Thursday,
September 25, 2003, Chandigarh, India
|
Islamist alliance
rejects Pervez’s proposals Pakistan trying
to arrest Laden, says Musharraf Pak not to freeze
N-arms till India does, PM urged to speed
up dual citizenship process
Bush against H-1B
visa elimination |
|
Iraqi council
occupies seat at UN
India to hold
cultural carnival 4 Nepal troops
jailed for posing as Maoists
|
Islamist alliance rejects Pervez’s proposals Islamabad, September 24 After a three-hour-long meeting of its Supreme Council last night, which raised speculation that the alliance could be headed for a split over the issue of opposing General Musharraf’s package, the MMA announced early today that it had rejected the proposal and decided to call off all future talks with the government. Its leaders told reporters that a three-member MMA delegation would call on Prime Minister Mir Zafarrullah Khan Jamali to convey MMA’s decision to reject the package and inform him about its resolve to insist that General Musharraf quit as Chief of Army by December, 2004. General Musharraf is currently in New York to attend the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA). The modified package, under which General Musharraf “agreed in principle” to cut down his powers and submit his controversial Legal Framework Order (LFO) for the approval of parliament, was presented to the MMA on September 19 after it was approved by the cabinet. MMA spokesman Liaqat Baluch said religious parties rejected the package as they felt that their demands about the President’s army uniform, his discretionary powers and the retirement age of judges were altogether ignored in the official draft proposals. The MMA also wants General Musharraf to get elected as President by parliament and assemblies and not by seeking vote of confidence as proposed by the government package. Mr Baluch said there could be no compromise on the key issues on which it had engaged itself in dialogue for 10 months. MMA leader Maulana Fazlur Rahman said the alliance would no longer engage itself in talks with the government as it had backed out of the agreed formula prepared during the Lahore talks. He said the alliance would not wait for a response to its proposals from the government side and concentrate on a countrywide mass-contact drive. The MMA decision followed its leaders taking part in a joint relay fast organised by mainstream opposition parties outside the Parliament yesterday questioning the legality of General Musharraf to address the UNGA as President of Pakistan. Displaying banners with slogans such as “General Musharraf is unelected and unconstitutional president and has no right to address the UNGA”, opposition leaders condemned him for going abroad and ignoring Mr Jamali, the elected Prime Minister. The MMA and leaders of Alliance for Restoration of democracy, (ARD) said General Musharraf’s was a “disputed person” as he was not an elected president and hence not competent to represent the country at any international forum. The rejection by the MMA of the package seals the fate of the Jamali government’s attempt to work out a compromise in which they could isolate parties headed by exiled former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif.
— PTI |
Pakistan trying to arrest Laden, says Musharraf
Islamabad, September 24 “This is an absolutely and totally wrong perception,” Mr Musharraf said about the perception that Pakistan was avoiding the arrests. Pakistan was being assisted by the CIA in efforts to locate Osama and other Al Qaida members in the mountains, Mr Musharraf told CNN. “And they (CIA) know exactly what is happening on ground. Sometime they get close to him and then suddenly this man disappears,” the President said. Mr Musharraf said he was not worried at all that there was any danger to him or his government from Al Qaida. “There is no such danger at all, this is not the reality,” he added. Asked if Pakistan would send its troops to Iraq under the present circumstances, he said currently the country’s conditions were not conducive and there was a strong domestic opposition to it. There was a common and general perception that the force in Iraq was an occupation force, it was not a reconstruction or welfare force, Mr Musharraf said. “Personally I know the reality. I know the regime under Saddam Hussain was extremely autocratic and may be cruel and he (Saddam) himself was a cruel man,” the President said. Asked why the people believed otherwise, the President said, “I think because of what has been happening to the Muslim world continuously”. “There is a suspicion, there is a perception that the Muslims are being targeted and maybe religion is being targeted.” Although the USA and the West had rejected this impression, actions should speak louder than words, he said.
— PTI |
Pak not to freeze N-arms till India does, says Pervez
Islamabad, September 24 “Why isn’t the world asking Indians to freeze their programme... If they freeze we will also freeze,” General Musharraf told CNN in an interview. “We have a threat on our eastern border from a country which is about seven times our size. We maintain a strategy of deterrence — conventional and unconventional — to guard ourselves, to ensure that there is a no win situation for our big neighbour”, he said. “There will be no war if there is a no-win situation (for India) and we want to ensure there is a no-win situation through a strategy of deterrence,” said General Musharraf, who is currently in the USA to attend the UNGA session. “We will maintain that deterrence level in conventional as well as in unconventional weapons,” he said.
— PTI |
PM urged to speed up dual citizenship process Washington, September 24 In a memorandum presented to Mr Vajpayee by its President Thomas Abraham, the Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin
(GOPIO) said though Indians were being recognised in every corner of the world for success in their chosen fields, there existed “a gap between the global Indian society and India.” “Dual citizenship should help remove this gap,” the Washington-based body said. Mr Vajpayee, at a conference of people of Indian origin in New Delhi earlier this year, had said dual citizenship would be granted to them. The organisation suggested the establishment of a Ministry of Overseas Indians similar to the Ministry of Overseas Chinese in China.
— PTI |
Bush against H-1B visa elimination
New York, September 24 “The H-1B programme is important to the USA. I understand the current cap is approximately 2,00,000, and I will seek to maintain a strong H-1B programme,” Mr Bush was quoted as saying by the ‘India Abroad’ newspaper here. The President’s comments came during an interaction with Indian-Americans on the occasion of a Bush-Cheney fund-raiser reception recently. When asked about H-1B Bills on the floor of the House of Representatives, especially the Resolution 2688 moved by Republican Congressman Thomas Tancredo seeking to terminate the H-1B programme, Mr Bush said, “Tancredo and me are at opposite ends of the pole. I fully do not support Congressman Tancredo’s Bill against H-1Bs.”
— PTI |
Iraqi council
occupies seat at UN United Nations, September 24 The council’s representatives took the seat yesterday as no member objected but it needs to go to the credentials committee to get formal recognition, world body officials said. Current Council President Ahmed Chalabi and Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari were occupying the places assigned to Iraq. Apparently, there was no protest from Arab nations and others as the Arab League has given provisional recognition to the council.
— PTI |
India to hold cultural carnival in China Beijing, September 24 The event will feature a series of lectures on Indian art, culture and society, an exhibition of Indian art, culture and tourism-oriented artefacts and photographs, performance of Indian dances, screening of Indian feature and documentary films and sale of souvenirs and food from the country. The carnival week will also feature six lectures by Chinese experts on various aspects of Indian culture and society, helping visitors gain an insight into them. “This is a major cultural event encompassing broad areas of art and culture in India, and will aim at presenting before the Chinese audience a microcosm of the rich and diverse entity that is collectively identified under the rubric of Indian culture,” the Deputy Chief of Mission of the Indian embassy, Mr Debnath Shaw, said. The event is being organised to mark the 110th birth anniversary of the honorary president of the People’s Republic, Soong Ching-Ling, “an enduring symbol of Sino-Indian amity,” he said. In January this year, the Soong Ching-Ling Foundation proposed to hold a series of exhibitions on culture and social life of various countries. The foundation selected India as the first partner, Mr Shaw said. Soong Ching-Ling (1893-1981) was the wife of Dr Sun Yat-Sen, the founder of the first Chinese republic. She visited India in 1955, interacted with a wide cross-section of Indian society and held the country very dear to her heart.
— PTI |
4 Nepal troops jailed for posing as Maoists Kathmandu, September 24 They were found guilty of extorting money in Nepalgunj in western Nepal pretending to be Maoists, Brig-Gen B.A. Kumar Sharma, chief, Law Division, RNA, said.
— PTI |
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