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  Friday, April 11, 2008, Rabi-ul-Sani 4,1429    

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Editorial

  Burning of lawyers alive

  Taliban’s march on roads of Swat
 
  End to anti-media laws
 

Articles

  Implications of Russian help to NATO
 

  Adumbration of Kashmir policy
 

  Ethical standard of Holy Prophet [PBUH]
 
  Friends for all seasons
 
  Who will tame India?
 
 

Quote of the day

 

There is no such thing as a great talent without great will-power.

 
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   Voice of People
 
  Internet users in quandary

Mohammad Fayyaz

It is through a letter of a reader in a certain newspaper that this writer came to know that now internet users are charged for a fresh local call every 15 minutes while online by the PTCL. This was later on was confirmed from representative via 1236. This PTC step would definitely discourage to a greater extent Internet use, the researchers’ access to information would no longer be freely possible. Common users will get deprived of quickest source of exchange of information, contact with friends and relatives, reading newspapers, and the academic use of the web. I wonder as to who the PTCL has entrusted reasonability for putting forward strange innovatory ploys to extort money from the users’ pockets by using one trick or the other. They introduce one package or the other about every two months to fleece the users of the PTCL. The writer, who at least reads some newspapers, though superficially, has lately come to know about this ‘every-15-mintues-fresh-localcall-charge’ (read ‘extortionist trick’) policy of the PTCL; certainly most others are still unaware of this particular fleecing trick of the PTCL.
When I talked to the representative of the PTCL about this, she explained, though unbelievable, that PTCL has had an agreement with the Internet Service Providers about this and that I should better talk to my Internet Service Provider (ISP) regarding this issue. I retorted as to what an ISP has to do with the issue of local calls via the PTCL but she harped the same string. The PTCL should immediately take back this unwarranted step only to help the users of the internet to use this facility for the obvious purposes written in preceding lines, otherwise this facility will mostly remain unutilized by most the Pakistani internet users.
—Charsadda

  Dastardly acts

Zeenate Nooure Jehan

The manhandling of Arbab Jehangir and DR Sher Afghan Nazi is surely condemnable in strongest possible words. Fortunately Sher Afgan and Arbab Rahim were hale and hearty after unfortunate manhandling, yet the hype created by MQM, MLQ leaders, hatred fanned by few anchorpersons and TV channels was equally condemnable for politicizing it to the advantage of Mr Mushraff,MQM and MLQ.They seem hell-bent to destabilize Sind and Punjab government.
—Karachi

  Comical indeed

Mirza Tuftan Baig

The treatment meted out to Arbab Rahim in Sindh Assembly and later to Dr Sher Afgan Lahore can be termed either sad or a ‘tit for tat.’ Both the gents were the vocal instruments of the previous regime and their tongue lashing against their political adversaries sought no bounds. But one frowns upon the free use of shoe-lashing in return for tongue lashing. And that too, when the shoes lashed the faces of the two men who had a standing in the past. Two events would send shudders in the spines of rest of the former ministers and advisers. It is a warning call for them to watch their steps. People witnessed such scenes even in Japan, Korea, and India. Arbab and Sher Afgan should both take heart and understand that public emotions can sometime overflow to take an ugly turn. It is part of the political process.
—Lahore

  Inquiry report on Ojhri blast

Abdul Karim Janjua

On a bright sunny morning on April 10, 1988, an explosion rocked Rawalpindi. A mushroom cloud of black smoke bellowed up thousands of feet into the sky followed by an incessant rain of rockets and projectiles that continued the whole day. The flying rockets hit unsuspecting people several kilometres away from the scene of the fire in an ammunition depot in Faizabad at the junction of Rawalpinid and Islamabad.
Not many people were even aware that an ammunition depot existed in the midst of a densely populated locality. Many suspected that Pakistan had perhaps been attacked. Some others suspected a mishap at one of the nuclear installations. The blasts continued at almost regular intervals. It was claimed that the blast had been caused by an accident and it was an act of God. Prime Minister Muhammad Khan Junejo publicly declared to hold an inquiry and also to make its findings public. When Junejo insisted that the findings of the official military Court of Inquiry be made public, Zia quickly moved sacking the prime minister and dissolving the assemblies, accusing Junejo of not doing enough to bring Islam to the country.
The explosion may have been an accident or sabotage no one knows. Apparently no one was punished. The top military generals heading the agencies continued in their careers although an elected prime minister and an elected assembly were sacked. A question was asked in the Senate in 2004 as to whether and when the findings of the inquiry into the Ojhery fire would be made public. There was deafening silence for several months. Finally the question was disallowed on the ground that it involved a sensitive and secret issue. Nothing remains secret forever. Twenty years is a long enough period for the inquiry findings to be made public. We owe it to the victims of Ojheri blasts. We owe it to ourselves.
—Via email

  Freedom of media

Col Riaz Jafri [R]

Eitzaz Ahsan was repeatedly seen and heard begging the media men to switch off their cameras and not telecast the thrashing and the beating being given to Mr Sher Afgan Niazi by the lawyers of Lahore.
The SCBA President never requested the media not to cover the minute to minute 25 hour long marathon of a live TV show of him driving the Ex CJP from Pindi to Lahore. Why does he want to curb the freedom of the media now? Let them show this ugly side of the great proponents of the rule of law.
—Rawalpindi

Irrational behaviour

Waheed Mazhar

Every civilised person condemns the deplorable maltreatment meted out to the former chief minister of Sindh, Arbab Ghulam Rahim, on April 7. We desperately expect Pervez Musharraf to reiterate the logic that he used after the tragic murder of Benazir Bhutto that she herself was responsible for the incident. It would absolutely be correct in the case of Arbab Rahim to say that it was his own person and policies as chief minister that caused such resentment, frustration and anger among the people against him.
It was indeed a very regrettable incident but it, however, highlights the consequences of manipulating national institutions and thwarting all possible and lawful means of seeking redress of grievances and wrongs caused to the people either by the highhandedness of the partisan government or by the deliberate indifference of the people who wield power at their whim and in an arbitrary manner. It is quite tragic that those were the norms during Mr Rahim’s tenure as chief minister of Sindh. The people of Pakistan, not only the citizens of Karachi, still remember the tragic massacre of innocent people on May 12, 2007 and the complete indifference of the administration at that time which was headed by Mr Rahim.
The administration even refused to investigate the matter which caused resentment and anger among the masses all over the country. It was quite sad and people still remember that the MQM never chose to boycott the Sindh government over the atrocities of May 12, and now they have rushed to boycott the assembly, which shows the priorities of the popular party of Karachi. It was also observed, quite regrettably indeed, that even before any inquiry or investigation, the electronic media aired biased views of certain people who not only blamed rather gave their final verdict regarding the involvement of the PPP in the incident.
We expect much more responsibility from our media than any other institution because they have the greatest access to the masses, and responsibility demands that they must lay more emphasis on imparting awareness and importance of institutions instead of having resort to sensationalism. In order to avoid such incidents in future, it is the duty of every citizen, political party and institution to emphasise and ensure the proper working of institutions and neither become party nor allow anybody to thwart the working of institutions for ulterior purposes and petty gains, particularly of those institutions which redress the public grievances.
—Lahore

 

 

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