Thursday, December 20, 2007

Picture of secret jailing emerging in Pakistan

Nearly 100 freed, told to keep quiet, but stories coming out

Carlotta Gall

The New York Times (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/12/20/MNB6U1083.DTL)

Pakistan's military and intelligence agencies, apparently trying to avoid acknowledging an elaborate secret detention system, have quietly set free nearly 100 men suspected of links to terrorism, few of whom were charged, human rights groups and lawyers say.

Those released, they say, are some of the nearly 500 Pakistanis presumed to have disappeared into the hands of the Pakistani intelligence agencies cooperating with the United States' fight against terrorism since 2001.

No official reason has been given for the releases, but as pressure has mounted to bring the cases into the courts, the government has decided to jettison some suspects and thereby spare itself the embarrassment of having to reveal that people have been held on flimsy evidence in the secret system, its opponents say.

Interviews with lawyers and human rights officials and a review of cases and court records by the New York Times show how scraps of information have accumulated over recent months into a body of evidence of the detention system.

In at least two other instances, detainees were handed over to the United States without any legal extradition proceedings, Pakistani lawyers and human rights groups say. U.S. officials here and in Washington refused to comment on the cases.

"They are releasing them because these cases are being made public," said Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui, a lawyer working at the Supreme Court who has taken up many of the cases of the missing. "They want to avoid the publicity."

In addition, human rights groups and lawyers contend, the government has swept up at least 4,000 other Pakistanis, most Baluchi and Sindhi nationalists campaigning for ethnic or regional autonomy who have nothing to do with the U.S. campaign against terrorism.

In total, human rights groups and lawyers describe the disappearances as one of the grimmest aspects of Pervez Musharraf's presidency, and one that shows no sign of slowing.

Under previous governments, "there were one or two cases, but not the systematic disappearances by the intelligence agencies under Musharraf," said Iqbal Haider, secretary-general of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, an independent nonprofit organization.

The Pakistani government denies detaining people illegally and says that many of the missing are actually in regular jails on criminal charges, while other cases have been fabricated.

The issue of the missing became one of the most contentious between Musharraf and the Supreme Court under its former chief justice, Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry.

The releases are particularly galling to lawyers because as one justification for imposing emergency rule on Nov. 3, Musharraf accused the courts of freeing terrorism suspects. That decree was lifted Saturday, but the former chief justice and other judges were dismissed and remain in detention. The Supreme Court hearings on the missing have been halted.

While Musharraf criticized the court as being soft on terrorists, court records show that Chaudhry was less interested in releasing terrorism suspects than in making sure their cases entered the court system.

He said at each hearing that his primary concern was for the families of the missing, who were suffering great anguish not knowing where their loved ones were.

His main aim was to regularize the detention of the missing, not to free them, Siddiqui said. "Not a single person who was convicted was released on the Supreme Court's order," he said.

Detainees have been warned on their release not to speak to anyone about their detention, yet fragments of their experiences have filtered out through relatives and their lawyers. A few even appeared in court and told their stories, and it became increasingly clear that the "disappeared" men had in fact been held in military or intelligence agency cells around the country, often for several years without being charged.

Still, the government denies detaining people illegally or torturing them. Brig. Javed Iqbal Cheema, a spokesman for the Ministry of Interior and leader of the national crisis management cell that deals with terrorism, said many of the men said to be missing had been found in jails or police cells and had been charged with crimes.

Others, he said, may have gone to the hills or Afghanistan to fight and died there. Still others, he suggested, were fabricated. "Let me assure you that there's a lot of politics going on into the missing persons also," he said.

Critics say that abuses continue. The director of the human rights commission, I.A. Rehman, said the government had set up a nearly invisible detention system. "There are safe houses in Islamabad where people are kept," he said, citing accounts from the police and those who have been freed. "Police have admitted this, flats are taken on rent, property is seized, people are tortured there."

In some cases, detainees recounted that they had been interrogated in the presence of English-speaking foreigners, who human rights officials and lawyers suspect are Americans.

A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman said she could not comment on the allegations and referred all questions to Washington. A spokesman for the CIA, Mark Mansfield, declined to comment on Rehman's accusations, or on any specific detainees.

One detainee, a Jordanian named Marwan Ibrahim, who was arrested in a raid in Lahore, where he had been living for 10 years, said he was sent to a detention center in Afghanistan run by Americans, then to Jordan and Israel, and was finally released in Gaza, according to an account Ibrahim gave to Human Rights Watch, another independent group.

Another detainee, Majid Khan, 27, a Pakistani computer engineer who disappeared from Karachi four years ago, surfaced April 15 this year before a military tribunal in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. His American lawyers say he was subjected to torture in CIA detention in a secret location. Mansfield, the CIA spokesman, declined to comment, except to say that the "CIA's terrorist interrogation effort has always been small, carefully run, lawful and highly productive."

"Fewer than 100 hardened terrorists have gone through the program since it began in 2002," he said, "and, of those, less than a third required any enhanced interrogation measures."

As more and more such accounts have come to light, Musharraf has fought vigorously to keep the details of Pakistan's secret detentions hidden.

A week into emergency rule, he passed a decree amending the 1952 Army Act to allow civilians to be tried by military tribunals for general offenses. The tribunals are closed to the public and offer no right of appeal.

The amendment was made retroactive to January 2003. Haider of the human rights commission said the amendment was to cover the illegal detentions by the intelligence agencies. "These agencies have gone berserk, and Musharraf is legitimizing their acts," he said.

Cheema, the Interior Ministry spokesman, acknowledged that prosecutors and investigators had had difficulty pinning crimes on detainees. Hundreds of people in Guantanamo have not been charged either, he pointed out. The Army Act amendment would resolve much of the problem, he said.

"Sometimes it becomes difficult to prove a case, but you have reasons that a person poses a threat to humanity and to society," he said.

The intervention of the Supreme Court under Chaudhry was undoubtedly exposing this system of secret detentions.

He first took up the cases of the missing in 2006, demanding that the government trace the detainees and account for them.

His steady requests for information from senior police, Interior Ministry and military officials in court helped to trace nearly 100 detainees. Most of those were subsequently released without charges.

"This was very embarrassing to the government because the people who were supposed to be found and released, they told all their stories," said Rehman, the director of the human rights commission.

Amina Masood Janjua, who has led a campaign to trace the missing, first learned about news of her husband, who disappeared in July 2005, from a written account by another detainee. Later the detainee, Imran Munir, was produced in court and told her he had been held in the military base at Chaklala, in Rawalpindi, and saw her husband in another cell.

Another detainee, Hafiz Muhammad Tahir, was brought before the court and told the judges he had been ordered by the police to give a false account of his detention and charges against him, Janjua said. In fact he had been held secretly for three years without charge. The chief justice ordered him to be freed, and he was released the same day.

But only four or five detainees ever appeared before the Supreme Court. The majority of the 100 detainees released this year have been freed surreptitiously by the police and intelligence agencies, lawyers and human rights officials said.

"They cannot admit that they had these people because they have no charges against them, no documentation," Janjua said.

Thwarting Justice Khwaja Sharif

Justice Khwaja Muhammad Sharif, Poker, Snow-white’s Whirling Rings of Cigarette Smoke – Going Crazy

Omer. G

Justice Khwaja Sharif of the Lahore High Court, one of those judges who refused to take oath under the PCO, was supposed to give a talk at Aiwan e Adal Lahore, at 10 30am today, Tuesday. Lawyers had planned to take him in the form of a procession from his house in S Block DHA to Aiwan e Adal. Students also had token representation to express solidarity with the judges. At around nine in the morning, a friend who was gracious enough to wake up at this early hour (considering the usual owl-like routine in our university) drove me to the place.

Looking around, we found street after street blockaded. In the vast leafy and quit streets of DHA, polices blockades, manned by policemen in riot gear, presented a very depressing sight. The regime’s PR team is doing a pathetic job. They are not giving us any excuse to believe their claim that the emergency has been lifted. With riot police blockading posh neighborhoods, what kind of a fool will believe that things are back to normal. I asked a senior-sounding police officer standing at one of the barricades about where Justice Sharif’s residence was. He pointed to a street. We went in there and then further until we found another blockade, then another. The policeman was a liar. He had standing right at the opening of Justice Sharif’s street while misguiding me. In any case, I asked the policemen at the other barricade about whether they were there to prevent Justice sahib from coming out. They nodded. At least, they weren’t lying this time. I had a brief chat with them. Then, I walked into another street. I greeted a man just walking past me and asked him how he felt about what was being done to his neighbor Justice Sharif. “It’s wrong, of course.” he said angrily, resuming, “How can there be two views about this?” Then, he went away. After that, I waylaid a middle-aged woman engaged in what appeared to be her daily morning walk, and asked her the same question.

Her expression was part vacant, part melancholic, a queer mixture. She answered, after a pause: “It’s your fault; you the younger generation”. She repeated this again and again. I felt as if wanted to agree with her, adding “You too, ma’am” By this time, I ran into a young reporter from ARY. I said salam and told him that I has was there for the same reason as he was. He told me to go to the Caltex petrol pump nearby, where I would found others of my sort.

We drove out to the Caltex petrol station. There was no one there. I tried calling up some lawyers. One of them told me to call later because his plane was just landing in Lahore or Karachi. The other one told me that it was the Lahore Bar President who would know what was to be done now. Nonetheless, by that time, we could see black coats on the other side of the road. My friend had a class to attend, so he left.

More lawyers gathered until there were around fifty. Then, we walked as a rally, passing through a few streets of Defence Housing Authority, chanting slogans like “yeh general, colonel bay ghayret”, we made our way to the first blockade. The lawyers were quick to push the police and, after some resistance, managed to cross the first barbed wire. That moment, I felt very elated. Just yesterday, at a Students’ rally, the police had been much harder to negotiate with. Today, we had pushed them, at least one bit.

The next blockade, however, was harder. We tried very hard but the police refused to budge. Ultimately all we could make them concede was to allow just a few Lawyer leaders and a few media people to go and present the bouquet that the lawyers had brought for Justice Sharif. All this while, the lawyers kept making a lot of noise, and kept pushing and shoving, but weren’t allowed in. Who says the Judges are free to move?

By that time, despite frantic messaging, only four SAC members were there, while six or seven Jamiat Talaba representatives had also joined in. The Jamiat Talaba members were quite noticeable for their aggressive manner of dealing with the police. Ultimately, however, despite the students’ insistence, no student was allowed to go and meet Justice Sharif.

After a while, Justice Sharif’s son came and addressed the gathering from the other side of the blockade. He conveyed the Honorable judge’s message for the lawyers and civil society at large: Assault against the judiciary will be resisted by the deposed judges, even if it demanded the sacrifice of lives. The judges appreciate the support everyone is showing and they plan to hold fast. Justice Sharif’s son agreed to accompany the lawyers to Aiwan e Adal and speak in lieu of his besieged father.

By that time, I too had to leave for a class. I ran back all the way to LUMS. It took just five minutes or so. Back in LUMS, life was going on just as usual. As I passed a bench, crammed by quite a few guys and girls, dressed up in the latest fashionable western wear brands, I could overhear talk of poker. Poker, I thought, deserved a lot of attention. It’s all about poker, isn’t it.

Near the PDC, basking in the sunlight, a tall, slender, snow-white girl with long flowing ash-brown locks was sitting, smoking a cigarette, holding it between her long, thin, white, soft-looking fingers. She could not have been blowing ring with cigarette smoke, but it looked as though she did. Later, she was rolling something silver between her palms, completely absorbed in her task. For a moment, I thought she was rolling a joint, although at second thoughts, I dismissed the suspicion – you couldn’t do it so publicly. On any ordinary day, she would have looked so irresistibly beautiful. But that moment, smoking in that superbly insular frame of mind, she looked sickly.

I looked at her, and the people back at the bench, and all the merry crowd in between them and I thought about Munshi Prim Chand and his short story about Wajid Ali Shah, the last Nawab of Lucknow. One day, out of nowhere, British soldiers came in, passed by a few absorbed chess players, arrested the Nawab, dragged him through the streets passing by the chess player again, and went away. A lot of things that Muslim India had been proud of, went away with him, never to return. The chess-players, in their insular frame of mind, they did not so much as notice. Is it all about chess? I thought about this and a lot of other things and then my head began swimming – that moment, everything around me looked very sickly.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

A telling account of the Islamabad violence

A detainee in the Islamabad protest speaks
Kamil N.
On midnight of December 15th, President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan officially lifted emergency rule.

Let us forget for now, that the judiciary has been deposed of and that his own puppet judges have now been installed. Let us forget that the constitution of this nation has been treated as if it were a cheap, common whore, to be used and abused at will, changed and altered to justify what Musharraf has done and to grant him more power than ever more. Let us forget that the military, with its new "Army Act" now has the power to court martial civilians in military courts, with no chance of appeals (yes, carried forward from the emergency). Let us forget that, the shedding of his uniform, the lifting of the emergency, all of this is meaningless, since Musharraf had managed to garuntee that he stays in power for at least 5 more years. We were told that Pakistan would "return" to its "road to democracy" after the emergency had been lifted. This is the same "democracy" that Musharraf claims to have been leading us to for the past 8 years.

Allow me now, to show you, my friends, just what "democracy" truly means for Musharraf and for his masters (a.k.a. The United States of America and their lapdogs).

December 17th, 2007 was the day that 280 odd citizens in Islamabad managed to demolish any and all multi-million-dollar worth propaganda that the Pakistani government had been trying to put up regarding how the country would become "peaceful" and "democratic" once the emergency had been lifted. It would have been an ordinary, everyday protest. We marched down the Blue Area road, towards the parliament, accompanied by the police. As we neared the turn to the Geo office, we decided that it was high time to put President Pervez Musharraf's word to the test: Were the deposed judges of Pakistan really "free" to travel around the country as he claimed?

The moment we tried to turn left towards the judges' colony, the police tried to block us. We pushed past them, and that was that: They attacked us.

To call it chaos would be an understatement. They hit us with their laathis (long, stout wooden sticks) and rammed us with their shields. An APC screeched up and down the road, lobbing tear gas shells at us. The air was soon thick with the substance, making us feel as though as our eyes were going to burn out of our sockets and our lungs were about to collapse. We realized that a few of our own had been beaten so brutally that they had succumbed to the tear gas and had simply fainted right there in the middle of the green belt area where we had fled to from the road where the police had chased us off from. It could not have been in a worse location, so some of us ran back, coughing and choking, to lift them up and bring them back.

The police were charging at us from all directions yelling and screaming, attacking anyone they could get their hands on. To make matters worse, some students began pelting the police with stones. However, what the newspapers NEGLECT to mention is that most of us, i.e. the organizers and others students were beside ourselves with rage when this happened. We screamed ourselves hoarse and tried to stop them.

These students were NOT part of the original protest; they seem to have simply "appeared" out of nowhere. Earlier, they were seen harassing some of the journalists covering the protests, fairly odd considering that we wanted this to be fully covered. It is likely that these "students" were not students at all. Their agenda? Thrill seeking? Seems a bit passé, no? At times like this, I wouldn't exclude the idea that they were agents of the government deliberately placed among us to stir up the situation and instigate violence.

The police used this opportunity as an excuse to beat us even more brutally and lob more tear gas. They even threw stones of their own at us, and injured a few of us very badly.

Things came to a head when the SP was hit on the head (no pun intended) with a large rock. The police came charging into the woods like a wave of black, screaming and clashing their batons against the trees. We had no choice but to disperse and only around 20 of us managed to head up north to the judges' colony. When we got there, we found a "welcoming committee" in the form of around 300+ policemen waiting for us. We were surrounded before we knew it. Despite this we refused to wait quietly. We continued with our slogans and one of us stood up and, in front of the entire gathered "crowd" gave a speech decrying what had happened.

Then, before we knew it the anti-terrorist squad (yes ladies and gentlemen, the anti-terrorist squad) had grabbed us from behind and shoved us all into a prison bus that had pulled up silently behind.

Even as we were driven to the thana (holding cell), we refused to keep quiet. We yelled our slogans and decried the police every time we saw them.

At the thana, they eventually separated the men and women. When some women who had escaped the protest earlier came to see if we could be released, they too were arrested. They were not doing ANYTHING but inquiring about our release. The women were eventually taken to another thana in the G-7 sector, for women.

They kept us all locked together in a small holding cell (there were around 30 of us) and took away our mobile phones. By this time our families had heard about what had happened and had gathered outside to try and see if we could be released.

Several hours later, an agreement was reached: The students would be released.
Although we objected to this, saying that we wanted everyone released together, we were encouraged to leave and not be "martyrs".

They kept most of those men, some of them over 50+ overnight. That cell had absolutely no heating and a stone floor with only straw mats to sleep on. In winters, temperatures can reach 0 degrees centigrade in the mornings, which is a cause of great concern for those of us who were released. These were men who had been beaten earlier and some needed medical attention. We were told that they would be released by the morning of the 18th.

But I can't blame these policemen. They were only doing their job. They had been ordered to do what they did, as brutal as it was.

What was done on December 17th was only another example of the sheer desperation of the Pakistani government and the brutality it is willing to use against its own citizens. And all this with the emergency lifted and the constitution restored!

So, where does this leave us? At least now we have no illusions: The upcoming elections WILL be rigged and this "emergency" has not been lifted at all.

The excuse of "terrorists in the North" is another farce that has been used time and time again by the Pakistani army to justify its actions. These same militants were spawned BY the army decades ago, just like the Taliban in Afghanistan were by the United States of America. It's the same case of using ones own monster as an excuse to justify these actions.

Fund for slain Journalist Hayatullah Khan's children

Hayat Ullah Khan was a Pakistani journalist who was the first one to photograph the wreckage of a US missile that killed Pakistani civilians inside Pakistani territory. After reporting on this, he disappeared in December 2005. He was shot dead and his body was found in June 2006 in the North Waziristan region. His wife had protested against his abduction and murder. She also died when a US bomb blew up near her house.


Hayat Ullah Khan was awarded the International Press Freedom Award by the Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE). The death of both parents has left behind five children aged 2 to 10. A fund to help the children has been set up by the Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE). Mohsin Abbas, a friend of Hayat Ullah Khan, makes sure the money from the fund goes to the children. A six-year-old Canadian girl recently donated money to the fund from her own pocket after she heard the story of the slain journalist in school, read more about it below.


To read more about the work of Hayat Ullah Khan visit http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/search/tribal/

Re-inventing Pakistan's Presidency

Dr. Haider Mehdi
(Courtesy The Nation)

“No culture has ever expected its leaders to be saints; in fact, some cultures have prized leadership that is decidedly un-saintly,” wrote an eminent academic, an expert in media and democracy.

Conceptualizations of the political character of leadership have changed since the inception of the idea of democracy which was founded in the ancient Greek “Republic,” when leadership character was defined in Aristotelian terms: “an observable collection of habits, virtues and vices.” In modern times, a significant and fundamental contribution added to Aristotle’s definition was made by Sigmund Freud. Freudian psychology has altered that definition to include “motivation, the subconscious and relationships that help to form all of us as people.” Consequently, political leadership is a sum total of observable personal habits as well as an aggregate of personality traits rooted in an overall development from childhood cognitive factors to career advancement to how a person steers through life – a complex combination of attitudes, motivations, ascribed moral values, self-perception, the perpetual view of others and the nature of interaction with them. Hence, political leadership in the modern sense is a holistic view of a leader’s overall personality development with special emphasis on the notion of what motivates such a person to what he/she does in the realm of political life.

Just like the world at large, the Pakistani masses do not expect their leaders to be saints. However, consciously or unconsciously, whatever the case, the majority of people have come to realize that leaders cannot be taken at face value or for what they say as symbolic rhetoric on a daily basis. The masses are now aware that a political leader’s “motivations” (hidden from visual observations) are the basic ingredient in how they conduct themselves and how they run the business of the state. For example, a self-centered leader bent on prolonging his/her rule or a leader with anti-democratic attitudes is obviously driven by personal motivational forces that do not serve the public’s interests and are consistently opposed and contradictory to the people’s welfare. Therefore, the masses have come to understand and question their present and past leaders’ intentions – they are looking through the prism of leaders’ personal motivational agendas and openly showing contempt and rejection of their politics.

Just like the world at large, the Pakistani masses do not expect their leaders to be saints. However, consciously or unconsciously, whatever the case, the majority of people have come to realize that leaders cannot be taken at face value or for what they say as symbolic rhetoric on a daily basis. The masses are now aware that a political leader’s “motivations” (hidden from visual observations) are the basic ingredient in how they conduct themselves and how they run the business of the state. For example, a self-centered leader bent on prolonging his/her rule or a leader with anti-democratic attitudes is obviously driven by personal motivational forces that do not serve the public’s interests and are consistently opposed and contradictory to the people’s welfare. Therefore, the masses have come to understand and question their present and past leaders’ intentions – they are looking through the prism of leaders’ personal motivational agendas and openly showing contempt and rejection of their politics.

No wonder then that the incumbent ruler of Pakistan, having been in the highest office of the state – the presidency – for eight years, is completely shut out of the public’s hearts and minds. The fact is that no matter what Pervez Musharraf does now or for the rest of his political career, he will never be restored in the public’s eyes. Nor would such a restoration be possible for Ayub Khan, Yahya Khan , or Zia-ul-Haq. The Pakistani presidency is in the ultimate crisis of confidence, distrust and historical evaluation by the public at large. The presidency in Pakistan needs to be re-invented.

The Pakistani masses do not wish the incumbent holder of the presidency or leaders like past military dictators to be in the presidency again (Just like Musharraf, Ayub Khan, Yahya Khan , and Zia-ul-Haq all claimed political and constitutional legitimacy.). People want a Pakistani Nelson Mandela to lead this nation. They want a leader in the presidency that acknowledges the significance of the historical moment in the life of this nation, a commitment to the general public’s welfare and an exceptionally selfless attitude towards public life. They want a president above and beyond personal interests and manipulative politics -- a leader who has an absolute determination for the respect of constitutional democratic norms and fully complies with the principles of ethical political conduct. They want a president who will demonstrate complete understanding and respect for public sentiment and have zero-tolerance of self-propelled ego-centric political behavior. Pakistanis do not wish to be served by a ‘messiah’ in the presidency (that all military dictators have claimed to be), but they expect a leader who will work tirelessly for emancipating the masses (as opposed to women emancipation only) from poverty, illiteracy, lack of health services, polluted cities, unemployment, inequitable social injustice and the restoration of national self-respect, self-reliance and full sovereignty over matters of the nation’s internal and external affairs. The public expects a president to liberate them from the yoke of the American connection and break the traditional colonial pattern of diplomatic relations with the West. The people expect to live in their own country with self-respect and dignity.

The Pakistani masses do not wish the incumbent holder of the presidency or leaders like past military dictators to be in the presidency again (Just like Musharraf, Ayub Khan, Yahya Khan , and Zia-ul-Haq all claimed political and constitutional legitimacy.). People want a Pakistani Nelson Mandela to lead this nation. They want a leader in the presidency that acknowledges the significance of the historical moment in the life of this nation, a commitment to the general public’s welfare and an exceptionally selfless attitude towards public life. They want a president above and beyond personal interests and manipulative politics -- a leader who has an absolute determination for the respect of constitutional democratic norms and fully complies with the principles of ethical political conduct. They want a president who will demonstrate complete understanding and respect for public sentiment and have zero-tolerance of self-propelled ego-centric political behavior. Pakistanis do not wish to be served by a ‘messiah’ in the presidency (that all military dictators have claimed to be), but they expect a leader who will work tirelessly for emancipating the masses (as opposed to women emancipation only) from poverty, illiteracy, lack of health services, polluted cities, unemployment, inequitable social injustice and the restoration of national self-respect, self-reliance and full sovereignty over matters of the nation’s internal and external affairs. The public expects a president to liberate them from the yoke of the American connection and break the traditional colonial pattern of diplomatic relations with the West. The people expect to live in their own country with self-respect and dignity.

The presidency in Pakistan has to be re-invented:

1. From now on, with the new legitimate and constitutionally accepted president to-be, the term of office for the president should remain only 4 years, non-extendable (remember Nelson Mandela, after 27 years of national liberation struggle, chose only a 4 year presidential term). The presidency must be elected by direct public vote.

2. From now on, military generals (serving or retired) shall be constitutionally barred from the office of the presidency.

3. From now on, the development of the presidency’s relationship to power and authority shall be regulated purely by strict legislative measures.

4. From now on, in order to streamline clause (3), the presidency shall have no powers to make appointments of the armed forces chiefs, judges of the apex courts or ambassadors. The presidency shall have only powers to recommend or nominate candidates for such positions. The relevant Parliamentary Committees must approve such recommendations with the presidency having no authority to veto the committee’s non-approval.


5. From now on, the presidency must demonstrate flexibility, adaptability and purposefulness by mature political judgments in all matters of national discourse. The presidency must obtain prior approvals of all of its political initiatives from the parliament.

6. From now on, the presidency shall have no powers to impose martial law, issue ordinances, and dismiss judges of the apex courts or order military operations within Pakistan territory.

7. From now on, the presidency shall have a credible manifesto on establishing direct contact with the masses.

8. From now on, the presidency’s public relationship manifesto must have detailed explanations of how the public’s sense of trust will be maintained in this institution.

9. From now on, the presidency shall have no powers to curb the mass media, regulate freedom of speech and expression or exercise overall control over the broadcasting air-waves. Neither shall the president have a monopolistic presence in the media.

10. From now on, the presidency shall not be the sole spokesperson for national policies, or the making of such policies, both internally and externally. All such powers shall remain vested in the parliament and made operational through the head of the elected government. The presidency shall remain in an advising role.

Demanding sainthood standards of conduct from political leadership is neither desirable nor advisable. But given the history of presidential excesses in Pakistan, this proposal sets the minimum reform expectations for the future democratically-elected presidency of this country.

In re-inventing the presidency, the Pakistani civil society must remain vibrant and engage itself in a deep exploration of the political character of anyone who wishes to occupy the presidency. This will help Pakistanis think deeply about what they, as a political system, mean by and need from leadership.

Indeed, the moment has arrived to change the equations of power in Pakistan from a single entity to the public domain…! Won’t you join in this struggle?

SAC Lahore vigil tomorrow to express solidarity with Islamabad students

The Student Action Committe (Lahore) is holding a candle light vigil starting outside Neher Ghar, 5 zaman park, (close to Aitzez Ihsans house).

This is being held for those in Islamabad who were brutalized, tear gassed, baton charged or arrested on Dec 17th.

Please join us in this act of solidarity and committment that we are all in this together. The agencies, authorities and the regime need to be retold that these voices will be heard, that we will not be silenced, we will not be threatened.

Come light a candle with SAC (Lahore) and other supporters for those in need.

Student Action Committee (Lahore)

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Demo outside Karachi Press Club

Urooj
Around 60 people gathered outside the Karachi Press Club at 03:00 p.m. today to register their protests against the treatment meted out to the Students Action Committee (SAC) rally in Islamabad. The demonstration was jointly organised by the CMKP and the Labour Party of Pakistan (LPP). The call was endorsed by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), International Socialists Pakistan (ISPak), and Peoples Resistance (PR).

Policemen and Rangers personnel had brutally baton-charged and tear-gassed an SAC rally in Islamabad on December 17. Scores were injured, and 40 were arrested. Sixteen of them are yet to be released, and FIRs have been lodged against all of them under Section 144 of the PPC. Tuesday's demonstration in Karachi condemned the State's unprovoked (yes, unprovoked) brutality in Islamabad.

The police mysteriously stayed away from us today, though, even though the demo would count as "agitation." In any case, the best part of the entire demo was that it was a total surkha scene, full of slogans in favour of a Socialist inquilaab! A lot of anti-Musharraf slogans were shouted, including the usual "lathi goli ki sarkar" and "mukk gya tera show Musharraf."

A number of Sindhi naaras also came up. There was one that sounded like: "Musharraf-e-khosa -- Jehova!" (Forgive me for mistakes here please!) We are extremely grateful to everyone who responded to the call at such a short notice, and we apologise for the timings ka confusion. *embarrassed cough*

All in all, it was a VERY successful demonstration. The message that was sent across was clear: We will NOT tolerate the State's bullshit anymore. Wanton brutality is NOT going to stop us. The struggle is going to continue until the judiciary is restored to the pre-November 3 status, and True Democracy is implemented in the country. The State cannot hide behind lies anymore. We know that the lifting of the Martial Law and the upcoming elections are all a farce. We refuse to be fooled anymore. Above all, today's demonstration was another response to The Turd (aka General Musharraf) ka statement about how "agitation would not be tolerated." As always, here's a message to The Turd: "No agitation? UP YOURS, General!!!" :-P The battle has just begun, comrades, and we have to prepare ourselves for a long war. Let's SOCK it to the oppressors!!!

Kiunkey ZINDA hai yeh qaum -- Zinda hai!!! Power to the People!!!

In Complete Solidarity

APDM vows to continue struggle

(Courtesy GEO News)
Chief Muttahida Majlis-e-Ammal, Qazi Hussain Ahmed has said that a country-wide movement has been started for boycotting the upcoming elections.Addressing All Parties Democratic Movement’s first convention here on Tuesday, Qazi said the January 8 polls are a fake and, therefore, urged all the parties to boycott the same. He also appealed to the people not to participate in the elections process.

APDM demands restoration of 1973 Constitution to the position of pre-October 1999.

On the occasion, Chairman Tehreek-i-Insaf, Imran Khan, said Nawaz Sharif, Benazir Bhutto and Maulana Fazl-ur-Rehman are engaged in strengthening President Pervez Musharraf and that they have betrayed the nation as well as lawyers and judges.Chief of Pashtunkhwa Mili Awami Party, Mehmood Achakzai, Chief Sindh Taraqi Pasand Party, Dr. Qadir Magsi, Rasool Buksh Paleejo, Hai Baloch, Abid Hussain Munto, Hamid Gul, Hamid Khan, Ghulam Mustafa Khar and other leaders also spoke on the occasion. All of them announced to continue the struggle against dictatorship.

A joint announcement was also issued on the occasion which demanded restoration of 1973 Constitution and judiciary, media’s freedom of expression, supremacy of parliament, halting the continuing military operations in different parts of the country, resolving Balochistan issue through dialogue, granting of autonomy to the provinces and relinquishment of the President’s post by Pervez Musharraf.

The Real Chief Justice condemns police action in Islamabad

Deposed Chief Justice of Pakistan, Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry on Monday strongly condemned the brutal torture of Media, Students and Civil Society by the police outside the Judges Enclave. Atharminallah, eminent lawyer an e-mail of the deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, who vowed to continue his struggle for the supremacy of law and the Constitution. In the email, the deposed Chief Justice, expressing his solidarity with all the segments of the society, promised, " We will fight till last breath for the supremacy of 'un-tampered' Constitution of 1973 and rule of law". In his message to the Lawyers community, civil society, media and 160 million people in every corner of the country said that these atrocities by police agencies and Govt can never demoralize the judges who refused to take oath under provisional constitutional order on November 3.Terming the Monday's police brutality "Barbaric act" on innocent people outside the Judges Enclave the deposed Chief Justice in his mail said that it was a vicious act committed by the police and other agencies by torturing peaceful demonstrators. "Peaceful protest is right of every citizen of Pakistan as freedom of expression is enshrined under 1973 constitution" the deposed Chief Justice wrote in his mail."Look at the state of condition within a week, blasts in Quetta, Nowshera and Kohat, but the police and agencies are deputed to arrest women, torture students, lawyers and media men protesting for the rule of law," he wrote. Strongly condemning act of torture on civil society, the deposed Chief Justice wrote that the Police and other Agencies are only focussing on arresting Chief Justice of Pakistan, judges and lawyers, where as wanted men can escape from their custody as only two or three policemen are there to guard them."It is highly deplorable and barbaric act of Government, which exposes its weakness and nervousness" he maintained, adding "Is Martial law or so called emergency lifted or it appears mere rhetoric"

Darkness, Light and Eid

Fellows in prison, day and night, and the approach of Eid

Omer. G
My thoughts scatter tonight. As I pen these words, seven days into its cycle, somewhere the moon must be shining, bright and beautiful. Back on earth, the circumstances do not look too heartening. On the wings of the wind, news has reached us that thirty or so of our friends in the great green city of Islamabad linger in the sobering darkness of prison cells. I saw the moon early this evening. It must still be shining. Somehow I cannot find it now when I need it. Is it hiding behind those tall hostel buildings? Maybe, it is being blinded out by the atrocious, unceasing lights that flood our campus all night. This moment, however, all I have before me are a few dim, scattered stars to console an unsettled heart. Noble celestial beings, oldest veterans of the fight against darkness! If you would but peep into the dark cells of my detained fellows, lift their spirits and lighten their woes.

Amidst the darkness, another thought flashes. Why does the Quran repeatedly remind its reader of the recurring cycle of the moon, of days merging seamlessly into nights and nights merging into days. The Quran brings our mind to think about these and, over the centuries, the exegetes responded by penning volumes. Poets probed these phenomena in their own way. Even Kant, the rationalist German philosopher, felt that the starry heavens filled his mind with an ever new and increasing admiration and awe.

To me, tonight the heavens appear unusually dark, in more than one way. Whatever stars there are will be gone by the last hour, which draws nigh. Then, before the end, a new beginning must come. Every night, dawn manages to intervene just in time. I find this a comforting thought. There remains, however, this eternally dreaded possibility: what if the forces of darkness that loom large on this earth can capture these celestial luminaries and permanently blacken them out. That reminds me of Tolkien who, in his fantactic but profound imaginary world, deals beautifully with this thought.

In the bleak and deadening darkness of Mordor, Samwise Gamgee - that simple peasant hobbit, who despite his humble origins emerged as a figure of great moral and spiritual insight – beholds a single shining star. “The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty for ever beyond its reach.” I dearly hope that before they vanish, the moon and the stars would provide our incarcerated friends with that same clear and cold assurance - that the Shadow is only a small and passing thing.

For others, the playful little growing moon now heralds the coming to blossom of Eid season. From afar, some of us can already smell the appetizing aroma of festive food and the pleasing fragrances that beautiful humans wear on happy occasions. Beleaguered judges and lawyers still stand defiant against the encroaching oppression of an increasingly authoritarian state; some face the imminent threat of eviction from their homes this Eid; even worse, they face the very real prospect of being forgotten by the nation for which they sacrificed their careers. They and our companions, in the loneliness of their cells, can neither see the moon nor smell the merriment and gaiety of Eid as it approaches.

In the borderless vastness of Arafat, pilgrims will soon gather to importune their Lord, and be remembered of the ultimate reckoning that shall befall all, without exception. Let us bear witness with them, as Prophet Abraham witnessed before us, at great peril to his life that ultimate power belongs to Allah alone, and to no human, no matter how powerful and mighty. Let us join them as we pray for the coming of better days, the return of a spring of justice, human dignity and freedom. Let us pray for strength and courage enough to tear apart the walls of injustice that surround us and our friends in these testing times.

Pictures from the Islamabad Rally
















Monday, December 17, 2007

Eyewitness account of the protest in Islamabad

Tayyab

The numbers have been increasing and today, they were big enough to mount a battle with the police..and invite heavy shelling..the number of students was significant.

it started off in Aabpara, moved to press club in front of holday inn...Imran Khan joined shortly after.. The protesters were escorted by cops all along..the police tried to stop people when they were turning into f-6, right around where the old american express office.. the women charged the police first, followed by students and everyone else..

they pushed the police back, i would say, a good 200 feet... thats when the police started baton charging... students retaliated with their own tiny sticks, and stones...somewhat like the intifada..

police shot tear gas shells...initially one...which actually fell very close to where I was and I got scared, as I was not sure what it was or how it would act.. ;-)

Thats where it got extremely bad...people were spread all over the place..there were around 2/300 police, armed atleast one APC (Armed personnel career) I must say that I was pleasantly surprised to see the emotions of students...and women...old and young...and people... there were tiny kids in the protest...people joined with their families... people were getting injured, and were retreating... many, i saw, were injured, and by this time, the entire ground was full of tear gas smoke...

by this time, people tried to stop students who wouldnt give in.. the people retreated into the parking lot of intercontinental under construction...there were cars there and they thought they would be safe from police throwing shells and stones at the crowd.. went on till dark...and people very very slowly and reluctantly dispersed... no one seemed in a hurry

my impression is that only if we could double the number we had today, (which shouldn't be a big deal), they will have to call in army to control this... the people, especially the youngsters are very angry...that was my impression... also, it was a long walk from Aabpara to Marriott Islamabad...and i met a number of interesting people on the way...

i hope the arrested are freed, and the injured get well soon... i just rambled...and i am sure i was not able to capture the energy of this protest... i salute all pakistanis who joined in today...love you all (message for those who are away) I can understand how you feel being away.. but you are part of this struggle anyways... do you know that all those people who are away, they are contriuting by paying attention... there is something very spiritual about attention...it is a huge contribution, I must say...

we are, as they say, Brethren in the Resistance.

please keep writing, keep pushing..every effort counts..whatever we can..thanks

Questions for Musharraf and Bush

The Washington Post
By John F. Tierney and Aitzaz Ahsan
Monday, December 17, 2007

One of us chairs a House of Representatives subcommittee tasked with oversight of U.S. foreign policy, and one of us languishes under house arrest after transfer from a Pakistani jail for the "heinous" and "seditious" crime of representing, in legal proceedings, the sacked chief justice of Pakistan's Supreme Court.

As members of the political opposition in our respective countries and as lawyers firmly committed to the rule of law, we have a few questions for our heads of state:

How will you address the increasing anti-Americanism in Pakistan in light of the growing, and not unjustified, perception among Pakistan's democratic moderates that the United States is not willing to stand with the people of Pakistan against an increasingly authoritarian and anti-democratic government in Islamabad?

How will you respond to the inevitable international condemnation of a parliamentary "election" in which journalists are muzzled; political parties are prohibited from campaigning; Pakistani military and intelligence services visibly enforce an atmosphere of intimidation; and opposition leaders are exiled, jailed or placed under house arrest?

How do you expect to effectively compete against extremist ideology when U.S. education funding to Pakistan is one-fifteenth its military support and Pakistani funding for public education remains woefully inadequate? Thirteen million children ages 5 to 9 -- out of 27 million total -- are not enrolled in school at all, leaving them exposed to extremist mentors.

How do you expect to combat the Taliban and al-Qaeda cancer spreading from Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas into the Northwest Frontier and Balochistan provinces when the military is busy pointing its guns at judges, lawyers, journalists, political opponents and human rights advocates?

How do you expect to muster the political fortitude and legitimacy to fight extremist Taliban and al-Qaeda forces when you have alienated the center-left and center-right -- the more secular components of Pakistani society?

The people of Pakistan and the people of the United States deserve honest answers to these vexing questions. They are long overdue.

John F. Tierney is a Democratic representative from Massachusetts. Aitzaz Ahsan, an opposition leader in Pakistan's parliament, has represented deposed chief justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry as well as former prime ministers Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto.

Protest outside Karachi Press Club on Tuesday

A joint demonstration has been organised for 03:00 p.m. tomorrow (December 18) outside the Karachi Press Club (KPC), to protest the State's brutalities against the Students Action Committee (SAC) rally in Islamabad today.

While the protest has been called by the CMKP and the Labour Party of Pakistan (LPP), we appeal to Peoples Resistance, lawyers, students, journalists, labour unions -- every citizen -- to please join us there. A strong message has to be sent across to the State tomorrow: these atrocities will NOT stop us!

Friends of the Resistance, today's events in Islamabad proved once and for all that the so-called lifting of the emergency is nothing but a sham. If this was done in Islamabad today, it could be done in Karachi too. Aakhir kabb takk bardaasht karengey yeh tamaasha hum? Please come to the press club tomorrow to express solidarity with the brave souls who stood up to the State's brutalities today.

Countless were injured, and 40 have been arrested (including seven women). We HAVE to show Musharraf and his cronies that this brutality will NOT stop us anymore. Please join us at the press club at 03:00 p.m. tomorrow. Bring yourself, bring friends. Bring banners, flags and placards. Above everything, please try to bring as many people as possible -- there's power in numbers.
Power to the People!!!

In Complete Solidarity

23 lawyers candidates withdraw from the elections

(Courtesy The Post)
TOBA TEK SINGH: Twenty three candidates belong to lawyers' community led by APDM leader Abid Hasan Minto withdrew their nomination papers Saturday on the call of Pakistan Bar Council and APDM leadership to start election boycott campaign. The lawyers went in a procession to the offices of returning officers in district courts complex led by APDM central who withdrew from the district included Labour Party Pakistan central leader and NA-93 and PP-86 candidate Farooq Tariq, district PML-N former secretary Rana Anwar, former DBA president Mian Shahid Iqbal, advocate Safdar Ali Nasir, MMA district secretary Hafiz Abdul Basit, advocate Ch Masaad Ahmad Kahloon, Ch Afzal, Mian Shoaib Muhammad, Khalid Javed, Zahid Sattar, Arshad Javed, Mian Arshad, Ch Ijaz Ahmad, Furqan Habib, Makhdoom Nazar, Sarfraz Khan, Mian Younis, Ziauddin, Irfanul Haq, Munir Ahmad, Mehr Yaseen, Dr Arshad Alam, Attaullah and Mian Shoukat Ali Shoukat.

Update on the students arrested in Islamabad

The seven female protestors arrested have been released without charge. The 35 or so male protestors are still under arrest at the thana on constitutional avenue. According to reports, they are being charged under various offences, including 144 and 7-ATA (Anti-terrorism Act). Some students and lawyers who went to the thana to attempt to procure their release have also been arrested. On what pretext, one cannot say.

it is pertinent to note here that, although the 'emergency' is claimed to have been lifted, its draconian implications are still very much in sway. The brutal response of the police to the student rally is a clear indication of the paucity of basic rights even after the 'restoration' of our battered constitution. Let us not even talk of the continued illegal detention of several judges and senior advocates on no charges whatsoever.

Justice, anyone..?

Message from the Student Action Committee Islamabad

This is to request your urgent help. As you might know, a student protest took place today in Islamabad to protest against emergency and removal of supreme court judges and for the restoration of free media. The protest was attended by about a thousand students and people from all walks of life. In spite of lifting of emergency, however, the police resorted to violent tactics to disperse the protesters, using tear gas and rubber bullets in the process. After a brief episode of violence, most of the protesters dispersed except for few who went on to reach the CJ's house. Here, about 35 students and protesters were arrested and taken to Sectt. police station. Lawyers, students, journalists and other members of the civil society! We request you to please show up at the Sectt. police station to demand the release of these arrested students. This is your chance to stand for freedom and justice.

Police unleashes brutality at student protest in Islamabad

Police teargas, baton-charge, fire (rubber bullets) at and arrest students in Islamabad

The protest at Aabpara Islamabad today (Monday) turned ugly as police baton-charged and tear-gassed the 1000 or so students who had assembled to continue their protest against the continued unlawful acts of the government. The police, in an attempt to stop the march of the students towards the Judicial residences, resorted to repeated baton-charges and tear-gassing, ultimately firing rubber bullets into the crowd, hitting many people, including women.

Ultimately, due to the violent turn of events, a small number of students remained to continue the march towards the judicial residence, where the police surrounded and arrested around 35 people, mostly students, some of them female. At the time of the writing of this report, the detainees were being taken to Adiala Jail. The Student Action Committee Islamabad is meeting to decide the course of action to be taken at this point.

Student Action Committee Lahore continues protest

Press Release:

The Student Action Committee (Lahore) held a protest today against the derisive return to a constitution that was altered to personal specifications by President Retd. General Pervez Musharraf.

The crowd began to gather outside Nasser Bagh at 1 pm. The protest took off around 1 30 pm where the SAC (Lahore) was joined by students, lawyers, activists, academics, civil society members who were all committed to the same cause. Even citizens who were passing by joined in with enthusiasm once they heard what the rally was for.

The students in full flow, with banners reading “Emergency Lifted, Nothing Changed”, “Azaadi” “Restore the Judiciary” chanted slogans with the crowd that was pulsating with an energy that soon spilled out on the roads.

“Tor raha hai Pakistan, aaj keh dor ka Yahya Khan”, “Zinda hai Tulba” , “Pakistan ka bais e tabhai…Pervez Musharraf aur Pervaiz Elahi” could be heard from afar as the crowd proceeded from Nasser Bagh to Anarkali Chowk. Here the protestors stood and chanted some more eliciting encouragement from those passing by in their vehicles.

The police, who had been helpful in maneuvering the protest down the mall, soon realized the impact of the protest and started haranguing the crowd, especially the students, to disperse. They claimed they would press charges against students, if they did not wrap up immediately.

The students and their fellow supporters, charged with energy to be seen and heard, did not crack at such demands and continued to raise slogans at Anarkali Chowk.

The protesters marched back towards Nasser Bagh, where they gathered on top of the roundabout and continued their slogans. After a while, the crowd formed a human chain on the roundabout, demonstrating solidarity with each other as well as the public on common fronts: restoration of the pre Nov. 3rd judiciary, an independent media, and a system where every voice can be heard.

The crowd dispersed after almost 2 hours of high level activities. By the end of the day 150 to 200 people had been noted at the protest.

To be noted: the protest today was held as a reflection of the SAC (Lahore) commitment to work for the said causes regardless of the sham political displays by the regime. The threats by the police were just one reflection of how the state of emergency was lifted but nothing restored, nothing changed.

Girls from Peshawar University stage protest



Peshawar (Dec 17):Female students of Peshawar University staged a protest here to express solidarity with the judiciary and media. Earlier, the administration thwarted plans of holding a peaceful walk on campus by a group of girls numbering one hundred, when its officials along with police armed with AK-47s arrived at the gates of the UOP Girls' Hostel where the walk was expected to begin. The admin locked the hostel gate and nobody was allowed to come out. Later on, few student representatives did manage to step out however they were prevented from taking out a rally. Talking to the media they said the girls from a conservative place like the Frontier were impelled to come out as they considered it as their moral duty. They wanted to protest because of the ongoing situation in the country. According to them, there was growing resentment against dictatorship amongst the students. They expressed concern over the worsening law and order situation in the province and the tribal areas and blamed President Musharraf for throwing the region in a state of turmoil due to, what they termed, his ‘bad policies’. The students said they did not belong to any political party however they supported Imran Khan’s stand of boycotting ‘fraudulent’ elections. They called for restoration of all deposed judges and immediate lifting of curbs on the media. Afterwards, some student representatives displayed their protest placards in front of members of the press and vowed to stage another demonstration next time.It may be recalled, that a students rally was taken out in Peshawar last Thursday also (13 Dec) which was forcibly turned back by armed police and university officials.
(Campus News)