Archive for September 22nd, 2010

Flood Victims to get free houses in model villages: CM

September 22, 2010

BHAKKAR: Chief Minister Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif has said that the Punjab government will establish model villages in flood-hit areas to provide free houses to victims.

He was addressing affectees at Watan Cards Distribution Centre at District Council Hall here on Tuesday. He said that clean drinking water, dispensaries and schools would be provided in model villages. He added that the government would provide free fertilizers and seeds to growers so that they could re-cultivate their crops. He said that the process of providing Rs 20,000 to the head of each victim family was being completed at a fast pace with the cooperation of the Nadra and UBL. “Quilts and warm clothes will be provided to flood affectees before the winter,” he said. He added that all resources would be utilised for rehabilitation of the flood victims.

Earlier, the chief minister inspected the distribution of Watan cards. The chief minister directed the officials to ensure transparent payment of the first instalment of Rs 20,000 to victims. He also directed the officials to provide pick and drop facility to affectees for collecting Watan Cards. MNA Abdul Majeed Khan, MPA Sanaullah Khan Mastikhel, Malik Adil Nazir Utra, Saeed Akbar Khan Niwani and former MPA Najeebullah Khan Niazi lauded the efforts of the chief minister during the relief operation. They assured their cooperation in the rehabilitation of the affectees. Minister for Zakat and Usher Malik Nadeem Kamran, Board of Revenue Senior Member Ikhlaq Ahmed Tarar, Sargodha Commissioner Jawad Rafiq Malik, DCO Muhammad Asif Qureshi, DPO Syed Pervez Qandhari and the Nadra and UBL officials were also present.

OUR LAHORE CORRESPONDENT ADDS: The chief minister said that the government had fulfilled the promise of paying the first instalment of Rs 20,000 before Eidul Fitr in Mianwali.

“The promise of establishing modern villages for affectees will also be fulfilled. Villagers have as much right over modern amenities as the people of Karachi, Lahore or Islamabad,” he maintained. He said that the government had decided to increase staff at Watan Card centres so that relief amount could be provided to flood-hit people at the earliest.
Inspecting Watan Cards Centre at Government Elementary College Muzaffargarh, the chief minister said that he had witnessed the devastation caused by flood in Kot Addu, Basira, Mehmood Kot, Dera Din Panah and Rohilanwali. He said that he would continue to strive till rehabilitation of each victim family.

The chief minister said that philanthropists and affluent people were donating generously for flood victims in response to the appeal of PML-N Quaid Muhammad Nawaz Sharif and over Rs one billion had been deposited in the fund set up for the purpose. He said that Nawaz Sharif and Shahbaz Sharif would remain with the flood-hit people till they become able to stand on their feet. “Islam teaches unity and brotherhood. Collective efforts should be made for the reconstruction of the country,” he remarked.

‘18 Pak soldiers missing in Indian jails’

September 22, 2010

ISLAMABAD: Bitter memories of the 1965 and 1971 wars with India were revisited in the Senate on Tuesday when Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi made a shocking disclosure in writing that 18 personnel of the Pakistan Army captured in the two wars had gone missing in Indian jails.

Talking to The News after the Senate session, Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit said Pakistan had already shared a list of its 18 missing soldiers with New Delhi. The soldiers were arrested during 1965 and 1971 wars and were believed to be still in the Indian jails.

This is for the first time that the Foreign Office made a confession in writing before the upper house during the Question-Hour that apart from 920 Pakistanis detained in Indian jails, 18 Pakistani soldiers were part of the list of those missing in Indian jails. The foreign minister did not give the required detail about their names and ranks. Qureshi told the house that a total of 920 Pakistanis were detained in Indian jails out of whom 770 were civilians, 132 fishermen and 18 missing defence personnel.

The fresh disclosures at the government level might revive the hopes of families of the missing soldiers in Indian jails. Pakistani soldiers may not be alone facing this kind of sorry fate in the Indian jails. In 2006, a group of desperate Indian women had visited the Pakistani jails after the then president Pervez Musharraf, as part of confidence building measures between the two countries, had given them a special permission to locate the Indian soldiers reported to be missing in the Pakistani jails. The Indian women, mostly blood relatives of the missing Indian soldiers, were allowed to visit the Pakistani jails, meet all foreign prisoners and identify their blood relatives, if any. These Indian women had built pressure on their own government to raise the issue of missing Indian soldiers in Pakistani jails after reportedly, one of the detained Indian soldiers during the 1971 war, had written a letter to his relatives in India from a Pakistani jail, informing them he, along with several other soldiers, were still alive.

But, despite this extraordinary act of human gesture shown by the then leadership of Pakistan, the group of Indian women had returned empty-handed, quite disappointed as they could not trace a single soldier detained in Pakistani jails.

Untangling the Bizarre CIA Links to the Ground Zero Mosque

September 22, 2010

By Mark Ames

So far, the debate over the proposed Islamic center near Ground Zero has unfolded along predictable lines, with the man at the center of the project, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, drawing attacks from the right painting him as a terrorist sympathizer with ties to Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood.

But meanwhile, links between the group behind the controversial mosque, the CIA and U.S. military establishment have gone unacknowledged.

For instance, one of the earliest backers of the nonprofit group, the Cordoba Initiative, that is spearheading the Ground Zero mosque, is a 52-year-old Scarsdale, New York, native named R. Leslie Deak. In addition to serving on the group’s board of advisors since its founding in 2004 by Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, Deak was its principal funder, donating $98,000 to the nonprofit between 2006 and 2008. This figure appears to represent organization’s total operating budget-though, oddly, the group reported receipts of just a third of that total during the same time period.

Deak describes himself as a “Practicing Muslim with background in Christianity and Judaism, [with] in-depth personal and business experiences in the Middle East, living and working six months per year in Egypt.” Born into a Christian home, Deak became an Orthodox Jew and married a Jewish woman before converting to Islam when he married his current wife, Moshira Soliman, with whom he now lives in Rye.

Leslie Deak’s resume also notes his role as “business consultant” for Patriot Defense Group, LLC, a private defense contractor with offices in Winter Park, Florida, and in Tucson. The only names listed on the firm’s website are those of its three “strategic advisers.” These include retired four-star General Bryan “Doug” Brown, commander of the U.S. Special Operations Command until 2007, where he headed “all special operations forces, both active duty and reserve, leading the Global War On Terrorism,” and James Pavitt, former deputy director for operations at the Central Intelligence Agency, where he “managed the CIA’s globally deployed personnel and nearly half of its multi-billion dollar budget” and “served as head of America’s Clandestine Service, the CIA’s operational response to the attacks of September 11, 2001.”

Besides Pavitt, Brown and a third advisor, banker Alexander Cappello, the Patriot Defense Group is so secretive it doesn’t even name its management team, instead describing its anonymous CEO as a former Special Forces and State Department veteran, the group’s managing director as a former CIA officer experienced in counter-terrorism in hostile environments and the group’s corporate intelligence head as a “23-year veteran of the U.S. Secret Service who worked on the personal security details of former Presidents Bush and Clinton.”


Leslie Deak and Moshira Soliman/ PanachePrive

Patriot Defense Group’s primary business involves leveraging its government connections and know-how. The firm is divided into two divisions: one that “focuses exclusively on the needs of the U.S. military and law enforcement communities as well as the requirements of friendly foreign governments,” and a corporate division, which “provides business intelligence and specialized security services to corporate clients and high net-worth family enterprises.”

So, to recap: From 2006 to 2008, R. Leslie Deak worked as a “business consultant” to this super-secretive security contractor with ties to the CIA and counterterrorism forces, and in those same three years he also donated nearly $100,000 in seed money to the foundation now advocating the construction of the so-called Ground Zero Mosque.

Interestingly, during the same three-year period during which the Deak Family Foundation was financing the Cordoba Initiative, Deak also donated a total of $101,247 to something called the National Defense University Foundation. The National Defense University is a network of war and strategy colleges and research centers (including the National War College) funded by the Pentagon, designed to train specialists in military strategy. The organization recently announced a November 5 dinner gala in honor of Defense Secretary and former CIA chief Robert Gates. Sponsors include Northrup Grumman, Boeing, Lockheed Martin and…the Patriot Defense Group.

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Deak also sits on the NDUF’s board of directors, the chairman of which is Mark Treanor, the former general counsel for Wachovia bank from 1998 through its collapse in 2008 and a major bundler of campaign donations for the McCain-Palin ticket in 2008. Wachovia, now owned by Wells Fargo, was recently fined $160 million for laundering “at least $110 million” in Mexican drug money between 2003 and 2008, while Treanor was Wachovia’s general counsel, though the figure is likely higher since Wachovia admitted it didn’t put any controls on at least $420 billion-that’s billion-in cash moved through its network of Mexico currency exchanges.

Which leads to another odd coincidence: Laundering money for drug lords is what brought down Deak & Co., the company run by Leslie Deak’s father, Nicholas Deak, years ago. The elder Deak, a former top intelligence commander during World War II for the OSS (the forerunner of the CIA), was the founder of Deak-Perera, which became for a time one of the world’s biggest foreign currency and gold dealers. But in 1984, a Presidential Commission on Organized Crime accused the firm of acting as a money laundering operation for Columbia drug cartels, who reportedly brought sacks of cash containing tens of millions of dollars into Deak’s Manhattan offices. By the end of 1984, Deak & Co. had declared bankruptcy, and a year later, Nicholas Deak was murdered in the company’s headquarters at 29 Broadway by a deranged homeless woman.

After the firm went bankrupt and Leslie Deak was left on his own, the corporation was broken up and sold off in pieces. One company that traces its beginnings to the defunct Deak empire is Goldline International, a business concern well known to fans of Glenn Beck as well as California investigators. Goldline is to Glenn Beck what General Electric was to Ronald Reagan: The company sponsors Beck’s TV and radio shows as well as his touring act, and Beck is its public face. The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office, along with the Santa Monica City Attorney’s office, are currently investigating Goldline for defrauding customers by railroading gullible customers into buying their most debased products.

Speaking of Glenn Beck, it has been reported that Saudi Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal, the second-largest shareholder in News Corp., the parent company Fox News, which airs Beck’s program, is also a major funder of Imam Rauf’s projects, as Jon Stewart viewers heard all about last week.

Coincidences happen, of course. (For instance, Pamela Geller, the blogger who’s become the leading voice denouncing the mosque project was once, bizarrely enough, associate publisher of The New York Observer.)

But add to this array of unexpected connections the work of Imam Rauf on behalf of the U.S. government-which includes serving as an FBI “consultant” and being recruited as a spokesperson by longtime George W. Bush confidante Karen Hughes, who headed up the administration’s propaganda efforts in the Muslim world-and a compelling picture begins to emerge. Bush’s favorite Imam, with backing from a funder with connections to the CIA, the Pentagon and the currency trading company that now sponsors rightwing firebrand Glenn Beck, proposes to build a mosque around the corner from the site of the most devastating terrorist attack ever visited on America. In the name of “[cultivating] understanding among all religions and cultures,” he puts forth a project that offends a majority of Americans and deals a significant setback to the broader acceptance of Muslim-Americans. It’s a little like Billy “White Shoes” Johnson claiming the only reason he moonwalks after scoring a touchdown is to lower tensions on the football field and raise the other team’s spirits.

Whether the Cordoba Initiative ever gets its way with the Ground Zero Mosque, it may well have a lasting legacy at odds with its stated intention: By damaging the very moderates and progressives who actually view New York, and the nation as a whole, as a tolerant melting pot, and strengthening the position demagogues on both sides, it will almost certainly deal a setback to interfaith relations. It will also help to hobble the Democratic party. Which just might have been the point all along.

Either that, or it’s merely a coincidence that this controversy has erupted now, during crucial mid-term elections. In which case we can all go back to what we were doing before-either denouncing the Park51 Mosque as an affront to Americans, or championing it as a symbol of our fundamental rights-playing our accustomed roles in a drama that seems too perfect, somehow, to believe.

SC sends Brig Imtiaz, Adnan Khawaja to jail

September 22, 2010

ISLAMABAD – Former Managing Director Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) Adnan A Khawaja and former head of Intelligence Bureau (IB) Brig (Retd) Imtiaz Ahmed were arrested from the courtroom on Tuesday on the order of a three-member bench of Supreme Court.

The bench, comprising Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhary, Justice Tariq Pervaiz and Justice Ghulam, was hearing a suo moto notice on the reported appointment of Adnan Khawaja as chairman OGDCL by the government.

The apex court also ordered seizure of the properties of both the men and rejected Adnan’s bail plea. The court ordered Adnan Khawaja to submit a fresh surety bond in the SC while Brig Imtiaz had been asked to submit the bond in Lahore High Court within three days. Both the men were later shifted to Adiala Jail.

The Chief Justice asked Khawaja how did he obtain the posts – Managing Director OGDCL and chairman National Vocational & Technical Education Commission (NAVTEC) despite the fact that he, as NAB convict, was disqualified to assume such a post for ten years.

Khawaja was disqualified for a period of ten years from seeking or being elected, chosen, appointed or nominated as member of any public office, any statuary or local authority of government of Pakistan or granted any financial facilities in the form of any loan by any government bank.

It’s worth mentioning here that in the wake of the suo motu notice taken by the apex court and the subsequent revelations in the media, the government had cancelled the appointment of Adnan Khawaja as chairman OGDCL, only a day after he assumed the charge.

Appearing before the bench, Raja Aamer Abbas, Additional Prosecutor General NAB, informed the court that as per directives of SC he had obtained details from the Central Jail, Rawalpindi, according to that convict Brig. (Retd) Imtiaz Ahmad had already undergone sentence of 4 years, 5 months and 14 days whereas remaining part of his sentence is 3 years 6 months and 16 days, if fine is paid.

Brig (Retd) Imtiaz was sentenced in the NAB Reference No. 21 of 2000 for 8-year RI along with a fine of Rs 70,00,000 under Section 382-B Cr.P.C. by the Accountability Court, Rawalpindi, on 31.07.2001. He was released from jail on bail by the Lahore High Court vide order dated 08.06.2002 passed in Cr. A. No. 1096-M of 2002.

Similarly, co-accused Adnan A Khawaja was sentenced to 2-year RI with a fine of Rs 200,000 under Section 382-B Cr.P.C. by the Accountability Court, Rawalpindi, and out of his total sentence, he has already served 1 year, 1 month and 8 days, including the remissions, whereas the remaining portion of his sentence is 10 months and 22 days, if fine is paid.

After promulgation of the National Reconciliation Ordinance both Brig (Retd) Imtiaz and Khawaja claimed benefit of the same and ultimately vide judgment dated 04.12.2008 passed by the Islamabad High Court, they were acquitted of the charge. But the NRO was declared ultra vires in the SC judgment on December 16, 2009 as a result of that their acquittal was set aside.

During pendency of the appeal filed by Adnan A Khawaja before the High Court, his sentence was suspended by this court vide order 06.02.2002 passed in Cr. Appeal No. 22 of 2002 on furnishing surety bonds.

After getting acquittal from the Islamabad High Court vide judgment dated 04.12.2008 Khawaja was appointed as Chairman NAVTEC. After the declaration of NRO ultra vires of the Constitution vide the judgment dated December 16, 2009, he continued to perform his functions as chairman NAVTEC, although he was debarred from holding any public office for a period of 10 years, in terms of the National Accountability Ordinance, 1999.

Not only this, on September 07, 2010, he was appointed as Managing Director OGDCL. Therefore, in pursuance of the information so communicated widely, his case was taken up and it was noticed that he is enjoying the position contrary to the judgment of the Accountability Court and when the notice of the matter was taken by this Court, the competent authority of the government of Pakistan rescinded the notification of his appointment.

The Chief Justice said that it was moral duty to relinquish the job after the judgment. Raja Amir said that even the High Court judgment he was debarred from holding any government post.

Justice Tariq Pervez remarked, “After December 16, 2010 judgment you both – Khawja and Brig (Retd) Imtiaz – should have got the bail on fresh surety bonds, but that did not happen.”

Khawaja said, “My legal advisors had asked me not to worry and do not need to apply for fresh surety.” Brig (Retd) said, “I was not aware that the NAB case would revive after the SC judgment.”

The court observed that unless fresh surety bonds are not furnished their bail could not be extended. Therefore, police were ordered to take them into custody and send them to jail.
Ismail Qureshi, Secretary Establishment, has furnished the explanation, which would be considered on the next date of hearing.


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