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Malala Yusufzai: Victim of Barbaric Terror and Dirty Politics

This is just an attempt to trigger the hate against Islam that ISLAM doesn't allow women education, and they are successful to an extent. And our media is playing great role in it.

Almost every journalist did late sitting to write an article on the issue, which Fatman sir is posting :)
 
Sir we have always heard similar stories from other side of the border. I am fed up of this good taliban bad taliban theory since the good version of Talibans were busy cutting noses of women, lashing them on the streets or banning girls schools in Afghanistan. The bad talibans in Pakistan also did the same thing with addition of 'attempted' killing a 14 year old girl in the name of Islam.

PS: I am not representing any ideology here and my teachings are not as inhuman as good/bad Talibans where if you disagree, you should be killed. Whatever I am saying is my personal opinion only so you are free to disagree

Sir that cutting nose incident was not done by Taliban stop saying exactly what Americans say Talibans were the ones who made sure that Opium production is reduced to zero they were the ones who created law and order in the Afghanistan
 
This is just an attempt to trigger the hate against Islam that ISLAM doesn't allow women education, and they are successful to an extent. And our media is playing great role in it.

Almost every journalist did late sitting to write an article on the issue, which Fatman sir is posting :)

Islam is a great religion. The TTP has nothing to do with our faith. What Kayani is referring to is the evil fascist ideology of the TTP that was imported from the Saudi Salafis.
 
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.

...........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

Fatman, I find the last sentence of the article intriguing. How do you read it? Is this guy working for the bad guys and got picked up by the military or is he one of the good guys? Why would TTP kidnap a retired officer?
 
If Pakistan army is sincere in eliminating Taliban fitna they should also stop supporting haqqani network and pro-pakistani factions of TTP like mangal bagh's, mullah nazir's etc....All madrassas of maulana fazlur rehaman and maulana samiula haq and other deobandi madrassas in KPK should be strictly monitored.....
 
If I was to draw up a list of TTP sympathizers and supporters(not including militants themselves) it would read as follows:

1. Hameed Gul (and several of his retired cronies)
2. Various members of the Ex-Servicemen Association
3. Jamaat Islami and its affiliates
4. JUI - Samiul Haq
5. Sipaha Sahaba - SSP or ASWJ
6. All Wahabi religious parties(Salafi, Ahle Hadith)


I did'nt add Fazlur Rehman because he is a bit of a phony. A lot of what he says is merely for public consumption. The list clearly illustrates a nexus between Salafi-inspired mullahs and ideologically-driven retired military officers - an outcome of the Jihad Inc. Project spawned and nurtured over the last three decades.

Of course, most people agree there are rogue elements in the military that are TTP sympathizers as well. However, only military insiders have the crediblity to comment on the specifics.
 
The TTP were very clear. They didn't blame the drones or Pakistan army. They said clearly that they targeted her because of her views on education, secularism and liberalism.

Secondly, all the excuses in the world do not justify shooting a 14 year old girl in the head. Even if the TTP had all the legitimate grievances -- which they don't -- it STILL wouldn't justify their actions. If they have a problem with the army or the Americans, they should be man enough to fight them, not attack 14 year old girls.

Two very good points, and I just cannot understand why many people here cannot fathom this. Only a pre-existing sympathy to talibanis or their ideologies can make people adopt these non-justifications and the boogeymen of drone strikes.

I shall repeat what the Developereo said, since it seems so difficult for some people to understand. The TTP sent gunmen from their caves (or wherever they live), to this girl's neighborhood, with the express purpose of shooting and killing her, and anybody who happens to be with her. What exactly is the point of crying about American drone attacks in this context, as if saying "America does bad things" somehow makes these terrorists look good by comparison.

Talking about drones would have some merit if:
a) This girl was a drone operator, or facilitated drone strikes by providing material or moral support to the CIA or US military.
OR:
b) The Taliban was patriotically firing anti aircraft guns at drones, and some of the shrapnel happened to hit this girl inadvertently.

In case of scenario 'b', you could have had a discussion about whether the Taliban should try other methods to deter drones, or whether USA's drone campaign itself is at fault for this incident etc.


Even the big bad USA doesn't use drones against people who blog against the US military or express disapproval of americans. They only do it for identified (or misidentified) high value terrorists, and the civilians who die are collateral damage, and not the intended victims. Now I don't have much of an opinion on drone strikes, and can understand why many Pakistanis detest it and have a legitimate beef with americans for that. But to talk about drone strikes in the context of this particular atrocity is disingenuous at best, and moral bankruptcy on another level. And at worst, that is the mentality that breeds such terrorists and sustains their dubious legitimacy.

To make it clear once more: What the terrorists did (and event they don't deny they did it, only a few members here do) was to attempt the cold blooded murder of a little child, who's only "crime" was to want a better future for herself and her countrywomen, and to express that wish articulately and smartly.

And to the people who have been talking about afghan Taliban being pious freedom fighters unlike the pak Taliban, I ask this. Were you born in the past ten years? Do you have any idea what these a-holes did to women when they ruled Afghanistan? Women's education was completely banned, even women being treated by male doctors (the only kind of doctors available since they came to power) was prohibited unless in extreme emergencies. Women were strictly and completely prohibited from working. Even women with PHDs were forced to secretly prostitute themselves or silently beg for alms, because they could not work, and some of them didn't have male relatives capable of providing for them. Many of them had to commit suicide by ingesting large amounts of baking soda (a particularly painful way to die), because that was the only poison they could afford. Desperate emails used to be circulated in the early days of the internet by some afghan women who managed to have their views heard by acquaintances abroad, detailing these conditions and their horror stories. These were happening long before 9/11, long before the Taliban destroyed millennia old Buddhist statues using mortar and artillery and gained worldwide attention.

What the afghan Taliban are hoping to achieve is that same barbaric "society" that they think is the golden way to live. And the Pakistani Taliban didn't name themselves so by accident - they intend to follow that very same barbaric ideology.
 
If Pakistan army is sincere in eliminating Taliban fitna they should also stop supporting haqqani network and pro-pakistani factions of TTP like mangal bagh's, mullah nazir's etc....All madrassas of maulana fazlur rehaman and maulana samiula haq and other deobandi madrassas in KPK should be strictly monitored.....
First who support Pakistan and are not fighting against us should be supported not eliminated and those who do have to be isolated only than we can win the war
 
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

Despite the fact that Taliban Spokesman has been issuing claims and justifications for attack on Malala, I can quote you posts by members of this august forum who have firm belief that it is all a hoax. Taliban never attacked Malala; media is doing all this to malign Muslim Taliban and the name of Islam.

How could one expect Mufti Naeem of Binori Madrasah to condemn Taliban openly? Many of the Taliban leaders have been students there.

We keep blaming the West for double standards with some justification. It is a great shame but one cannot deny the truth; we are a nation full of hypocrites and double standards as well.
 
Despite the fact that Taliban Spokesman has been issuing claims and justifications for attack on Malala, I can quote you posts by members of this august forum who have firm belief that it is all a hoax. Taliban never attacked Malala; media is doing all this to malign Muslim Taliban and the name of Islam.

How could one expect Mufti Naeem of Binori Madrasah to condemn Taliban openly? Many of the Taliban leaders have been students there.

We keep blaming the West for double standards with some justification. It is a great shame but one cannot deny the truth; we are a nation full of hypocrites and double standards as well.

Did you see the Hamid Mir program on Geo yesterday?

The Maulvi was trying his best to label it as a conspiracy.

That US attacked her to provoke Pakistan into NW. And alot of other stupid statements.

I still don't think that the Maulvi yesterday really understood the significance of symbolism in this whole issue. Instead, he tries to deviate the topic onto drones, and still spare the TTP and save himself from saying clearly something against TTP.

Saddening to see is that people like Fazlullah Diesel will still be elected by those people in KPK, and he will still instill a little bit of pro TTP thinking.
 
Did you see the Hamid Mir program on Geo yesterday?

The Maulvi was trying his best to label it as a conspiracy.

That US attacked her to provoke Pakistan into NW. And alot of other stupid statements.

I still don't think that the Maulvi yesterday really understood the significance of symbolism in this whole issue. Instead, he tries to deviate the topic onto drones, and still spare the TTP and save himself from saying clearly something against TTP.

Saddening to see is that people like Fazlullah Diesel will still be elected by those people in KPK, and he will still instill a little bit of pro TTP thinking.
many of these so called mullahs are wolves in wolves clothing ...........
 
Isn't this incident being blown out of proportion? I mean just yesterday the US drones murdered over 18 and injured over 15 in Orakzai Agency and the whole country is crying over 1 girl??? A girl who might have been better off living diplomatically amongst those who do not understand civilized ways of arguments on top of that!
 
Military ‘ready for any sacrifice to eliminate terror’

While a military offensive will achieve some good and I appreciate the work of our soldiers, I am less concerned about it because the animals will simply run across the border and come back in a few months.

What needs to happen -- and this is 100% the media's job -- is to make sure everyone in the region understands what kind of barbarians these people are and no one is willing to help them in any way.

Ultimately, as Imran Khan keeps pointing out, the solution is to change the mindset of the people, and this tragedy is the kind of emotional event that can get the point across.
 
PESHAWAR: A spokesman for the Swat Taliban has threatened to kill 14-year-old schoolgirl Malala Yousufzai’s father after a failed attempt to assassinate his daughter, said a report by Reuters.

Sirajuddin Ahmad, a spokesman for “Radio Mullah” Maulana Fazlullah’s Swat Taliban which previously had control over the Swat region, told Reuters that two killers from Fazlullah’s special hit squad had been sent to target the young schoolgirl.

The Swat Taliban militia, known to work under the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) umbrella, has a force of around 100 men specialised in targeted killing, fighters said. They chose two men, aged between 20 to 30, who were locals from Swat Valley, Reuters quoted the fighters as saying.

“We had no intentions to kill her but were forced when she would not stop (speaking against us),” said spokesman Sirajuddin Ahmad, now based in Afghanistan’s Kunar province.

Ahmed said the Taliban held a meeting a few months ago at which they unanimously agreed to kill her. The task was then given to military commanders to carry out.

In another report, the Associated Press quoted the spokesman as saying that the meeting of the Taliban leadership was held two months ago.

AP further quotes Sirajuddin Ahmed as saying that Malala Yousufzai was warned three times to stop her activities promoting “Western thinking,” but she did not. The last warning was conveyed a week ago, Ahmed told an AP reporter.

A military offensive had pushed Fazlullah out of Swat in 2009, but his men had melted away across the border to Afghanistan.

Earlier this year, Fazlullah’s men kidnapped and beheaded 17 Pakistani soldiers in one of several cross border raids.

“Before the attack, the two fighters personally collected information about Malala’s route to school, timing, the vehicle she used and her security,” Reuters quoted Ahmed as saying.

They decided to shoot her near a military checkpoint to make the point they could strike anywhere, he said.

On Tuesday, the two men stopped the bus she was riding home in. They asked for Yousufzai by name. Although the frightened girls said she wasn’t there, the men fired at her and also hit two other girls in the van. One of them remains in critical condition.

Now that they had failed to kill Yousufzai, they would target her father, Ahmad told Reuters.

Ziauddin Yousufzai, the headmaster of a girls’ school, is on their hit list for speaking against them, his activities to promote peace in the region and for encouraging his daughter.

“We have a clear-cut stance. Anyone who takes side with the government against us will have to die at our hands,” Ahmad warned. “You will see. Other important people will soon become victims.”

Earlier, TTP central spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan had already claimed responsibility for the assassination attempt on the young schoolgirl. However, it is unclear why the Swat Taliban spokesman Sirajuddin Ahmad has come out with this statement after an earlier statement by the TTP central spokesman.

Taliban
 

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