Pakistan

Militants kill 3, seize 30 security staff in north-west Pakistan

Peshawar, Pakistan - Islamic militants killed three intelligence officials and abducted 30 police and paramilitary troops in two separate attacks in the restive Swat valley of Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province, officials and Taliban said Tuesday.

More than a dozen heavily armed rebels opened fire on a vehicle carrying the three intelligence officers near the village Bishbanr in the Matta area of Swat district on Monday. The officers died on the spot.

Major Farooq, a spokesman for the Pakistan Army in the region, confirmed the killings.

Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan accepted responsibility for the attack.

Theories abound in Islamabad over ISI fiasco

Islamabad, July 29: Several reasons are being cited in Islamabad for the sudden U-turn by Pakistan government of putting back the intelligence agency ISI under the purview of the country’s prime minister. But, the ultimate conclusion is that the Pakistan government’s image has received a dent in the fiasco, which was later described as a ‘misunderstanding’ on the part of the federal government, said an editorial in the Daily Times.

According to one theory, the federal government did it on the eve of the prime minister’s visit to Washington to please the Americans who are unhappy with the ISI’s role in Afghanistan.

Pak’s first women-only police station consigned to history

Islamabad, July 29: The scheme to set up women-only police stations in Pakistan seems to have fallen flat, as the first police station inaugurated by late Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in Islamabad, on January 25, 1994, today stands shut down for lack of proper trained female staff to run it.

After 14 years, the City Police formally ordered the women-only police station last October to stop registering cases. By October 31, 2007, when the police station closed its register, it had registered a total 69 cases in the year.

Diesel exports to NATO forces in Afghanistan costing Pak exchequer millions of rupees

Diesel exports to NATO forces in Afghanistan costing Pak exchequer millions of rupeesIslamabad, July 29 : If sources in the Pakistan Petroleum Ministry are to be believed, the export of subsidised diesel for the consumption of NATO forces in Afghanistan and the fuel smuggling across the Pak-Afghan border were causing massive losses to the national exchequer and straining fuel supplies in Pakistan.

It has been learnt that Pakistan was losing around Rs 32.5 million daily due to such exports and smuggling.

Pak govt to ensure safety to staff of two Pak dailies

Lahore, July 29: Following threats from “intolerant elements” propped up by the previous government, the Gilani government has ensured safety for the management and staff of two national dailies - Daily Times and Daily Aaj Kal.

Federal Information Minister Sherry Rehman said that it was the responsibility of the government to protect and support the two newspapers, reported the Daily Times.

She said that Daily Times and Aaj Kal Editor-in-Chief Najam Sethi understands that intolerance resulted from wrong policies of the previous government.

She hoped that in future the papers would not succumb to the threats of ‘intolerant elements’.

ISI has been interfering in Pak politics, says PPP leader

Lahore, July 29: A senior PPP leader has reportedly said that the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence) was one of the most efficient spy agencies in the world, but it was wrong on its part to create the IJI (Islami Jamhoori Ittehad), an alliance of nine political parties which played a key role in toppling the PPP government in 1988.

In a TV interview, PPP MNA Farzana Raja said that though the Army spokesman denies the ISI having a political wing, but it was an open secret that the IJI formed by the ISI was the real force behind the toppling of the PPP government.

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