Ex-PM Khan slams spy chief for ‘political’ presser as protest march to Islamabad kicks off

Former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan (C) addresses his supporters during an anti-government long march towards Islamabad to demand early elections, in Lahore on October 28, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 28 October 2022
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Ex-PM Khan slams spy chief for ‘political’ presser as protest march to Islamabad kicks off

  • Pakistan’s spy chief Lt. Gen. Nadeem Anjum criticized Khan on Thursday for anti-military campaign
  • Khan kicks off protest march from Lahore’s Liberty Chowk, plans to reach Rawalpindi in seven days

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan on Friday kicked off his anti-government protest march to the capital with a speech at Lahore’s Liberty Chowk in which he slammed the chief of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) for addressing a “political” press conference a day earlier.

In a rare public appearance on Thursday, DG ISI Lt. Gen. Nadeem Anjum criticized Khan over his criticism of the military and for portraying Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa as a “traitor” among his followers. This was the first time in the history of Pakistan that a sitting DG ISI addressed a press talk.

Khan, long believed to be close to the military, is considered to have fallen out with the army since his ouster via a parliamentary vote of confidence in April. Khan says the army should have intervened to save his government from what he calls a “foreign conspiracy” to remove him from office. The now ruling coalition government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the military have both repeatedly denied allegations Khan was removed in a foreign-backed plot.

“You [DG ISI] said that you are apolitical, that we [army] are not involved in politics,” Khan said, addressing Gen Anjum. “DG ISI, I haven’t even seen Sheikh Rashid [local politician] conduct a more political press conference [than the one you addressed].”

“DG ISI, listen carefully, the things I know, I am staying silent for my institutions and the country. I don’t want to damage my country,” Khan said as the crowd cheered. “When we criticize [army], it is constructive and for your betterment.”

“I am saying this again, I can say a lot and can respond to you. But I don’t want the institutions to get weak.”

In remarks to journalists on Thursday, Anjum, who was dressed in civilian clothing, said he was aware that the media was “surprised by my presence,” but he could not remain silent while the military was being “targeted for no reason.”

“If you (Khan) are convinced that the head of your army is a traitor, then why did you praise him so much just in the recent past?” Anjum said. “If he was really a traitor in your point of view, then why do you still meet him behind closed doors?”

“Don’t do this, that you meet us in the dark of night behind closed doors to express your constitutional and unconstitutional wishes and then in the light of day call the same person a traitor.”




Activists and supporters of opposition party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) dance before the start of an anti-government long march towards Islamabad to demand early elections, in Lahore on October 28, 2022. (AFP)

Since his ouster, Khan has held rallies around the country to call for fresh polls. In May, he marched his supporters to the federal capital to bring down the government but called off the protest after his supporters clashed with police. Since then, he has been threatening to launch another “long march” against the government.

“This march of mine, this is not for politics, this is not for elections or for personal gains,” Khan told the crowd. “It has one purpose, that I free my nation … that this nation’s decisions aren’t made in another country.”

“We will stay peaceful,” he added.

The government has warned the ex-premier it will deal with protesters with “an iron fist” if marchers break the law or resort to violence. 




Activists and supporters of opposition party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) dance before the start of an anti-government long march towards Islamabad to demand early elections, in Lahore on October 28, 2022. (AFP)

 


Due rights for Kashmiris, Palestinians ‘only way’ toward regional peace — Pakistan PM

Updated 05 August 2024
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Due rights for Kashmiris, Palestinians ‘only way’ toward regional peace — Pakistan PM

  • Sharif was speaking in televised address to Azad Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly on Youm-e-Istehsal
  • The day is observed annually in Pakistan on August 5 against India’s revocation of special status of Jammu and Kashmir

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Monday granting due rights to the people of Kashmir and Palestine was the “only way” to maintain peace and stability in the region, state-run APP news agency reported.

The PM was speaking in a televised address to the Azad Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly on Youm-e-Istehsal, or Day of Exploitation, observed annually in Pakistan on August 5 against the revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government in 2019. Pakistan has been marking the day since August 5, 2020. 

The Himalayan Kashmir region has been disputed by the two nuclear-armed neighbors since they both received independence in 1947. The two countries have fought two of their three wars over the region and both claim it in full but rule it in part.

“The day is not far away when both India and Israel will be bound to give due rights to the people of Palestine and Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir as all ways other than this lead to total destruction,” Sharif said. 

“Pakistan has never thought of aggression with regard to its nuclear power. Therefore the better option is to adopt the peaceful way and sit together to find out the peaceful solution to the Kashmir dispute.”

The PM said Pakistan would continue to extend its “moral support” to the people of Kashmir until they won their “basic rights and freedoms,” accusing India of silencing the media in Kashmir as well as its “genuine leadership,” imprisoning thousands of Kashmiris for political reasons and outlawing at least 14 political organizations.

Sharif also spoke about the war in Gaza, where at least 39,550 Palestinians have been killed in an Israeli military campaign triggered by a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7 last year in which 1,200 people were killed and 250 abducted, according to Israeli tallies.

“More than 40,000 Palestinians had been martyred so far including thousands of children. The unarmed Palestinians are still being martyred every day,” Sharif said. “Israel’s Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu, through his army, has broken the records of barbarism in Palestine.”


No visa restrictions for Pakistanis, UAE consul general in Karachi says

Updated 35 min 26 sec ago
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No visa restrictions for Pakistanis, UAE consul general in Karachi says

  • Ambassador Remeithi says UAE will ‘in few days’ announce new facilities for business community on both sides
  • 50 percent of UAE’s crime rate is reportedly attributed to Pakistanis, an official told a senate committee last week

ISLAMABAD: The UAE’s consul general in Karachi said in comments published on Monday there were no visa restrictions on Pakistanis and the Emirates was providing “100 percent” facilities to nationals of the South Asian country traveling for tourism, business, medical or other reasons. 

Ambassador Bakheet Ateeq Al Remeithi’s comments come on the heels of widespread local media reports of a declining trend in overseas employment for Pakistanis due to their alleged lack of respect for local laws and customs. During a briefing of the Senate Standing Committee on Overseas Pakistanis last week, Dr. Arshad Mahmood, secretary of the Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis, said in widely reported comments that 50 percent of the crime rate in the UAE was reportedly attributed to Pakistanis.

Of more than 10 million overseas Pakistanis, over 50 percent live in Gulf countries, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE having been the top destinations for Pakistani laborers for decades. Saudi Arabia and the UAE are also the first and second largest sources of remittances to Pakistan respectively.

“We are here to provide services,” Remeithi said in a video published by local media after a visit for the mayor of Sukkur city, Barrister Arslan Sheikh, to a UAE visa center. 

“And the facilities we are giving our Pakistani brothers and sisters, absolutely 100 percent we explain [the visa process to them] and also give them facilities and there are no restrictions.”

However, the consul general added that the UAE had a process of ensuring that people were actually traveling for the stated reasons such as tourism, business, or health: “And we fully cooperate and make sure we can give them full facilities.”

He cautioned Pakistani laborers against taking luggage along for other people, as they could end up transporting illegal materials and face problems at UAE airports.

“We give people awareness of what is harmful for them, that they should pack their own luggage, and make sure no one has put anything in your luggage, and which does not create problems for you at Karachi or UAE airports,” Remeithi said. 

The consul general said relations between Pakistan and the UAE were more than 50 years old and the Emirates would always be there for the South Asian nation.

“And even more, in a few days we will announce more facilities for the business community on both sides,” he concluded. 

Pakistan’s foreign office last week advised its nationals living abroad, especially in the Middle East, to abide by local laws and respect their customs.

“UAE or other countries in the Middle East have their laws with respect to individuals who are foreign expatriates and their participation in political activities,” the foreign office spokesperson said, urging Pakistani citizens to follow their host country’s laws.

Commenting on the Pakistani workforce’s skills, she said they had “positively” contributed to the development of countries in the Middle East where they have lived for decades:

“The host governments are appreciative of Pakistani nationals, of their contribution to their society, and the peaceful and law-abiding nature of Pakistani workers who live in these countries, especially in the Middle East.” 


Google launches new program to promote AI startups in Pakistan 

Updated 05 August 2024
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Google launches new program to promote AI startups in Pakistan 

  • AI Academy would get access to Google’s global experts for individual guidance and support 
  • Opportunities to network and collaborate with other AI startups in the region would be provided

ISLAMABAD: Google has announced the launch of a new program called the AI Academy to aid the growth of artificial intelligence startups in Pakistan and the Asia-Pacific, a press release said on Monday.

The move is aimed at sparking new cross-border innovations and partnerships that would allow the exchange of ideas, expertise, and resources to accelerate the development of AI solutions, helping the APAC region become a “global hub” for AI development, Google’s PR agency said in a press release.

“Google for Startups has today introduced a new program called AI Academy to help and accelerate the growth of artificial intelligence startups in Pakistan and the APAC region,” the press release said. “The program will bring together more than 20 startups that are developing AI-based technologies.”

The AI Academy would get access to Google’s global AI experts for individual guidance and support and a Google Cloud Credit of up to $350,000 would also be added to the account of the startup for the promotion of AI development and experimentation. The press release said opportunities to network and collaborate with other AI startups in the region would also be provided.

Google said the AI Academy was designed to fast-track startups to market so they could develop a “proof of concept” and product roadmap, rapidly validating their artificial intelligence solutions. The accelerated process “will not only accelerate their path to success but also demonstrate the tangible value of their innovation in the field of artificial intelligence.”

Google Pakistan Country Director Farhan S Qureshi said the new AI Academy program was a testament to Google’s commitment to promoting the development of artificial intelligence across Asia-Pacific. 

“With Pakistan being an important market, we hope that local startup companies will take advantage of this opportunity to improve their AI solutions and further strengthen the AI ​​ecosystem in the Asia-Pacific region,” he said. 

The press release concluded that the application for the program could be submitted until August 16.


Baloch rights movements ‘proxy’ for militant groups, criminal mafia — Pakistan army

Updated 29 min 47 sec ago
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Baloch rights movements ‘proxy’ for militant groups, criminal mafia — Pakistan army

  • Military spokesman says no “softening” of stance toward May 9 rioters 
  • 139 soldiers killed in anti-terror operations in 2024 amid militancy surge 

ISLAMABAD: Military spokesperson Lt. Gen. Ahmad Sharif Chaudhry said on Monday there was no “softening” of the army’s stance on riots last year led by alleged supporters of ex-premier Imran Khan, calling a Baloch ethnic rights movement holding protests a “proxy” for militant groups.

Pakistan’s army said last month protesters taking part in a march in the southwestern city of Gwadar had attacked security forces deployed to guard them, killing one soldier and injuring 16 others.

A nationalist ethnic Baloch movement led by the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) had been demonstrating in the port city, blocking a highway to press their demands for the release of members of their movement they say were detained by security forces.

Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, where the port city of Gwadar is located, borders Iran and Afghanistan and has long been the scene of a low-level insurgency by separatist groups who say they have been fighting for a greater share in the region’s rich mineral resources. The province, Pakistan’s largest by area but its most impoverished, is also central to Beijing’s economic interests in the region, which is funding the Gwadar port and other projects.

Addressing a press conference on Monday, the military spokesperson said the purpose of the BYC and the Baloch Raaji Muchi (Baloch National Grand Jirga) it had convened in Gwadar was to make development projects and investments “controversial” and incite people against the Pakistan army and other security forces involved in operations against militancy and crime. 

“This Raaji Muchi, this is a proxy of terrorists and criminal mafia that has been exposed,” Chaudhry told reporters. “This is what the reality is. They are nothing more than proxy of terrorist organizations and illegal smugglers, this is a mafia.”

The BYC has held other protests in the past, including a long march to the capital to against enforced disappearances. Political leaders, human rights activists and families of victims have for decades spoken against enforced disappearances in Balochistan as well as killings by security agencies in staged encounters, a practice where officials claim the victim was killed in a gunfight though they were summarily executed. Authorities deny involvement in such incidents.

MAY 9 RIOTS

Answering a question about whether there was a softening of the army’s stance against May 9 rioters, Chaudhry said the army’s stance was “clear.”

“There is no change in it and neither will there be a change,” he said. 

Alleged supporters of ex-PM Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party attacked and damaged government and military installations on May 9, 2023, after his brief arrest that day in a graft case. The attacks took place a little over a year after Khan fell out with Pakistan’s powerful military, blaming the institution for colluding with his rivals to oust him from office in a parliamentary vote in April 2022. The military rejects the allegations.

Hundreds of PTI workers and leaders were arrested following the May 9 riots in a state crackdown and many remain behind bars as they await trial. The military has also initiated army court trials of at least 103 people accused of involvement in the violence. Many close Khan aides have since deserted him, due to what is widely believed to be pressure from the army, which denies interfering in politics.

Khan has been in jail since August last year, even though all four convictions handed down to him ahead of a parliamentary election in February have either been suspended or overturned. He has recently made a “conditional” offer of talks to the army, if “clean and transparent” elections were held and the “bogus” cases against his supporters were dropped.

The military — which has repeatedly said Khan and his party were behind the May 9 attacks on military installations — has ruled out any talks with him.

ANTI-TERROR OPERATIONS

Speaking about anti-terror operations across Pakistan, Chaudhry said at least 139 Pakistani soldiers had been killed in the campaigns during the first seven months of 2024.

Pakistan has faced a decades-long insurgency by separatists in the southwestern Balochistan province, while religiously motivated groups, including the Pakistani Taliban or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), have waged a fight in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province that borders Afghanistan and launched attacks in other parts of the country also. 

In recent months, both KP and Balochistan have seen a massive spike in terror attacks, with daily assaults on army, paramilitary and police forces, and targeted assassinations of security and government officials.

“139 Pakistan Army officers and soldiers embraced martyrdom in counter-terror operations,” Chaudhry told reporters, providing figures for 2024. “The entire nation pays tribute to these brave sons and their families.”

Security forces and law enforcement agencies had conducted 23,622 small and large-scale intelligence-based operations across the country this year, with 2,045 operations carried out over the last 15 days in which 24 militants had been killed, Chaudhry added. 

He said Pakistan’s army, police, intelligence and law enforcement agencies were conducting over 100 operations against militants daily. 

“Pakistan’s armed forces, law enforcement and intelligence agencies are fully focused on guaranteeing Pakistan’s external and border security,” the military spokesman said. “Our war against terrorism will continue till the last terrorist and the terrorism associated with him is not eliminated.”

Islamabad has blamed the rise in militant attacks in recent months on insurgents based in neighboring Afghanistan and says it has consistently taken up the issue with Kabul’s Taliban administration, raising tensions between the neighbors whose security forces have clashed at the border in recent months. 

The Taliban government denies allowing the use of Afghan territory by militants.


PM Sharif directs Pakistan Cricket Board to select players on merit 

Updated 05 August 2024
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PM Sharif directs Pakistan Cricket Board to select players on merit 

  • Pakistani cricket analysts have frequently accused selectors of choosing players based on favoritism 
  • PCB announces three domestic tournaments to bridge gap between domestic, international cricket

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday directed Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Mohsin Naqvi to select players and officials on merit, as the South Asian country desperately tries to reform its cricket team following a dismal World Cup performance in June. 

Pakistan’s first-round exit from the T20 World Cup held in June in the USA and West Indies disappointed millions of cricket fans across the globe. Pakistan lost in its group stage matches to minnows United States before losing to arch-rivals India after they were comfortably within reach of a victory. 

Cricket analysts have blamed Pakistani selectors for making poor choices and criticized T20 skipper Babar Azam for not selecting players based on merit. Azam and the PCB have rejected the allegations. 

“You should reform the cricket team and choose people based on merit, which is your specialty,” Sharif told Naqvi while speaking at a ceremony in Lahore. “Even if the prime minister recommends someone which goes against merit, you should politely decline it.”

PCB ANNOUNCES DOMESTIC TOURNAMENTS

Meanwhile, the PCB announced three domestic Champions tournaments, saying it wanted to bridge the gap between domestic and international cricket to provide a tougher, more competitive and high-pressure cricket playing environment for upcoming cricketers.

According to a press release by the PCB, The Champions One-Day Cup, Champions T20 Cup, and Champions First-Class Cup will be the three new additional tournaments for players to take part in. 

“With the addition of three Champions tournaments, the PCB will now organize a total of 261 matches across eight men’s senior tournaments,” it added. “This includes 131 first-class matches in three events, 40 50-over matches in two events and 97 T20 matches in three events.”

The PCB said five sides would compete in each Champions Cup event that will be played in a double league format and that around 150 highest-performing domestic players in the country and centrally contracted players will be available for selection for the tournament.

Each team will be allocated a regional high-performance center in different cities throughout the country including Lahore, Karachi, Faisalabad, Multan and Sialkot apart from having a Pakistan superstar as a mentor, the board said.

There will be three pay slabs for the 150 selected cricketers ranging from Rs250,000-Rs550,000 [$905.40-$1991] the PCB said. 

“The Champions One-Day Cup will serve as the season opener of the PCB Men’s Domestic Cricket Season 2024-25 when the 21-match tournament is played from September 1-29,” it said. “Curtains will fall on the PCB Men’s Domestic Cricket Season 2024-25 with the Champions First-Class Cup, which will be held from May 28 to August 5.”

Describing the introduction of the three tournaments as a “bold step,” Naqvi said it would bring together talented and consistent performers from domestic players creating an environment mirroring the international cricket intensity.