongoing political turmoil and warns of extremist exploitation of the situation. 

Sharif giving his first interview since Wednesday, when a court order barred him from elected office, accused President Asif Ali Zardari of "declaring martial law on democracy" and warned that the extremists could take advantage of the ongoing unrest. 

The opposition leader's charge echoes the complaints that forced former military ruler Pervez Musharraf to give up his presidency last year. 

Sharif said Pakistan is in the middle of a tense time with neighboring India over the deadly militant attack on Mumbai, ongoing issues in the tribal areas and the even bigger issue in the Swat valley. 

He added that Zardari's pro-western government is not going to be able to face any of its key tasks if it continues to wage political war on him, he told the Associated Press in the interview conducted at his residence near Lahore. 

He said that a surge of political squabbling will surely distract the government from grappling with the Taliban and al-Qaeda threat spreading from the tribal areas along the frontier with Afghanistan. Sharif opined that this confrontation might also feed worries about a military intervention, a frequent result of political turmoil in Pakistan. 

"I think we are heading for some sort of unfortunate situation," Sharif said, without elaborating. "There are a lot of forces - the militants, the extremists - they are all there to take advantage." 

Sharif's supporters gather at a fire barricade on a Karachi street.

Rioting, which began in Lahore, flared elsewhere for a third consecutive day, with police swinging batons and firing tear gas at stone-throwing youths among hundreds of people who blocked the six-lane highway between the capital, Islamabad, and the nearby city of Rawalpindi. Protesters tore down advertising billboards, smashed street lights and blocked traffic with burning tires. 

The Supreme Court ruling upheld a ban on Sharif from contesting elections because of a past criminal conviction related to the 1999 military coup that ended his second term as prime minister and put Musharraf in power. Sharif's brother was also sacked from his position as Punjab governor and was replaced by a Zardari loyalist. 

Sharif predicts a similar outpouring of support from lawyers and other groups to back his party, which is the country's second largest political movement and which worked in an uneasy alliance with Zardari's bloc to push out Musharraf. 

Their shaky alliance floundered soon after Zardari became president, when he reneged on a promise to reinstate the ousted Supreme Court chief justice. Sharif said there would be no reconciliation with Zardari unless he reinstates Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry.View

Friday, February 27, 2009

Kurram Agency Toori abducted persons couldn’t be recovered


PESHAWAR: Even after lapse of five days twelve abducted persons of Toori tribesmen could not be recovered.

Sources said that that some armed persons had abducted twelve persons of Toori tribesmen on way from Kuram Agency to Peshawar from Tootkas area and one trying to escape was shot dead. Despite lapse of five days, the kidnapped persons could not be recovered.

Toori tribesmen have demanded immediate release of the abductees and ensuring safe travel on the Peshawar-Kurram main highway. View

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Punjab Assembly session underway at staircase


LAHORE: Punjab Assembly session is underway at staircase of assembly building after governor has refused to give permission to conduct the session in assembly. 

Speaker Punjab Assembly Rana Muhammad Iqbal is presiding the session with deputy speaker Rana Mashud.

Several provincial ministers including Punjab law Minister Rana Sanaullah are attending the session, which is discussing the agenda of Sharif brothers’ disqualification. 

Earlier, PML-N members clashed with police outside the assembly. Heavy police contingents were deployed in and around the building on the orders of the governor Punjab. 

The assembly gates were shut down to barred the members to enter into the building. PML-N members had tried to crush the gates after that barriers were placed at the entry and exit.View

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Pakistan calls for addressing roots causes of conflicts as part of U.N. peacekeeping


UNITED NATIONS, Feb 25 (APP): Pakistan has called for a comprehensive strategy for U.N. peacekeeping involving conflict prevention, addressing the root causes of conflict and post-conflict peace-building in a bid to attain peace and stability. 

“Full operationalization of the comprehensive approach requires greater political will of member states, larger consensus on objectives, and genuine cooperation to achieve those objectives including through a much broader pooling and sharing of resources by all, “ Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon told the U.N. Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations. 

Speaking in a debate on the U.N.’s “biggest enterprise”, he said Pakistan had remained at the forefront of collective United Nations efforts taken over the years towards the maintenance of international peace and security. Pakistan was the top contributor of uniformed personnel to the world body’s peacekeeping operations, with some 11,000 nationals currently participating in 13 missions. 

Pakistan had also been the lead troop contributor since the initial surge in demand in 2003, the ambassador said. The United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan, which monitors the Kashmir Line of Control, had been one of the Organization’s first peacekeeping operations. Some 100 Pakistani peacekeepers had made the ultimate sacrifice serving under the United Nations banner, he added. 

Haroon said tools and institutions were not enough to achieve results and that fully implementing a comprehensive peacekeeping strategy required greater political will on the part of Member States and broader consensus on shared objectives, including pooling of resources and burden sharing by all. 

“This, in our view is indispensable for achieving success during the current period of unprecedented expectations, demands and challenges,” he said, stressing that collective action must cut across the whole range of activities, from proper planning, objective analysis of ground realities, and crafting clear achievable mandates, to ensuring the safety and security of mission personnel and identifying sound exit strategies. 

That collective vision must be based on the tenets and principles of the Charter, but must also incorporate a shared understanding of the changing nature of conflict and corresponding required evolution in peacekeeping processes, including the reform and strengthening of peacekeeping capacity. 

“These are the fundamental issues that must be at the core of our work,” the Pakistan ambassador said, stressing that the continued success and credibility of United Nations peacekeeping required that Member States had full ownership of policy and strategic oversight. 

To that end, no body or particular set of countries could monopolize policy-setting in this area; the full engagement of the Organization’s wider membership was essential. Indeed, experience had shown that even the most sensitive issues could be addressed in a non-controversial manner, if there was a genuine effort to seek common understandings. He added that such broad engagement must be accompanied by the elaboration of coherent policies and their consistent implementation. 

Speaking on structural and policy issues from the perspective of troop-contributing countries, he advised against any kind of differentiation between missions in terms of operational structures, command and control mechanisms, or any other preferential arrangements. Pakistan expected partnerships to be based on equitable relationships and mutual respect. In light of recent problems, he said there was also a need to carefully review lessons learned from the new breed of United Nations peacekeeping missions, including hybrid operations, in terms of planning, force generation, deployment and overall performance, as compared to traditional mission structures. 

While calling for broader cooperation between the Secretariat, the Security Council and troop-contributing countries, Haroon noted his delegation’s disappointment at the persistent lack of adequate representation of major troop-contributors at relevant organizational levels.  

“We urge the Secretariat to rectify this as a matter of openness and fair play,” he said, stressing that representation of major troop-contributors at top managerial levels in the field and at Headquarters was essential to ensuring greater coherence between those who managed, directed and commanded operations, and those who provided invaluable human resources on the ground.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

St Sunni tehreek Attack on Imam Bargah Nasaran Hussain "Shah Faisal Town Karachi block 5"

St Sunni tehreek Attack on Imam Bargah Nasaran Hussain "Shah Faisal Town Karachi block 5"

Pakistan 2008 Crime & Safety Report: Karachi Crime & Safety



Overall Crime and Safety Situation
The U.S Department of State continues to warn U.S. Citizens to defer non-essential travel to Pakistan. al-Qa’ida and Taliban elements continue to operate inside Pakistan, particularly along the porous Afghan border region. Bombings and assassinations continue to occur throughout the country. Persons considering traveling anywhere within Pakistan are encouraged to read the U.S Department of State’s Travel Alert, which is available electronically at travel.state.gov. This website contains information regarding travel preparedness, health matters, and safety and security issues. Recent articles in the Economist and Time magazines describe Pakistan as the most dangerous place in the world. Karachi has seen recurring violence characterized by random bombings and shootings as well as a large number of incidents of kidnappings for ransom. American citizens, U.S interests, and other Westerners are at risk of becoming targets of violence. The U.S. Consulate General in Karachi has been the target of several major terrorist attacks in recent years. The most recent was a vehicle bomb on March 2, 2006 that killed four people, including two Consulate employees and wounded many others. Due to the assassination of former Prime Minister Bhutto on December 27, 2007, and the riots that took place in Sindh Province following the attack, the below statistics will show a substantial increase in attacks over the previous year. It is not clear at this time who was behind the assassination but it is evident that the attack has caused stability in Sindh to be uncertain at best and chaotic at worst.

Crime and safety in Karachi are major concerns and it is important for visitors to maintain a heightened level of security awareness at all times. Karachi is the ninth largest city in the world and is the business capital of Pakistan with a population of approximately 18 million.

Statistics

The following crime statistics for Karachi are based on reporting by the Citizens Police Liaison Committee (CPLC) for calendar year 2007. The CPLC is a non-governmental organization (partially funded by the Sindh Government, but most funds come from the business community) working to assist law enforcement, which maintains crime statistics as well as a criminal database. It is difficult to estimate the actual number of cases not reported to the CPLC.

According to CPLC’s statistics for 2006, there were a total of 5,081 reported vehicle thefts in Karachi with an average of 423 stolen per month. For 2007 this number increased slightly to 5,120 with an average of 426 per month. Unlike many other crimes in Karachi, most vehicle thefts are actually reported in hopes that the vehicles will be recovered. Police recovered approximately 47 percent of all reported stolen vehicles in 2007.CPLC murder statistics for 2006 indicate there were a total of 278 terrorist killings, i.e., murders associated with terrorist acts or groups. This number increased in 2007 to 344 terrorist killings, which is an increase of 24 percent.

There were a total of 54,157 incidents of cell phone larceny reported in 2006. This number increased to 99,065 for 2007, which is an increase of 83 percent. A snatching is defined when the phone is taken directly from the person.

Pakistan: Mumbai probe enters new step


Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mahmoud Quershi says that Islamabad will proceed with its investigations into the Mumbai attacks. Qureshi said that Pakistan had given India a set of 30 questions along with its response to the Indian dossier on the Mumbai attacks, a Press TV correspondent reported Saturday. "We are waiting for their response and we will take our next step in light of the information provided by India," he told reporters in Islamabad. Tension between the two nuclear-armed neighbors has been mounting since the deadly terrorist attacks on Mumbai in November 2008. Earlier this month, Pakistan admitted for the first time that some part of the conspiracy of the Mumbai terrorist attacks was hatched in Pakistan. On November 26 last year, a group of ten gunmen went on a shooting rampage in more than 10 sites across Mumbai, killing 165 people. Authorities in New Delhi were quick to point a finger at Islamabad, blaming the attack on a banned Pakistan-based group called Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), alleging that Pakistan's intelligence agency (ISI) had also been involved in the incident. Islamabad, on the other hand, has denied any involvement in the terror attacks, blaming 'non-state actors' for the rampage.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Last Night, Aseem Raza age 22, martyred by firing of a group near Hussaini Mission Imambargah at Drugh Road,


After Namaz e Janaza Momineen do protest on Sharah e Faisal, Road. During the protest again Sipah e Yazeed open fire on Momineen. Two more Momin's shoot dead by sipah e Yazeed in Shah Faisal Colony. One Shop and One house also burned by Sipah e Yazeed. No action taken from GOVT, on this martyred. We strongly condem on it, no local media channel coverage of this protest on TV & Newspapers. We appeal all momineen specially Anjuman's, who gives the expensive advertisment on Newspapers of Anjumans programs and other issue, its responsiblity of all condem D.I. Khan Blast and also condem Aseem Raza Martyred. Show strength and unity of nation on media. Shaheed ki jo Mout hay woh Qoum ki Hayat Hay.. Labaik Ya Hussain (a.s). Shia-Online Team.

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