Sunday, 11 May 2014

Shocking story of the sex-obsessed world of Brunei

Shocking story of the sex-obsessed world of Brunei | PakistanTribeNEW YORK – Last week, celebrities including Jay LenoEllen DeGeneres, Sharon Osbourne, Richard Branson and Clive Davis united for an unlikely cause: a boycott of the Beverly Hills Hotel, because its owner, the Sultan of Brunei, recently announced the implementation of Sharia law in his country, New York Postreported.
“Theory states that Allah’s law is cruel and unfair,” said Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, “bumists.
So, why now?
“Who knows?” says Reza Aslan, religious scholar and author of “Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth.” “This is obviously not coming from a place of religious devotion, since the Sultan himself is in violation of every single rule of Sharia law you could possibly imagine.”
Indeed, the Sultan and his equally decadent brother, Prince Jefri, were dubbed “constant companions in hedonism” in 2011 by Vanity Fair.
He lives in a palace with 1,788 rooms, 257 bathrooms, five swimming pools, a mosque, a banquet hall that holds 5,000 people and a 110-car garage. When he turned 50, the Sultan built a stadium, invited Michael Jackson to perform in it and paid him $17 million for three concerts.
Jefri, 59, maintains a separate pleasure palace and once owned a 152-foot yacht called “Tits”; he named its tenders “Nipple 1” and “Nipple 2” and could never understand why others often found that juvenile and crass. Here and abroad, the brothers are infamous for their sex parties and their harems composed mainly of underage girls.
In 1984, after nearly 100 years as a British protectorate, Brunei gained independence. The Sultan is descended from a centuries-old royal line, maintained by inter-marriage among cousins.
Brunei is about the size of Delaware, with a population of 415,000, and the government provides free education, health care, pensions and low-interest loans for the purchase of homes and cars.
Oil is the source of all wealth, and when Shell began pumping in the 1970s, Brunei soon became known as “the Shellfare state.”
In 2012, Forbes magazine ranked Brunei as the fifth-richest nation in the world. Yet there is little fun to be had: Alcohol is banned and there is virtually no nightlife or culture.
“I’m trying to think of a place that’s duller,” Australian writer Charles James told Fortune in 1999. “Maybe a British village in midwinter.”
In one way, the brothers adhere to Islamic law: As proscribed, each has several wives and families. But everything else they do is in defiance of the Koran and the law they’ve just imposed.
“It’s a radical double standard,” says Jillian Lauren, who wrote about her life as a member of Jefri’s harem in her memoir “Some Girls.”
“They have more money than anyone else. I know that they both have been married and divorced multiple times. It’s really hypocritical.”
It wasn’t until 2001, when Jefri was forced to auction off personal possessions after using the country as a piggy bank — spending an average of $747,000 a day for 10 years, on top of $17 billion in gifts to friends and family — that the sultanate’s true vulgarity was exposed. (His brother also treats the country as an ATM machine, and it remains a crime in Brunei for anyone to ever discuss how the royals spend their money.)
Among the family’s possessions:
  • The Dorchester Hotel luxury chain
  • More than 17 airplanes, including a private, customized Boeing 747 and an Airbus 340-200 — often used to transport their harems and the South American professional polo players they rent for sport
  • 9,000 cars, including two custom-made Mercedes-Benz firetrucks
  • 150 homes in 12 countries
  • A private zoo
  • One 12-foot-tall rocking horse
  • Four life-sized statues depicting Jefri having sex with a fiancee ($800,000)
  • A global network of employees to procure women
  • Asprey, jeweler to the Queen of England
  • 10 luxury watches, at a cost of $8 million, that showed a couple having sex every time the hour struck
  • Hundreds of thousands of suits by Versace and Armani
  • A gold course designed by Jack Nicklaus
  • Gold-plated toilet-bowl brushes
  • A sofa shaped like a Cadillac
  • Dozens of bowling alley machines, pool tables, pizza ovens and grand pianos
  • A professional lab to develop film
  • 16,000 tons of marble, stacked in warehouses
“With their money, they could have cured diseases,” an adviser to Jefri told Fortune. “But they have little interest in the rest of humanity.”
Another described Jefri and his brother as incredibly dim. “They don’t have a lot of thoughts,” he said. “If you were a fly on the wall and heard their conversations, they’d take you to Bellevue.”
A third brother, Mohamed, was reported to loathe his brothers’ wantonness and profligacy. But when the Sultan tasked him with rebuilding the economy he and Jefri had so badly damaged, he took more than $2 billion for himself and was promptly fired.
Jefri once hid from his brother in five-star hotels around the world, and in a ploy to get him back, the Sultan reportedly held Jefri’s son Hakeem, then 25, under house arrest. A member of the Sultan’s team found this funny: “Hakeem can leave Brunei anytime he wants,” the source told Fortune. “But he wouldn’t know how to pick up the phone and take a commercial flight. So he probably feels trapped.”
Inside the harem
Two years before that, in 1997, Brunei’s long-rumored harems and sex parties were made public when Shannon Marketic, a former Miss USA, sued Jefri and the sultan. In court filings, she claimed a talent agency brokered a $3,000 a day job in Brunei, where she’d do “personal appearances and promotional work.”
Instead, Marketic said, she was held as a sex slave, forced to dance every night in the prince’s private disco from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m., called a whore and groped at random. Marketic told People magazine that she’d been drugged and molested and once back in the US sued them for $10 million, citing “mental anguish, nightmares, difficulty sleeping, other trauma.”
The brothers claimed diplomatic immunity, and the Sultan called the accusation “worse than murder.” The case was dropped.
Lauren, who was recruited as a harem girl at just 18, doesn’t believe Marketic’s allegations. “Her description of what was going on at parties doesn’t ring true.”
Other things do. Upon landing in Brunei, Lauren says, all of the girls were forced to hand over their passports. (Marketic claimed this as well.) Lauren was told never to show her soles — an insult in Muslim countries.
She was warned to watch what she did and said at all times; surveillance was everywhere. She was to keep her weight down, and if that was a problem, there was a doctor on hand with diet pills, sleeping pills — whatever she might need.
Lauren was to bow to the royals whenever one passed, not speak unless spoken to, and at all times was to keep her head lower than Jefri’s — who demanded the girls call him Robin, a name he found more American.
He liked American cars and clothes and pop culture but had a more complicated attraction to American girls. “As the decadence increased, so did the number of Americans,” Lauren says. “He would start opening magazines and say, ‘I want that woman,’ ‘I want that one,’ and order them.”
Lauren was one of the rare Westerners who found subservience easy. “A lot of American girls had a bigger problem with it than I did,” she says. “There was one girl who was like, ‘I’m an American. I’m not bowing for anybody.’ She left after a few weeks.”
Most of the girls, she says, were Filipino or Thai, many as young as 15. “There’s no such thing as underage over there,” Lauren says.
The girls were housed in Jefri’s palace and left to waste away until nighttime, almost never permitted to leave. Nights were spent drinking top-shelf liquor in the disco, dancing for the prince and his entourage, hoping that this one night you may be chosen — maybe alone, maybe with other girls.
“You’re out of your mind with boredom,” Lauren says. Weeks passed before she was summoned, ordered into a Mercedes-Benz and driven to an anonymous office building, where she was led into a garish suite and locked inside, alone.
“An hour passed,” she writes. “There were no books, no magazines, no television. I walked in circles. I sat back down. I looked for a bathroom. I tried the door and it was locked . . . I considered peeing in a wastebasket. I was trembling from the cold, from hunger, from nerves.”
After four hours, the prince showed up. They had sex, the prince not wearing a condom, and when he was done, “He lay beside me for exactly three seconds before slapping my ass,” and saying, “That was very nice for me. I am late for a meeting.”
Lauren says the prince never used protection and never asked her if she was on the pill or using any form of birth control. She wasn’t screened for STDs.
“It was certainly a concern,” she says. “But we didn’t talk amongst ourselves because it was a very touchy subject — who was sleeping with him when. It was adversarial.”
Lauren was considered a Jefri favorite, and her status was confirmed when Jefri passed her along to his brother, the Sultan. She was helicoptered to Malaysia with no warning, brought to a hotel suite, and left alone with the Sultan, who asked her how she liked his country and then asked for oral sex. She gave it and was dismissed, never to see him again.
“That night, Robin was eager to know if [the Sultan] had liked me,” Lauren writes. “He seemed like a little boy looking for his father’s approval.”
Her payment came in jewels, shopping sprees and stacks of cash, which she’d change to US dollars in Singapore. She stashed the bills in two money belts, wore her jewelry and slugged Jack Daniel’s as she smuggled her haul through US customs. In transit, she was no high-class hooker; just another slightly drunk conspicuous consumer.
Over three years, Lauren went back and forth to Brunei for months on end, leaving when the Prince had finally tired of her. “Robin was in London on business when I left,” she writes. “I didn’t even get to say goodbye.”
Keeping his people ignorant
In the palace, none of the girls were ever exposed to news about Brunei, and the media there is state-run.
According to a 2013 report issued by the independent watchdog organization Freedom House, journalists face up to three years in jail for “reporting ‘false and malicious’ news.”
Any criticism of the Sultan or the royal family is also criminal, and the government retains the right to shut down any media outlet they like. As for the web, only 60% of the population has access and it’s both restricted and monitored.
“On the international market, they can do whatever they want,” says Aslan. “Maybe the Sultan has had some great spiritual awakening — but I doubt it, because he’d do what the Koran says and give away all his money.”
Perhaps the prime motivator for the Sultan’s decree is control: maintaining power, privilege and personal excess at the expense of his country, without his countrymen’s knowledge. Tellingly, he called Islam a “firewall” against globalization — despite the all-too-worldly life he leads.
As for the outrage and celebrity-led boycotts, Aslan finds them misguided and hypocritical.
“What the Sultan is supporting for his tiny island nation is what Saudi Arabia — one of our closest allies — has been doing for decades,” he says. “Is Saudi Arabia at all paying for their human-rights violations? Of course not.”

Saturday, 10 May 2014

FBI agent case: Court orders police to submit challan on May 19

FBI agent Joel Cox. PHOTO: INP
KARACHI: On the request of an investigation officer, the district and sessions court Malir on Saturday gave extra time to submit the final challan in the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) agent case, Express News reported. 
FBI agent Joel Cox was arrested at the Karachi airport on May 5 for carrying ammunition. He was later released on bail on May 8.
Police presented Cox before the court today and requested for more time to complete their investigation. In response to this request, the court ordered police to submit the final challan on May 19. The court also asked Cox to appear before the court in the next hearing.
Cox was travelling from Karachi to Islamabad by PK-308 on the evening of May 5 when a routine search by Airport Security Force (ASF) staff at the Jinnah International Airport found 15 bullets and a magazine in his bags.
He was detained before being handed over to the airport police station. A case was lodged against him under Section 23 1(a) of the Sindh Arms Act, 2013. When he was presented before the district Malir court the following day, the court sent him into judicial remanded till May 10.
The district and sessions court Malir had released Cox after the payment of a surety bond worth Rs1,000,000.

Nigeria military 'ignored schoolgirl kidnap warning': Amnesty

Women sit as they gather on May 8, 2014 during a meeting called by Congafen (the Coordination of the NGOs and Nigerien women associations) at the Youth house in Niamey, western Niger, to ask the United Nations (UN) to pursue in justice Boko Haram who are responsible for the abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls. PHOTO: AFP
ABUJA: Nigeria’s military was warned of an attack on a school in which more than 200 girls were abducted by Boko Haram militants but failed to act for nearly five hours, Amnesty International said Friday.
The allegation, which the military has denied, came as US, British and French experts arrived on the ground to help trace the schoolgirls and Nigeria said a round-the-clock search was under way.
At least 10 army search teams were trying to track down the girls in the remote far northeast, border guards were on high alert and the air force had so far flown at least 250 sorties.
Nigeria is keen to demonstrate that it is finally acting to trace the 223 girls still missing, after three weeks where the teenagers’ parents and families accused them of inaction and indifference.
But Amnesty’s claims are likely to heap further pressure on Nigeria’s embattled government and military.
Hundreds of people from the girls’ home town of Chibok, in northeastern Borno state, took to the streets of the state capital, Maiduguri, to vent their frustrations at the lack of immediate action.
At the same time, Nelson Mandela’s widow Graca Machel broke her customary mourning period to plead for the girls’ safe return.
Amnesty said that from 7:00 pm local time on April 14, military commanders had repeated warnings about an impending raid in Chibok.
Two senior military officers said not enough troops could be found to head to the town to stave off the attack, as soldiers were reluctant to face guerilla fighters who were better equipped.
Up to 200 armed Boko Haram fighters eventually abducted 276 girls at about 11:45 pm after fighting a small number of police and soldiers stationed in the town.
Amnesty’s Africa director for research and advocacy, Netsanet Belay, described the situation as a “gross dereliction of Nigeria’s duty to protect civilians”, adding that people remained “sitting ducks” for future attacks.
“The fact that Nigerian security forces knew about Boko Haram’s impending raid but failed to take the immediate action needed to stop it will only amplify the national and international outcry at this horrific crime,” he said.
“The Nigerian leadership must now use all lawful means at their disposal to secure the girls’ safe release and ensure nothing like this can happen again.”
Defence spokesman Chris Olukolade told AFP that Amnesty’s allegation was “unfounded, as usual”.
“The report is just a collation of rumours,” he said.
The girls’ kidnap and threat by Boko Haram’s leader Abubakar Shekau in a video that he would sell them as slaves has triggered world outrage and a groundswell of calls for action on social networks.
The US team comprises seven military officials from the US Africa regional command AFRICOM, a State Department expert and three FBI personnel, who arrived on Friday, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.
Four others from the State Department and the USAID aid agency were due to arrive Saturday.
“They’ll be providing technical and investigatory assistance, helping with hostage negotiations, advising on military planning and operations and assisting with intelligence and information,” she said.
Psaki called the search “challenging” while Secretary of State John Kerry tweeted that it was “too early to conclude” that the girls would be found.
Britain has deployed defence ministry personnel, the Foreign Office said, while French diplomatic sources said a small team was also in Abuja and surveillance equipment was being sent.
China and Interpol have also pledged expert support for the rescue efforts amid growing international awareness of Nigeria’s Islamist uprising, which has killed thousands since 2009.
Nigeria is Africa’s biggest economy, leading oil producer and most populous nation, with the continent’s biggest defence budget by far.
It has in the past resisted security cooperation with the West.
But outrage over the plight of the hostages has prompted President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration to welcome offers of assistance, which has been seen as a tacit admission that it requires help to put down the insurgency.
The United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) said that aside from the kidnappings, focus needed to remain on Boko Haram’s wider insurgency.
“The brutality and frequency of (the group’s) attacks is unprecedented,” it said.
Most of the recent violence has been concentrated in the northeast, where Boko Haram was founded more than a decade ago and more than 1,600 people have already been killed this year.
Attacks in Borno state have occurred with brutal regularity this year. Defenceless civilians are the most frequent victims, forcing them from their homes to seek refuge in other states or neighbouring countries.
Boko Haram has said it is fighting to create a strict religious state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north.
Some in the deeply conservative northeast have voiced support for such a society.
But experts say any public support Boko Haram may have once had in the region has been largely destroyed by its ruthless campaign against civilians.
The most recent massacre killed hundreds in the northeastern town of Gamboru Ngala, on the Cameroon border on Monday.

Red Cross staff detained in east Ukraine: Rebel official

A Ukrainian soldier secures an area outside the southern city of Odessa on May 9, 2014. PHOTO: AFP
DONETSK: Several members of the Red Cross have been arrested in the rebel-held eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk on suspicion of espionage, a spokesman for the insurgents told AFP on Saturday.
“They were arrested yesterday. We suspect they were engaged in espionage and we are currently checking these accusations,” said Kiril Rudenko, deputy spokesman for the self-proclaimed “People’s Republic of Donetsk”.
The spokesperson was not able to confirm whether a foreigner was among those held.
According to a local website, Novosti Donbassa, unknown gunmen burst into the Red Cross office in Donetsk and took seven people, including one French national, three local men and three from Kiev.
The seven people, all men, are being held in the regional administration headquarters, the website claimed.

Sub set to relaunch underwater quest for MH370

File photo of a man silhouetted against a Malaysian Airlines plane tail. PHOTO: AFP/FILE
PERTH: A mini-sub hunting for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 will be back in the search zone within days, an official said Saturday, as the Australian ship carrying the device prepared to leave on the mission.
Australian vessel Ocean Shield is carrying the US Navy Bluefin-21 mini-sub which had been scouring the seabed for the plane which disappeared on March 8 carrying 239 people until it docked to resupply early this week.
Ocean Shield was due to head back Saturday to the remote area of the Indian Ocean where transmissions believed to have come from the plane’s black box recorders were heard last month, a journey expected to take three days.
Once in the area, Ocean Shield will be able to deploy the Bluefin-21 to look for “any non-normal items, any metallic items”, US Navy Captain Mark Matthews told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
“They’ll either find something or they won’t, that’s about all I can box in, but what you do is you go look at your best indications and you pursue them until they’re exhausted,” he said.
Matthews said it was impossible to know for sure whether the signals picked up were from the plane’s black box.
“It is certainly a man-made signal, but what it’s from, I can’t look at it and positively say, ‘Hey that’s an underwater locator beacon’,” he said.
Extensive air and sea searches over vast stretches of the Indian Ocean have failed to find any sign of MH370 which mysteriously diverted from its Kuala Lumpur to Beijing route and is thought to have crashed far off Australia’s west coast.
Australia, which is leading the search, has stressed that it believes it is looking in the right area based on satellite communications from the plane.
Officials have scaled back the air and sea searches, and have said that an intensified undersea mission will begin once new, more sophisticated equipment can be obtained to search at depths of more than 4,500 metres.
The ocean bed in the prospective search zone is several kilometres deep and largely unmapped, meaning specialist sonar equipment and other autonomous vehicles are needed.
Until these can be deployed, the Bluefin-21 will continue the search while oceanographic work will also be done.
Meanwhile international experts are re-examining satellite imagery and all the data collated so far to try to pinpoint a more precise location for the search.

Hizb-e-Islami-Hekmatyar to boycott Afghan election run-off

Former Afghan prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. PHOTO: REUTERS
ISLAMABAD: The second armed resistance movement, Hizb-e-Islami Afghanistan, led by former prime minister, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, will boycott the run-off election next month as the two leading candidates favour a long stay of the American troops, a senior party leader said on Saturday.
Hizb-e-Islami, fighting the US-led Nato troops, took part in the April 5 elections and supported presidential candidate Qutbuddin Hilal. Hilal was placed fifth in the list of eight presidential candidates.
The Hizb participation was significant as it had joined the democratic process and isolated the Taliban.
“The Hizb-e-Islami’s central executive committee has decided to boycott the second round of the elections. The party leaders have endorsed the decision,” Ghairat Baheer, head of the Hizb’s political council, told The Express Tribune on Saturday.
Hizb had stayed away from the two previous presidential elections in 2004 and 2009 because of the presence of foreign troops.
As no presidential candidate secured the required 50% plus one vote in last month’s elections, the law requires a second round between the two top candidates.
Afghanistan Independent Election Commission’s (IEC) Chairman Ahmad Yusuf Nuristani says the run-off would be between Dr Abdullah Abdullah and Dr Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai
Dr Abdullah and Dr Ghani are now involved in lobbying to win support of the other candidates to strengthen their position in the second round expected in mid-June.
Dr Abdullah succeeded to win the backing of Gul Agha Sherzai, the former governor of Kandahar and Nangarhar, who was placed 6th in the presidential elections. Section of the Afghan media had reported that Abdullah is struggling to seek the backing of Zalmai Rasoul, the former foreign minister, who was considered a choice of President Hamid Karzai.
“Hizb-e-Islami will neither support Dr Abdullah nor Ashraf Ghani as both want signing of a controversial pact with the US to prolong the American invasion,” Baheer said.
Karzai had refused to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA) that allows the US to keep some troops beyond 2014.
“Their (Abdullah and Ghani) manifestos clash with the Hizb’s policies and that is why we have decided to boycott the election runoff,” the Hizb leader said.
He also said transparent elections are impossible in the presence of foreign troops, as fraud was seen in the April 5 elections. The Hizb leader, however, clarified that the party will not use force to disrupt the election process and would leave it to the people to decide whether or not to go to the polling centers.
Some former Hizb leaders, currently living in Kabul, announced on Friday their support to Dr Ashraf Ghani in the second round.
Baheer, however, said the dissidents cannot represent Hizb-e-Islami.
“Hizb-e-Islami is one party. Its leader and policies are known to everyone. Some people are using the party’s name for personal interests. We disown them,” he said.
The Hizb’s spokesperson, Haroon Zarghoon, told The Express Tribune the Hizb will not launch any attack on the polling centers or the election gatherings as the party only fights against the foreign troops.
The Taliban have announced to launch their traditional “Spring Offensive” across Afghanistan from May 12 and will step up attacks on foreigners and their Afghan supporters.
The Afghan Defence Ministry has dismissed the Taliban offensive as propaganda tactics and recalled that they had failed to disrupt the April 5 elections despite their tall claims.
The Defence Ministry has also started a big military operation aimed at “clearing the Taliban” from different parts of the country.

Two day trip: Nawaz heads to Tehran to smooth ties

Nawaz will be accompanied by a high-ranking delegation comprising of the finance minister, revenue minister and minister for petroleum and natural resources. PHOTO: AFP /FILE
ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif undertake an official visit to Iran from May 11-12 on the invitation of President Hassan Rouhani, in a trip aimed at smoothing ties with the Western neighbour, and rejuvenate the stalled multi-billion dollar pipeline.
This will be the first leadership level visit since the formation of new governments in both Iran and Pakistan.
According to a press release issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Saturday, Nawaz will be accompanied by a high-ranking delegation comprising of the finance minister and minister for petroleum and natural resources.
The premier will take part in a bilateral meeting with President Rouhani in Tehran during which the spectrum of bilateral relationships between the two nations is expected to be reviewed.
According to MoFA, the agenda includes talks on improving economic ties. Moreover, the issue of enhancing physical connectivity between the two countries will also be talked about.
A number of agreements and MoUs in various fields concerned with bilateral ties are expected to be signed as well.
Along with the ministers, Nawaz will be accompanied by the Chief Minister of Balochistan, the adviser to prime minister on national security and foreign affairs and the special assistant to the prime minister on foreign affairs.