Wednesday, 19 February 2014

Afghan Taliban reject Dubai peace talks as 'anti-jihad'

Afghan Taliban condemned the ongoing peace efforts launched by one of their Dubai-based leaders as “anti-jihad and a move to favour the US and its puppets". PHOTO: AFP
ISLAMABAD: Afghan Taliban condemned the ongoing peace efforts launched by one of their Dubai-based leaders as “anti-jihad and a move to favour the US and its puppets” on Wednesday.
President Hamid Karzai had welcomed the peace initiative by Agha Jan Mutasim, a former Taliban cabinet minister and a close aide of Mullah Omar, and had described the move as a good omen for the political setup in Afghanistan.
However, the Taliban in their first formal reaction disowned the Dubai peace process and said that they have nominated specific negotiators and have a political office in Qatar.
“The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan reiterates to all stakeholders that it has neither entrusted Agha Jan Mutasim with a responsible position nor can he represent it,” said Taliban spokesperson, Zabihullah Mujahid.
“The Islamic Emirate considers [Mutasim's] current activities and actions against the principles of sacred jihad and they are benefiting only the invading Americans along with their servants,” the spokesman said.
Mujahid said in a statement there has not been any meeting in Dubai of the Afghan Taliban or on its behalf, nor has it been in contact or with the Kabul government or the High Peace Council.
Mutasim had announced an interest in intra-Afghan dialogue last week, stating that the Afghan Taliban are ready to talk to the administration of President Hamid Karzai, a stance totally different from the Taliban’s previous policy.
He had told The Express Tribune this week that his recent meeting was attended by seven former Taliban ministers and several top military commanders and former Taliban diplomats.
A member of the Afghan High Peace Council had confirmed to The Express Tribune that a council’s delegation is currently engaged in talks with Mutasim in Dubai.
The presidential palace in Kabul had said that Karzai is hopeful that this peace process will succeed and that he wishes that all Taliban leaders will join the dialogue process in Afghanistan to ensure peace in the country.

Kiev protesters face off with police as EU eyes sanctions

Some protesters on the smoke-filled square hurled Molotov cocktails and cobblestones at the lines of riot police, while others piled wood on to the burning barricades separating them from the security forces. PHOTO: REUTERS
KIEV: Anti-government protesters were locked in a stand-off with riot police across burning barricades Wednesday after fierce clashes left at least 26 people dead in Ukraine’s worst crisis since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The crackdown by security forces triggered a storm of international condemnation, with the White House calling the violence “completely outrageous”.
The European Union called an emergency meeting to discuss sanctions against those behind the unrest, as embattled President Viktor Yanukovych blamed the opposition for going too far.
Ukraine’s security service ramped up tensions by announcing a nationwide “anti-terrorist” operation in response to the three-month-old protests.
Security forces on Kiev’s Independence Square meanwhile appeared to have temporarily halted their push to take over the city’s main protest camp as people streamed to the site with food, clothing and medication for the demonstrators.
Some protesters on the smoke-filled square hurled Molotov cocktails and cobblestones at the lines of riot police, while others piled wood on to the burning barricades separating them from the security forces.
Riot officers responded with the odd volley of stun grenades and rubber bullets.
The atmosphere was more subdued than on Tuesday, when riot police stormed the protest square with tear gas and protesters responded by burning tyres and throwing stones and fireworks, leading to apocalyptic scenes of violence.
At the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, shocked Ukrainian athletes wanted to wear black armbands to mourn the dead, a request that was denied by the International Olympic Committee as it would interfere with rules on athletes’ clothing.
Tuesday’s unrest in Kiev was the deadliest yet since protests erupted in November after Yanukovych rejected an EU pact in favour of closer ties with Moscow.
Since then, the crisis has snowballed into a titanic tug of war for the country’s future between Russia and the West.
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton summoned the bloc’s foreign ministers for emergency talks on Ukraine on Thursday, with sanctions being considered.
“All possible options will be explored, including restrictive measures against those responsible for repression and human rights violations,” she said.
France and Poland led the calls for sanctions, and were joined by the US, Britain and Germany in condemning the bloodshed.
“We stand with the men and women suffering” in Kiev, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said at a joint press conference with French President Francois Hollande in Paris.
US Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes said the clashes were “completely outrageous” and “have no place in the 21st century”, while UN human rights chief Navi Pillay demanded an independent investigation into the violence.
But in a televised address to the nation as the clashes raged, a defiant Yanukovych put the blame squarely on the opposition.
“The leaders of the opposition… have crossed the limits by calling for people to take up arms,” Yanukovych said.
Russia, which offered debt-laden Ukraine a $15 billion bailout after Yanukovych spurned the EU pact, described the protests as “an attempted coup d’etat”.
Ukraine’s security service later announced it would launch an anti-terror operation across the country against “radical and extremist groups”.
The agency said that over the past few days some 1,500 firearms and 100,000 bullets had ended up in the hands of “criminals”.
Kiev was effectively in lockdown on Wednesday as authorities shut down the city’s metro system and limited traffic into the capital. Schools in the centre were closed.
Ukraine’s health ministry said 26 people had died in the clashes since Tuesday morning, including 10 policemen. Over 260 protesters and more than 340 police officers were injured.
A journalist working for a pro-government Kiev newspaper died of gunshot wounds after he was shot by masked men, his newspaper Vesti said.
The interior ministry added that 58 people had been detained.
Yanukovych called for a day of mourning on Thursday.
Tuesday’s outbreak of violence surprised many, as tensions appeared to have been subsiding in recent days with both sides making concessions that saw protesters vacate Kiev city hall on Sunday after being granted an amnesty deal.
But on Tuesday, anti-Yanukovych protesters clashed with police outside parliament as they rallied for lawmakers to strip the president of a raft of powers.
Running battles broke out as protesters re-occupied city hall and attacked Yanukovych’s party headquarters with petrol bombs.
Police descended on Independence Square in the evening, warning women and children to leave.  But thousands of people, many of them wearing makeshift body protection and wielding iron bars and bats, stayed to battle the riot squads.
Late night talks on Tuesday between Yanukovych and the opposition failed to go anywhere, prompting opposition leaders to urge protesters to stand their ground on the Maidan, as Independence Square is known.
“This is a small island of freedom,” opposition leader and former boxing champion Vitali Klitschko said.
The violence also spread to the west of the country, where thousands of protesters overran public buildings

Anti-immigrant violence: Pakistani man arrested in South Africa after firing shots at rioters

In this file photo a man tries to save his belongings during anti-immigration clashes east of Johannesburg, South Africa. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE
CULLINAN: Police said Wednesday they had arrested a Pakistani man accused of opening fire on a crowd of protesters in a South African town east of Pretoria and injuring several people.
Rioting township residents hurled rocks and barricaded roads protesting the murder of a 10-year-old boy allegedly beaten to death with a golf club by a Pakistani shop owner.
“The boy was assaulted by one of the Pakistanis allegedly because he was stealing sweets,” said the police. “He died in hospital yesterday.”
Residents went on the rampage overnight, ransacking around 15 foreign-owned shops, according to police.
“One Pakistani guy was trying to get out of the protest area, and he was firing shots towards the protesters,” police spokesperson Marissa van der Merwe told AFP.
The suspect was arrested.
Both South Africans and Pakistanis had been wounded in the clashes, according to police who did not give specific numbers.
Foreign shop-owners including Pakistanis and Somalis had to flee the area as tensions mounted.
The protesters later turned their anger on police, pelting them with rocks. The officers responded with rubber bullets and tear gas.
A car belonging to a Pakistani national was also set alight.
With poverty rife and unemployment widespread, frustration in South Africa’s run-down neighbourhoods often boils over into anti-immigrant violence.
“We don’t want to see any Pakistani, Indian, Somalian,” said Dineo Mutsipi, a resident of Refilwe township.
“They are killing our kids, they are taking our business. We are sick and tired of them.”
“We promise that if they come back again to our location (township), we are going to kill them as they have killed our kids.”
Somali shop worker Bashir Hajyi, who has lived in South Africa for the past four years, described how his house came under attack overnight.
“There were all stones coming from all over the sides, from the roof, from the windows, from all over,” he told AFP.
“It’s better that they take us back, deport us back to our own countries.”
An explosion of deadly xenophobic attacks across poor South African areas in 2008 killed more than 60 people and displaced thousands into camp

Prince Charles sways sword during Saudi dance

Britain's Prince Charles wears traditional Saudi uniform as he attends the traditional Saudi dancing known as 'Arda' in Riyadh, on February 18, 2014. PHOTO: REUTERS
RIYADH: Britain’s Prince Charles, dressed in a traditional Saudi robe and a chequered red and white keffiyeh, joined members of Saudi Arabia’s royal family in performing the “Ardah” sword dance near Riyadh.
Charles, who arrived Monday on his second visit to the kingdom in a year, swayed his sword to the rhythm of drumbeats at the annual cultural and heritage Al-Janadriya festival, late on Tuesday near Riyadh.
He was accompanied in the dance by several princes, including Deputy Prime Minister Moqren bin Abdul Aziz and National Guard chief Prince Mitaab, who is King Abdullah’s son.
The Prince of Wales, in a regional tour without his wife Camilla, early Wednesday visited Al-Dir’iyah, the first capital of the Saudi dynasty where the remains of many palaces and restored buildings are located.
The heir to the British throne met during his Saudi visit with several Saudi officials, including Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal.
He was to head to Qatar later on Wednesday.

'Obnoxious' Dhoni under fire after new tour flop

Beleaguered skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni was put on notice by his predecessors after India suffered another away series defeat. PHOTO: AFP
NEW DELHI: Beleaguered skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni was put on notice by his predecessors on Wednesday after India suffered yet another away series defeat, with one of them calling his leadership “obnoxious”.
The 1-0 loss to New Zealand on Tuesday was India’s fourth consecutive series defeat abroad and followed a 4-0 drubbing for Dhoni’s World Cup champions in the preceding one-dayers.
India have now lost 10 of their last 12 Tests abroad, the other two were drawn – a record that included two successive 4-0 whitewashes in England and Australia.
As the media trained its guns on Dhoni, former captain Sourav Ganguly said his Test captaincy was “obnoxious”, while Rahul Dravid hinted his strategy was too timid to win in the five-day format.
Both, however, wanted him to remain Test skipper until next year’s 50 over World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, while another ex-captain Sunil Gavaskar stressed that a leader was only as good as his team.
“If the World Cup was not less than a year away, I would have agreed that Dhoni needed to be removed as captain,” Ganguly told the Headlines Today news channel.
“His Test captaincy has been obnoxious. But changing captains now will unsettle the team. His place is not in doubt in Test cricket, but Dhoni needs to set the overseas record right.”
Dravid agreed with the perception that Dhoni was a defensive captain, saying he needed to take risks if he wanted to win Test matches abroad.
Dhoni was widely derided for his defensive field placements in New Zealand which also followed claims he blew the chance of a rare overseas victory in South Africa in December by failing to go for the jugular.
“I think he’s got to realise this very quickly, that if he wants to win Test matches abroad, he’s got to risk it all,” Dravid told the Cricinfo website.
“He’s got to take that chance that he’s going to have to lose some Test matches. The only way you can win abroad is to take a few risks, take a few gambles.”
However, Dravid added that Dhoni’s leadership in Tests must be assessed after the Test tours of England and Australia that preceded the World Cup Down Under in February-March next year.
“I see these tours as Dhoni’s opportunity to redeem what has been a pretty poor overseas record for him as captain,” Dravid said.
“I think he deserves the right, the chance to play out this year, and assess it at the end of the Australian series. End of that series, we will really know where Indian cricket stands and where Dhoni stands, both as a player and as a captain.”
Gavaskar, who was a television commentator on the New Zealand tour, rubbished suggestions that it was time to ease the workload on Dhoni, who leads India in all three formats.
“A captain can do very little if you don’t have a bowling attack. Generally a captain is only as good as his team,” the former opener told NDTV.
“He is winning handsomely in India and, therefore, it’s very difficult to say to him, okay thank you, you won in India, but sorry your overseas record is not good so we are going to change the captain. That kind of thing doesn’t work.”
The most scathing media comment came in the Hindustan Times, who wanted both Dhoni and coach Duncan Fletcher sacked.
“Can there be any excuse for losing a series against this New Zealand side?” the paper’s sports writer Sanjeev Samyal asked.
“The Dhoni-Fletcher combination has simply not clicked. The great Australian captain, Ian Chappell, has always insisted that captains have a shelf life. Indian selectors have to take this view seriously.
“Even to the extent of the risk of destabilising the team with just 12 months to go for the World Cup, it’s time for Indian cricket board and selectors to bite the bullet when it comes to the senior team management.”

Pak-Iran joint commission discusses border security

Five Iranian border guards had been kidnapped and allegedly taken to Pakistan by militants. PHOTO: AFP/FILE
QUETTA: A Pakistan-Iran joint border commission session was held in Quetta on Wednesday with the subject of missing Iranian border guards at the top of the agenda.
The Iranian delegation, comprising 13 officials including Deputy Governor of Sistan-Baluchestan province of Iran Ali Asghar Mir Shikari, visited Pakistan to discuss border issues including the kidnapping of their border guards.
The Pakistan side was led by Chief Secretary Balochistan Babar Yaqoob Fateh Muhammad along with Home Secretary Balochistan Asad Gilani and IG Police Mushtaq Sukhera.
While Pakistani officials refrained from publicly commenting on the kidnapped guards, some sources said that the entire focus of the meeting was the kidnapping. They added that Iranian officials had issued a firm warning and urged Pakistani authorities to play their role in freeing the Iranian border guards.
On Tuesday, the Pakistan foreign office had said that security forces had scoured the country side along the border with Iran but had not found any evidence of the kidnapped border guards, suggesting they may still be inside Iranian territory. The meeting comes two days after Iranian authorities warned of breaching Pakistani territory to track down their missing guards.
Pakistani officials also raised the issue of violation of Pakistan’s territory with the Iranian delegation.
Both delegations agreed that they should improve their border relations.
Responding to a question about the Iranian security guards, Gilani said Iranian authorities has already taken up the issue of the missing Iranian border guards with the Federal government which is why he was not authorised to talk about the issue.
On February 5, militant group Jaish-al-Adal had claimed responsibility for kidnapping five Iranian guards inside Iranian territory.
Pakistan shares more than 900 kilometres of border with Iran.

Solution to energy crisis: Pakistan sets sights on coal

Proposed site of Energy Park in Qadir Goth, a village of Sindh. PHOTO: AFP
GADANI: After years of rolling blackouts that have wreaked havoc on industry and fuelled political unrest, energy-starved Pakistan has set its sights on a coal-fired future.
Regarded as the dirtiest of all fossil fuels, recent discoveries of untapped coal fields in the south of Pakistan have convinced the government they could be on the cusp of a solution to their energy woes.
Late last month, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his former rival, ex-president Asif Ali Zardari jointly inaugurated the construction of a $1.6 billion coal plant the southern town of Thar, hailing their shared goal of ending the nation’s power crisis.
The government has also green-lighted the construction of a pilot 660 megawatt coal-fired plant in Gadani, a small, serene town on the Arabian Sea known as the country’s ship-breaking hub.
A 600 megawatt plant has also been given the go-ahead in the city of Jamshoro.
The construction of these plants is one plank in an ambitious plan to convert many of the country’s existing oil-based thermal plants and upgrade its ports as they begin swapping one black gold for another.
“This is a major and historic fuel switching plan as we generate zero from coal compared to India which generates 69 percent of its electricity from coal-fired power plants,” Minister for Water and Power Khawaja Asif told AFP.
Pakistan has struggled with scheduled power cuts for decades. But the problems have been particularly acute since 2008, with regular outages of up to 22 hours a day for many domestic users and even longer for industries – costing about two percent of GDP per year.
In the hot summer, when temperatures soar to 50C in the country’s centre, the country produces around 18,000 MW of power, with an average deficit of 4,000 MW.
A lack of capacity together with huge debt cycles exacerbated by poor rates of tax collection are seen as some of the major factors contributing to the country’s dismal power shortages.
The issue was also a central campaign theme in last year’s general elections, which saw Nawaz Sharif elected to the top post.
Faced with a growing bill for imported oil that currently stands at $14 billion and a rapidly depleting supply of natural gas, the country’s private and public plants are switching their oil-plants over to coal.
“Pakistan has been facing rising oil prices and declining gas reserves as well as tight foreign account situation, rendering the reliance on the import of oil to fuel power plants increasingly unaffordable,” the Asian Development Bank said in a statement.
Pakistan’s largest private sector power utility Karachi Electric Supply Company (KESC), which provides electricity to the country’s biggest city, has taken the lead in plans for the coal switch.
The company has recently granted engineering, procurement and construction contracts to Chinese company Harbin Electric International to convert two units of the Bin Qasim thermal power stations with 420 megawatt capacity.
The $400 million project is expected to be completed by 2016.
Alongside the conversions, Pakistan is also upgrading its port facilities to increase its ability to import coal.
“Ports are the lifeline of the country,” says Haleem Siddiqui, a veteran seaman who pioneered the first state-of-the art container terminal at Karachi Port and whose company is building a “dirty cargo terminal” at Port Qasim along Arabian Sea.
The fully-mechanised terminal would be able to handle four to eight million tons of coal in the first phase to be completed by 2015, growing to 20 million tons in the extended phase in 2020, at a cost of $200 million.
But merely raising the amount of imported coal would strain the country’s already dwindling foreign exchange reserves and adverse balance of payment, which fell to 13-year low of $2.8 billion in February.
Which is why Pakistan is determined to find some of its energy needs under its own soil.
Some experts have pointed to the Thar Desert in Sindh, which sits on top a vast potential source of 175 billion tons of coal.
“It is very huge reserve and is equivalent to combined oil reserves of Iran and Saudi Arab in terms of heating value,” Agha Wasif, chief of the provincial energy department told AFP.
Engro Powergen Limited, a joint venture of public and private sectors, is developing a block of the Thar coal field with $800 million dollars investment which is set to open by 2016.
But not everyone is pleased. Some residents inside the Gadani Energy Park have been forced to leave their homes.
“We are living here for seven generations and we have the graves of our ancestors here, how could we leave our place?” said 25-year-old Umaid Ali from the village of Qadir Goth.
The power minister said no widespread displacements would take place, saying the land purchased for the Energy Park had been purchased long ago “and if there is any (residential) disturbance that would be duly taken care of”.
Pervez Hoodbhoy, a nuclear scientist and energy commentator, said that despite its dirty reputation – coal produced 44 percent of global C02 emissions in 2011 – Pakistan has few other options to keep the lights on.
“I’m aware of the fact that there are serious CO2 issues but the amount Pakistan is producing would be insignificant on the global scale.
“The alternative is nuclear power plants being imported from China and those have the potential for disaster given Pakistan’s safety record. Given the choice this seems to be the lesser of two evils,” he said.