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Malala Yusufzai: Victim of Barbaric Terror and Dirty Politics

Look D, the people that carry out the acts are brainwashed. The people that control these thugs are not. They are mercenaries. They are killing people for money. They are making tons of money as well.

My point is that we cannot control the actions of country 'A', but we have much more control over our own population and can work on reducing the pool of brainwashed fanatics which country 'A' can recruit for their agenda.
 
The Bengalis backstabbed us. Only after they declared independence did we start the real operation. I regret the loss of life but treason is treason.

Anyway we are going off topic.

I'm happy that Malala is recovering. Hopefully this can draw attention to some womens rights issues.
What you did to them in first 24 years every body knows it Sir Treason is Treason first know why some one becomes traitor Sir Tribals never said they want to get separate still your Army attacked them first and after 8 years War still going on

Why is the PA not bombing people in Karachi or Lahore? The whole reason the PA is attacking them is because they committed terrorism against Pakistan. However, because these are Pakistanis, the PA is careful to minimize collateral damage and responsible Pakistani leaders like Imran Khan have stressed the need for a multi-faceted solution involving reeducation.

That is not the case with the drones. The Americans don't care how many 'little brown people' get killed along the way because, for them, it's just a video game. So let's not compare the PA operations to the drones.



My point is that we cannot control the actions of country 'A', but we have much more control over our own population and can work on reducing the pool of brainwashed fanatics which country 'A' can recruit for their agenda.

Because their is no order of America the day they order them bombings will start in these areas also Mr USA hates tribal areas and they wanted them to be attacked so Musharraf made us their slaves and we went their and now Tribals hate us from core of their hearts by bombing them and killing their children and women you think you can win their support good joke Sir :hitwall:
 
What you did to them in first 24 years every body knows it Sir Treason is Treason first know why some one becomes traitor Sir Tribals never said they want to get separate still your Army attacked them first and after 8 years War still going on

Are you kidding me! During Wana we captured hundreds of AQ fighters. Who was sheltering them? The tribals.

Why should Pakistan become the land where every goddamn extremist can come and eat like going to a dhaba.
 
My point is that we cannot control the actions of country 'A', but we have much more control over our own population and can work on reducing the pool of brainwashed fanatics which country 'A' can recruit for their agenda.

The only way is through martial law. These political parties are too flimsy to decide the fate of our nation.
 
Are you kidding me! During Wana we captured hundreds of AQ fighters. Who was sheltering them? The tribals.

Why should Pakistan become the land where every goddamn extremist can come and eat like going to a dhaba.

Sir why Pakistan Army attacked those tribal areas they could have talked to them and asked them to throw them out although many of them were living their for several years but our Army as American orders came attacked its own people and now we face the disaster law and order situation in Pakistan Sir you could have talked to them but you straight go and attacked them
 
Sir why Pakistan Army attacked those tribal areas they could have talked to them and asked them to throw them out although many of them were living their for several years but our Army as American orders came attacked its own people and now we face the disaster law and order situation in Pakistan Sir you could have talked to them but you straight go and attacked them

You really got to stop lying. The Army and Gov gave them many chances and each time THEY not us broke the peace. And that is a fact which I have proof to back up.
 
Because their is no order of America the day they order them bombings will start in these areas also Mr USA hates tribal areas and they wanted them to be attacked so Musharraf made us their slaves and we went their and now Tribals hate us from core of their hearts by bombing them and killing their children and women you think you can win their support good joke Sir :hitwall:

The simple fact that the PA has resisted strong American pressure for a Waziristan operation should tell you that the PA is not an American stooge. Unlike the Americans, the PA is extremely hesitant to go around killing Pakistani citizens unless it is an absolutely last resort.

The only way is through martial law. These political parties are too flimsy to decide the fate of our nation.

Martial law may be needed temporarily -- qualified people can decide -- but, ultimately, this effort will be won through reeducation and instilling a mindset that rejects violence in favor of debate and dialog.
 
The simple fact that the PA has resisted strong American pressure for a Waziristan operation should tell you that the PA is not an American stooge. Unlike the Americans, the PA is extremely hesitant to go around killing Pakistani citizens unless it is an absolutely last resort.



Martial law may be needed temporarily -- qualified people can decide -- but, ultimately, this effort will be won through reeducation and instilling a mindset that rejects violence in favor of debate and dialog.

To be honest, I wished that Musharraf would have reigned for 30 years. Enough time to change this backwards mindset, of our illiterates and poor.

Musharraf may have made mistakes, but he was never a traitor. Unlike our government today.
 
You really got to stop lying. The Army and Gov gave them many chances and each time THEY not us broke the peace. And that is a fact which I have proof to back up.
Sir every time its your Army who broke the peace record on American orders that was admitted by former Governor of KP Ochakzai Sir your Army never really talked to them

The simple fact that the PA has resisted strong American pressure for a Waziristan operation should tell you that the PA is not an American stooge. Unlike the Americans, the PA is extremely hesitant to go around killing Pakistani citizens unless it is an absolutely last resort.



Martial law may be needed temporarily -- qualified people can decide -- but, ultimately, this effort will be won through reeducation and instilling a mindset that rejects violence in favor of debate and dialog.
They started resisting after Musharraf left till that time all the disaster had been done its already too late PA was not hesitant at all in Musharraf time
 
Malala Yousafzai Case

•Malala Yousafzai, the young girl shot by the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) for allegedly promoting secularism, has been airlifted by helicopter from a hospital in Peshawar to a military hospital with better facilities in Rawalpindi. Doctors successfully removed the bullet lodged in her neck yesterday, but officials say she is still in critical condition. One member of the medical team in charge of treating her in Peshawar explained that “‘neurologically she has significantly improved’ but that the ‘coming days…are very critical.’” A doctor interviewed by AFP said that Yousafzai “had a 70% chance of survival.”[ii]

•On Wednesday the TTP released a statement defending their attack on Malala on the basis of Sharia law. They said that Malala was attacked not because of her education, but because she was supposedly “preaching secularism and so called enlightened moderation.” TTP spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan said that religious law justified the killing of anyone “leading a campaign against Shariah and [trying] to involve the whole community in such [a] campaign,” adding that anyone fomenting a “war against mujahideen” deserved death. He further elaborated the TTP’s stance on education by declaring that the TTP’s “crime wasn’t that they banned education for girls. Instead, our crime was that we tried to bring education system for both boys and girls under Shariah. We are against co-education and secular education system, and Shariah orders us to be against it.”[iii]

•The government of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (KP) offered Rs 10 million ($104,000) on Wednesday to anyone who could help identify and arrest the TTP men who shot Malala Yousafzai. KP Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain added that the identities of anyone who could help would remain anonymous. Today in Islamabad, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said that the two men had been identified; additionally, Malik urged Islamic scholars across the country to issue a fatwa against the attack.[iv]

•The National Assembly on Wednesday unanimously condemned the TTP attack on Malala Yousafzai in a resolution demanding the government take action against the perpetrators as well as cover all medical and other necessary care for Malala. Law Minister Farooq H. Naek called the shooting a “crime against humanity” while renowned literary figure Bushra Rehman criticized the government for not doing more to protect Yousafzai after she received the National Peace Award in 2011. Members of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl (JUI-F) condemned the attack but said that the government should not “cut off” the perpetrators but rather continue efforts to negotiate with them.[v]

•Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani reiterated on Wednesday his commitment to the fight against terrorism after visiting Malala Yousafzai at the Combined Military Hospital in Peshawar. He called the attack on Yousafzai and two of her classmates a “heinous act of terrorism” carried out by individuals with a “twisted ideology” that ran counter to true Islamic values.[vi]

•Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), the charity wing of banned militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba, spoke out against the attack on Wednesday. In a Twitter message, JuD wrote that the attack was a “shameful, despicable, barbaric attempt…Curse b upon assassins and perpetrators.”[vii]

•Around 250 civil society activists protested the attack on Malala Yousufzai in Islamabad on Wednesday. They urged the state to take prompt action and demanded that extremists cease attacking educational institutions. In a Chakwal protest, Awami National Party Punjab chief Ayub Malik called the attack an attack against “humanity and all types of civilizations,” and that the “enemies of humanity and Islam must be dealt with iron hands.” Lawyers in Chakwal held a strike to protest the attack. Additionally, private schools in the Swat Valley closed down in protest over the attack and other smaller rallies took place in Karachi, Lahore, and Mingora.[viii]

International Outrage

•U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned the attack against Malala Yousufzai on Wednesday, calling “for the perpetrators of this heinous and cowardly act to be swiftly brought to justice.” He praised Yousafzai’s “courageous efforts to promote the fundamental right to education” and expressed his deepest sympathies to her family.[ix]

•White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Wednesday that President Barack Obama found the attack on Malala Yousafzai “reprehensible and disgusting and tragic,” and that U.S. forces were prepared to provide transportation and other care if necessary. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stated that the “attack reminds us of the challenges that girls face, whether it is poverty or marginalization or even violence just for speaking out for their basic rights,” and criticized extremists frightened of girls’ empowerment.[x]

•Afghan President Hamid Karzai called President Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday to express his “grief and shock” over the shooting and condemn its perpetrators as cowards.[xi]
 
is the malala incident the 'straw that broke the camels back' or the strong reaction by the military 'top-brass' just more media 'spin' on finally tackling the TTP?
 
Why there is Malala Malala Malala on every channel? Had the media projected the innocent killings of drone attacks in the same pace, these would have stopped till now. Sold Media. :mad:
 
Forked tongues of the holy armies

Ayaz Amir
Friday, October 12, 2012

Islamabad diary



They just can’t say it straight, our blessed holy fathers, champions of righteousness and clear winners of an international hypocrisy prize if one was on offer. What can be clearer, and more mindboggling, than the attempted killing of young Malala, all of 14 years old, and a threat – so it seems – to the mighty Taliban?


But try getting a clear condemnation from any of the holy fathers – take your pick from their frothing multitude – and you will taste the cup of frustration.



On supposed insults to the faith, insults real or imagined, their fists go up and angry foam flecks their outraged lips. Rallies are mounted across the country and the pillars of the republic, far from sturdy at the best of times, are shaken. But come a Taliban-staged event like the shooting of Malala and tongues begin to twist, churning out a fog of doubt-laced ambiguity. To every crocodile tear shed is added a comparison with drone strikes and the American war in Afghanistan.



A cleric on television, Mufti Naeem of Karachi, was asked by his host whether the learned doctors of the faith could bring themselves to issue a fatwa against the shooting of Malala. And try as the anchor did, the Mufti just wouldn’t give a clear answer. But we will have to issue a fatwa against drone strikes as well, he kept saying.



Maulana Ata-ur-Rehman, brother to his holiness Maulana Fazlur Rehman, put up much the same performance in the National Assembly. We condemn this outrage, he said, but we will have to go to the root causes of why such events happen...then a string of equivocations about drone strikes and the infidel war in Afghanistan. Root causes...the last refuge of those trying to take cover.



If this is the predictable response of the commanders of the bearded, that of the foremost clean-shaven sympathizer of the Taliban, Imran Khan, is no different. Shaking his head this way and that before a clutch of journalists he said who wouldn’t be outraged by this event...and then immediately brought in drone strikes and root causes.



There are visible beards and there are hidden ones. Lest we forget, Gen Ziaul Haq, was also clean-shaven, although his moustache, until presidential exigencies taught him to trim it, was sinister-looking.



On making a near-saint of Mumtaz Qadri, winner of eternal fame for pumping a magazine of bullets into Salmaan Taseer, no time was lost, by none of the holy fathers. Rallies were brought out in his support and lawyers of ‘Pindi/Islamabad, to their everlasting glory, showered him with rose-petals when he was brought before a magistrate.



I was on TV with the same above-mentioned Mufti Naeem, more power to his eloquence, and it was fascinating watching the circles he made. Javed Jabbar was there too and Iqbal Haider also and they kept saying what a wicked piece of work Taseer’s killing had been. But the Mufti, and there was a leader of the Sunni Tehrik, and they both just couldn’t bring themselves to utter the right words of condemnation.



See how quick off the mark the holy fathers were in the Rimsha Masih blasphemy case. A concocted incident from day one which the local police station chief should have been able to handle if he had his wits about him and a bit of courage but across the country guardians of the cloth reacted as if the faith had been mortally insulted. The farce has been revealed for what it was but notice now the silence of the evangelists – a silence as impressive as the initial clamour.



Notice also the outrage and the burning and killing which occurred on a day designated cynically, by a cynical government, as a day of love for the Holy Prophet. Not the smallest ambiguity there as the storm-troopers of the religious parties marched and destroyed what lay in their path.



But let the gangland-style shooting of a young girl happen, who by her outspokenness and courage had become a symbol of resistance against the Swat Taliban, and the walls of ambiguity go up – holy fathers straining to bring in qualifications whose only purpose is to dilute and dampen the enormity of an outrage that, had it occurred in the time of Omar, the Caliph with his own sword, drawn and flaming, would have avenged. The attempted killing of a 14-year old girl: is it so hard to imagine the wrath of Omar?


Can there be a greater insult to Islam, a bigger act of blasphemy, than invoking its sacred name – yes, the name of Islam – to target a young girl? And yet the Taliban spokesman, his name familiar to all of Pakistan by now, exults in the act. Not only that, but vows to strike again if the girl escapes death this time.



And caught between fear and the wages of expediency the holy fathers take refuge behind two-edged statements. The last circle of hell is reserved for hypocrites, no sin in Islam greater than hypocrisy, but hand it to the professors of the faith for fearing nothing, even though their lectures about the hereafter have to be heard to be savoured in their true setting.



What people are we dealing with? The Taliban are men in arms but what code of chivalry animates them? Young and old die in wars but which military code of honour countenances their deliberate murder? Which military code of honour permits the slitting of throats? Our conflicts are puny compared to the great wars of the 20th century. But where in those wars did any side take pride in the calculated, cold-blooded killing of the young and innocent?



And if Islam be the benchmark, pause for a moment and think of the great Khalid bin Waleed, the incomparable Salahuddin: among a long line of distinguished captains of war, and there has been no shortage of great captains in the history of Islam, how would these two have looked upon the attempted assassination of young Malala? If there are occasions where words fail this is one. But listen to the doctors of divinity and one has to admire the complicated layers of their sophistry.



And if in the world of Imran Khan and the leading warriors of the Defence of Pakistan Council (Gen Pasha, thou hast much to answer for) drone attacks is the big issue, is it not worth asking whether the state of Pakistan is in control of the area where these attacks are occurring? Do we control North Waziristan? If we don’t, shouldn’t lost sovereignty be reclaimed first before a violation of sovereignty is alleged?



In North Waziristan, as we have just had occasion to be reminded, even the great Khan dare not enter...nor Hafiz Saeed, he of the fiery creed. But let this be. Is the shooting of Malala revenge for the drone attacks? Yes or no? And if in the dimmest recesses of confusion the answer is no, then why draw the connection and dig up justifications for something beyond justifying?



This is turning into a demented society. Our responses to so many things – and I dare not name all of them – are not rational or normal. This is what we have done to ourselves, the logical culmination of years of playing with fire and manufacturing demons and Frankensteins we should have had sense enough to understand would come to haunt us and become our worst nightmares.



But the past is the past, never to come back. The example of this young girl may just force us to think where a line must be drawn and how, whatever the risks involved, we must stand up for what is right and uplifting and life-giving if this country is to be rescued and we are to leave our sorrows behind. May the angels speed her recovery.



Email: winlust@yahoo.com
 
is the malala incident the 'straw that broke the camels back' or the strong reaction by the military 'top-brass' just more media 'spin' on finally tackling the TTP?


Military ‘ready for any sacrifice to eliminate terror’

Baqir Sajjad Syed

General Khalid Shameem Wynne, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee presiding over the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee meeting at Joint Staff Headquarters.

ISLAMABAD: Top military body’s declaration on Thursday that it was ready for any sacrifice for eliminating terrorism sparked speculations about the possibility of a major military offensive against Tehrik-i-Taliban and other terror networks operating from tribal areas.

“Participants expressed their satisfaction over the standard of preparedness of Armed Forces to take on the upcoming challenges being faced by the country. It was reiterated that the resolve to fight the menace of terrorism will be kindred and Armed Forces of Pakistan are ready to render any sacrifice therein (sic),” a rather strongly-worded statement from ISPR said after the meeting.

The meeting, chaired by General Khalid Shameem Wynne, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, was attended by Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Asif Sandila, Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal Tahir Rafique Butt, Secretary Defence, Secretary Defence Production, Chief of General Staff, Director-General Joint Staff, Director-General Inter Services Intelligence, Director-General Strategic Plans Division and senior military officers from the three services.

Although there weren’t any specific details in the statement, but it was widely interpreted as a signal from the army to Taliban that it was finally ready to take them on.

Reiterations from the top military leadership, in the past, about their commitment to counter-terrorism had always led to speculations about a major operation against militants being in the offing — the latest being Gen Kayani’s Azadi night speech at the Kakul Academy.

However, as no announcement came from the government or the military, the speculation died out. But the strong reaction
from the military leadership to the attack on Malala has once again triggered talk of a possible operation.

But, back-to-back statements from Army Chief Gen Kayani and Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, the principal military advisory body, and more importantly the raging anger in the country against the atrocious attack on a young activist who stood up for education of girls is being seen as an important development with regard to an all-out operation to flush terrorists out of their hideouts.

Gen Kayani’s late evening meeting with President Zardari made the rumour mills’ work overtime. No statement was issued either by the Presidency or ISPR, but some sources claimed that the two had met to discuss the security situation in the country and a possible response.

“We refuse to bow before terror. We will fight, regardless of the cost, we will prevail Insha Allah,” Gen Kayani had said after visiting Malala Yousufzai at a military hospital in Peshawar.

A top general, who was not authorised to officially speak, while sharing the military’s assessment said: “The situation is ripe, people are themselves asking for operation in North Waziristan.”

He, however, noted that a political decision would be required before initiating the operation.

Military had long avoided involving itself in a campaign in North Waziristan on the pretext that it was engaged in other parts of the tribal region. Now with no major operation taking place except for Orakzai Agency, the army may think it to be feasible to go into the area it had long avoided.

The National Assembly had in its meeting on Wednesday adopted a resolution stating that the house “resolves that until the establishment of peace in the great motherland, the rooting out of terrorists will continue”.

It’s not clear if the operation, whenever it takes place, would be restricted to TTP which claimed responsibility for the attack, and its affiliates or whether Haqqani network’s sanctuaries would also be targeted.

The Rawalpindi kidnapping of a retired brigadier with intelligence background may be yet another indication of things moving fast towards the ultimate face-off.

DAWN
 

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