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Shed uniform before poll, US tells Musharraf
Washington, June 12
The US says it backs embattled Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf in its national interest, but hoped that he would shed his uniform and hold free and fair elections. "US assistance to Pakistan is done with - because it is in our national interest to do so," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said yesterday declining to link aid with the current political turmoil there or Musharraf' s reluctance to give up the army chief's job.

MQM files reference against Imran Khan
Islamabad, June 12
The Mutahhida Qaumi Movement (MQM) today filed a reference against Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan in the National Assembly seeking his disqualification as an MP on charges of moral turpitude. According to National Assembly sources, the reference has been based on Seeta White case involving an alleged illicit relationship with an American girl who gave birth to a baby girl. MQM Parliamentary leader Dr. Farooq Sattar along with other members of his party submitted the reference to Speaker, National Assembly, Chaudhry Ameer Hussain in his chamber.


EARLIER STORIES


Russia’s President Vladimir Putin (right) hands Alexander Solzhenitsyn the State Prize for his achievements in the humanitarian field as the president visits his home in Troitse-Lykovo in Moscow
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin (right) hands Alexander Solzhenitsyn the State Prize for his achievements in the humanitarian field as the president visits his home in Troitse-Lykovo in Moscow on Tuesday. — Reuters

Atlantis’s return delayed
Houston, June 12
The return of shuttle Atlantis, which will bring back Indian-American astronaut Sunita Williams home after her six month space sojourn has been delayed by two days to help astronauts fix a problem on the body of the spacecraft. The decision to add a fourth space walk to the Atlantis crew’s schedule to fix the thermal blanket on the shuttle’s exterior will mean a mission of 13 days in space rather than the originally planned 11 days, said John Shannon, head of the mission management team at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration( NASA)

Turban issue: Sikhs challenge French law
Brussels, June 12
Sikhs in France have filed a case before the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg challenging a French law that demands that turbans be taken off while being photographed for identity cards.

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Shed uniform before poll, US tells Musharraf

Washington, June 12
The US says it backs embattled Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf in its national interest, but hoped that he would shed his uniform and hold free and fair elections.

"US assistance to Pakistan is done with - because it is in our national interest to do so," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said yesterday declining to link aid with the current political turmoil there or Musharraf' s reluctance to give up the army chief's job.

"A more stable, more democratic, more prosperous Pakistan is in our interest, it's in the interest of the Pakistani people, it's in the interest of the region," he said.

"But in providing that assistance, we are narrowing up our interest with our values. So this is not a case where a country is providing assistance and abandoning its values," he said noting, "We continue to work with the Musharraf government and others within the Pakistani political system to continue their process of political reforms."

Hoping the November elections in Pakistan "should be free, fair and transparent and should meet international standards", McCormack said, "Those are things, I think, that everybody can support." "...He has pledged to make that choice ... if he continues in political life, to put aside the uniform. And we take him at his word at that and we would expect him to follow through on his commitments," he added.

But McCormack discounted speculation that Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher is going to Pakistan to mediate in its political crisis sparked by the suspension of Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry.

"Look, the Pakistani people are more than capable enough of resolving any political differences they may have, striking any political bargains. They don't need our help to do so," he said.

Calling President Pervez Musharraf's decision to rescind his decree against the media as a "a positive step", he hoped that the case against Chaudhry "should be resolved within the confines of the Pakistani constitution and their legal norms and the media should be free to cover it as they see fit."

Asked about Washington's continued backing for Musharraf, McCormack said, "He has made some progress in terms of political and economic reforms...(but) as you open up, more of that brings with it heightened expectations for what might be done."

Meanwhile, the influential New York Times Monday asked Washington "to disentangle America, quickly, from the general's damaging embrace" as "nobody takes General Musharraf's democratic claims seriously anymore, except for the Bush administration." In an editorial titled, "Pakistan's Dictator", it said the administration had "put itself in the embarrassing position of propping up the Muslim world's most powerful military dictator as an essential ally in its half-baked campaign to promote democracy throughout the Muslim world." "Ever since his high-handed dismissal of the country's independent-minded chief justice in March, the general has been busily digging himself into an ever deeper political hole," the Times said.

Pakistan seems to be rapidly approaching a critical turning point, with a choice between intensified repression and instability or an orderly transition back to democratic rule, it said.

Were Washington now to begin distancing itself from the general, it would greatly encourage civic-minded Pakistanis to step up the pressure for free national elections, the Times said.

"That's a process the chief justice was trying to make possible when he was fired. And that is what Pakistan's last two democratically elected leaders - Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif - are both campaigning for from abroad", it noted.

"The United States should be supporting these efforts, not continuing to make excuses for General Musharraf," the influential daily advised. — IANS

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MQM files reference against Imran Khan

Islamabad, June 12
The Mutahhida Qaumi Movement (MQM) today filed a reference against Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan in the National Assembly seeking his disqualification as an MP on charges of moral turpitude.

According to National Assembly sources, the reference has been based on Seeta White case involving an alleged illicit relationship with an American girl who gave birth to a baby girl.

MQM Parliamentary leader Dr. Farooq Sattar along with other members of his party submitted the reference to Speaker, National Assembly, Chaudhry Ameer Hussain in his chamber.

Imran is in London where he had gone vowing to file a petition in a London court seeking extradition of MQM chief Altaf Hussain on charges of terrorism. Altaf has been living in self-exile London for the past 15 years during which he was given British citizenship. Imran evoked furious reaction from the MQM when he accused Altaf of sponsoring terrorist acts in Karachi and masterminding the May 12 carnage in the city in complicity with President Pervez Musharraf to block a welcome rally in honour of suspended chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry. At least 42 persons were gunned down during the day. Imran said several of his party's activists were among them who were punished for having deserted the MQM to join his party. — TNS

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Atlantis’s return delayed

Houston, June 12
The return of shuttle Atlantis, which will bring back Indian-American astronaut Sunita Williams home after her six month space sojourn has been delayed by two days to help astronauts fix a problem on the body of the spacecraft.

The decision to add a fourth space walk to the Atlantis crew’s schedule to fix the thermal blanket on the shuttle’s exterior will mean a mission of 13 days in space rather than the originally planned 11 days, said John Shannon, head of the mission management team at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration( NASA).

The announcement came even as two Atlantis astronauts ventured out for the first space walk of the mission Monday. The shuttle which blasted off last Friday was originally scheduled to return to earth on Tuesday next.

No decision had been made on whether the loosened blanket will be repaired during a previously planned third spacewalk or a fourth, extra one, officials said. NASA has however played down concerns over the damage to Atlantis. — PTI

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Turban issue: Sikhs challenge French law

Brussels, June 12
Sikhs in France have filed a case before the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg challenging a French law that demands that turbans be taken off while being photographed for identity cards.

According to INEPNEXT news service, the United Sikhs NGO that filed the case says the French legislation "undermines the freedom of thought, conscience and religion".

Mejindarpal Kaur, director of United Sikhs, told mediapersons here yesterday that it was also necessary to go to the international court because "if left unchecked the French law will have a domino effect globally".

The case before ECHR will be the first such since France passed a law in March 2004 banishing religious symbols, including Sikh turbans, from public schools.

The highest administrative court in France, the Conseil D'Etat, has also ruled that public security justifies a law that requires Sikhs to remove their turbans while being photographed for driver's licence. — IANS

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