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| Why no one seems
to want Osama PESHAWAR, July 28: A prominent Pakistani tribal leader who has 100,000 pairs of eyes and ears at his beck and call is absolutely certain that Osama bin Laden is well and has been living in Peshawar, the capital of Pakistans Northwest Frontier Province, since last December.....more Pak to sell 5 super ISLAMABAD, July 28: Pakistan will sell five of its indigenously made trainer super Mashaks aircraft to Oman. A deal between the two .....more Pak son murders ISLAMABAD, July 28: A 35-year-old Pakistani widow was shot dead by her son carrying out an.....more |
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Jewish settlers kill Palestinian girl after funeral HEBRON, WEST BANK, July 28: A Palestinian girl was shot dead by enraged Jewish settlers.......more US backing gives COLOMBO, July 28: Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe tonight......more Nepal, India agree to KATHMANDU, July 28: Nepal and India have agreed to cooperate in controlling the Maoist......more MOSCOW, July 28: Sixteen people died after a large Russian IL-86 passenger plane crashed...more |
Why no one seems to want Osama PESHAWAR, July 28: A prominent Pakistani tribal leader who has 100,000 pairs of eyes and ears at his beck and call is absolutely certain that Osama bin Laden is well and has been living in Peshawar, the capital of Pakistans Northwest Frontier Province, since last December. Dressed in a one-piece Dishdashi, this tall, spartan chief of a Pathan tribe receives his visitors in a small dusty room under a flickering, low-voltage, naked light bulb. He does not wish to be quoted by name, but the CIA knows who he is and where he lives. He is an old and trusted contact of this writer and this is the third time that we have mentioned his claim to know the details of Bin Ladens escape from the Tora Bora mountain range into Pakistan. He is the antithesis of flamboyant, not given to hyperbole and not interested in financial reward. After dusk he sits in his small courtyard near Peshawar, sipping tea and chatting late into the night with tribal elders, messengers with news from parts of the federally administered tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan and out-of-town visitors, both politicians and journalists. But neither the CIA nor the FBI has contacted him to get the Bin Laden story first-hand. There are, admittedly, lots of rumors about Bin Laden sightings. But this man is also a national political figure who has visited the United States and Europe and speaks English. He is well-read and a moderate in his political views, but he maintains cordial relations with Pakistans politico-religious fundamentalists. Soft-spoken, he is adamantine, firmly immovable in purpose, and sticking to his guns about Bin Laden. His story is that the Saudi dissident made it out of Tora Bora last Dec. 9 on horseback with about 50 men through the Tirah Valley. They dismounted near the main road through the tribal areas that connects Parachinar with Peshawar and finished the journey in sports utility vehicles. Pentagon officials assume that if the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence agency knew that Bin Laden was in Peshawar, they would go over the sprawling slum city of 3.5 million people with a fine-tooth comb. This would be a faulty assumption. Bin Laden has many friends and admirers in ISI. A majority of the population, both in Peshawar and smaller towns in the tribal areas, is pro-Bin Laden and anti-American. A walk through the labyrinthine city would convince any observer that there are thousands of places to hide, above and below ground that every conceivable weapon (including shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles) is for sale that Bin Laden, if indeed he is in the city, is well-protected by thousands of sympathizers that President Pervez Musharraf is seen as the villain who sold out to the Americans and that a hovel-by-hovel search would result in large casualties. The tall, gaunt tribal leader speculates that Bin Laden is a tar baby for both President George W Bush and Musharraf. A US trial for Bin Laden could be a long drawn-out spectacle a La Milosevic with embarrassing disclosures. A Pakistani trial could prove equally embarrassing for Musharraf, for example, his long-standing relationship with ISI. For five years prior to September 11, Pakistan was a state that openly supported the Taliban and surreptitiously provided aid and comfort to Bin Laden and his Al Qaida organization. An ISI officer was assigned to Bin Laden. In addition to a score of now-destroyed terrorist training facilities in Afghanistan, Al Qaida enjoyed privileged sanctuaries and safe houses throughout Pakistan. These were managed by Pakistans many extremist organizations. Most foreign recruits for Al Qaida used Pakistans Madrassas religious schools as way stations as they made their way to Afghanistan. Londons Sunday Times recently published an exclusive article based on documents captured in Afghanistan: Some 3,000 men holding British passports have passed through Al Qaidas Afghan camps in recent years. His network has yet to be dismantled. Musharrafs much-publicized crackdown against Islamist extremists simply resulted in name and address changes. In fact, Musharraf sought to dispel rumors he was seeking to transform Pakistan into a secular country following national elections scheduled on October 10. Faced with a delegation from the alliance of mainstream religious parties led by two leading firebrands Fazalur Rehman and Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the President assured them Pakistan was born as an Islamic state and nobody has the authority to change its Islamic character. Benazir Bhutto, one of the countrys two best-known secular political leaders, let it be known she plans to return from Government-imposed exile at the end of August to get ready for the October elections. Musharraf has said publicly she will be arrested on charges of corruption the minute she sets foot back on Pakistani soil. Fired as Prime Minister and then sentenced on charges of corruption, Bhutto (whose father was executed by the previous military dictator) opted to live close by in Dubai. Her husband is in prison in Pakistan on similar charges to those of his wife. Between Bhuttos Pakistan Peoples Party and the Muslim League of Nawaz Sharif (also exiled by Musharraf), on the one hand, and the extreme religious parties, on the other, Musharrafs road back to democracy is strewn with axle-deep potholes. (UNI) |
Pak to sell 5 super Mashaks trainer aircraft to Oman ISLAMABAD, July 28: Pakistan will sell five of its indigenously made trainer super Mashaks aircraft to Oman. A deal between the two countries has been finalised and a formal handing over ceremony would be held at Pakistan aircraft manufacturing factory on August 1. The super Mashak is suited for a wide range of Army cooperation missions based on forward air control, forward area support, reconnaissance and camouflage inspections. The sale would enable Pakistan to join the comity of countries exporting aircraft, official newspaper APP reported today. The light, single engine trainer aircraft can accommodate two to three persons in the cockpit and meets the requirement of modern primary flight training syllabus including exercises like, basic flight training, instrument flying, night flying and avigation flying. A sizeable fleet of the earlier version of this aircraft is in use of Pakistan Air Force and providing services in different fields of operation, it said. (PTI) |
Pak son murders mother in latest "honour" killing ISLAMABAD, July 28: A 35-year-old Pakistani widow was shot dead by her son carrying out an honour killing to end her affair with a man from her village, the official APP news agency reported today. Widow Mehr Bibi had developed "illicit relations" with a man identified as Ramzan at a village near the city of Lahore, 250 kilometres south-east of here, APP said. "On Saturday night when her son, Muhammad Razaaq, found his mother absent from home. He along with two other persons went to the house of Ramzan where they found Mehr Bibi and Ramzan in an objectionable position... They opened fire on them," APP said. The news agency said that the victims relatives had warned her to "mend her ways" and stay away from her lover but "she did not care". The so-called honour killings are widespread in Pakistan and accounted for the deaths of 40 women in Punjab province in the first half of this year, according to human rights activists. (AFP) |
Jewish settlers kill Palestinian girl after funeral HEBRON, WEST BANK, July 28: A Palestinian girl was shot dead by enraged Jewish settlers today as they rampaged, guns ablaze, through this West Bank city following the funeral of an Israeli killed by Palestinian militants, Palestinian witnesses and hospital sources said. Nivin Musa Jamjoum, 14, was shot in the head as she stood on her balcony near the tomb of the patriarchs, also known as the Machpelah cave, a disputed religious site, the hospital sources said. Her brother was also wounded, but only lightly, they said. Another 11 people were injured in the rampage, including a family of six riding a horse-drawn cart which was rammed by settlers in a car on a by-pass road, the sources said. The family members were said to be moderately-to- seriously injured. Two others, one of them a man in his 20s, were suffering from gunshot wounds, while a nine-year-old was beaten up, they said. Another Palestinian youth was reportedly stabbed and later evacuated for medical treatment by the Israeli Army. Israeli military sources said the Army had treated two Palestinians and in Israeli policeman who had been injured in the rioting, but did not give details of their injuries. Israel Army radio said the policeman was injured in the face by settlers. Witnesses said the settlers had also taken over a three-storey Palestinian house, confining the Abu Nagiba Al-Sharbati family to a single room, while a second Palestinian house was torched and badly damaged. (AFP) |
US backing gives global safety net for peace process COLOMBO, July 28: Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe tonight said he had obtained an "international safety net" for his peace process, after the US declared its support not only for the peace initiative but also in the fields of defence and intelligence. "I have managed to secure US support towards improving our defence and intelligence set-up," he told the people in an address televised by state-run media. Wickremesinghe, who conferred with US President George W Bush in Washingon on July 24 on his peace efforts, said his visit was very "fruitful" as the US had pledged its support and blessings. He said Economic Reforms Minister Milinda Moragodas meeting with LTTE negotiator Anton Balasingham in London yesterday was "successful", but did not give details about the outcome of the talks. Moragoda and Balasingham had discussed matters relating to the agenda for proposed peace talks in Thailand and the creation of an interim administration for the north and east. Wickremesinghe has been seeking to raise international support for his peace initiative, mainly with a view to creating a climate of global opinion to pressure the LTTE into accepting a solution within the framework of Sri Lankas unity. The two parties are observing a formal ceasefire since February 23, despite charges of transgressions by both sides. (PTI) |
Nepal, India agree to curb Maoist activities KATHMANDU, July 28: Nepal and India have agreed to cooperate in controlling the Maoist activities along the border, official sources said. A meeting between Indian and Nepalese security officials at Siddharthanagar district decided that Indian security officials will help in thwarting untoward activities along the border areas to help Nepal smoothly conduct the November 13 mid-term poll, the sources said. The two sides also decided to resolve in a coordinated manner exchange of criminals running away from one country to another. (PTI) |
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MOSCOW, July 28: Sixteen people died after a large Russian IL-86 passenger plane crashed shortly after take-off at Moscows Sheremetyevo airport today, the Ria-Novosti news agency reported, citing Emergency Ministry officials. The Interfax news agency reported that 16 crew members were on board the plane, of which two survivors had been found, also quoting the Emergency Ministry. Witnesses cited by Itar-Tass said the aircraft crashed a few hundred metres from Dmitrovskoye Shosse, a main highway in Northern Moscow, from a height of about 200 metres. The head of the airports terminal 2 confirmed the crash and said it was a technical flight from Moscow to Saint Petersburg. "At the moment they are extinguishing the flames. The aircraft broke up when it hit the ground," the official said. (AFP) |
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