Pakistan 'to reopen key Nato Afghanistan supply route'


JNN 10.10.10 Islamabad : Pakistan will reopen a crucial overland supply route for Nato forces in Afghanistan with immediate effect, the country’s foreign ministry has said.

The border crossing at Torkham was closed 10 days ago in protest at a Nato helicopter attack inside Pakistan, which left two Pakistani soldiers dead.

Since then, the Pakistani Taliban have stepped up attacks on convoys with Nato supplies bound for Afghanistan.

Earlier, gunmen destroyed almost 30 tankers carrying fuel in Balochistan

In a short statement issued on Saturday, the Pakistani foreign ministry said it had decided to reopen the Khyber Pass crossing after assessing the security situation in all its aspects”.

“Our relevant authorities are now in the process of co-ordinating with authorities on the other side of the border to ensure smooth resumption of the supply traffic,” the statement added.

US embassy spokesman Richard Snelsire told the Associated Press that his country welcomed the “positive development”.

But he said that it was not likely that the flow of supplies would resume before Monday, as the border was normally closed on Sundays

‘Glad’

On Wednesday, the US apologised for the helicopter attack after a Nato investigation found that the “tragic event could have been avoided with better Coalition force co-ordination with the Pakistan military”.

The US said it aircraft had mistaken the Pakistani Frontier Scouts for insurgents they were pursuing, crossed into Pakistan and opened fire.

“This business is getting so dangerous – the recent happenings have made us think about not working for Nato because we can’t put our lives in constant danger,” Shaukat Khan, a lorry driver who has been waiting at Torkham since it closed on 30 September, told AP.

“We are glad to know that the Pakistani authorities have decided to reopen the crossing,” he added.

The BBC’s Aleem Maqbool in Islamabad says Nato will certainly be relieved at the reopening of the Khyber Pass to its lorries, but it will still have huge concerns about its supply routes through Pakistan.

Pakistani militants have shown no signs of ending their campaign to disrupt supplies, our correspondent says.

Earlier on Saturday, about 20 gunmen armed with rocket-propelled grenades attacked a tanker convoy in Mithri, about 200km (120 miles) east of Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province.

“The attackers first fired shots and then fired small rockets at the tankers. Twenty-eight to 29 tankers caught fire,” local official Neem Sherwani told the Reuters news agency.

The tankers were on their way to the smaller crossing at Chaman, which is open but is not as convenient for supplies bound for Kabul.

No group has so far claimed responsibility for the latest raid. But the Pakistani Taliban have said they were behind similar attacks in the past week, which have destroyed more than 100 Nato fuel tankers and lorries.

Taliban leaders say it is retaliation for recent US air strikes in tribal areas, which are thought to have killed more than 100 of their fighters.


Khamenei Calls for Promotion of Scientific Programs


JNN 10.10.10 Khamenei says the main objective of acquiring knowledge and developing technology is to obtain humane values and defend the rights of the oppressed.

Khamenei met yesterday morning with thousands of scientific elites. During the meeting, His Eminence said that making investments in the arenas of science, technology, and educating elites is one of the main priorities in making plans that are aimed at fostering appropriate development.

His Eminence referred to science as the basis of the country’s material and spiritual power and reiterated: “All honorable Iranian people as well as officials, elites, students and academics should make serious and non-stop efforts in order to make up for the country’s historical and long-lasting backwardness in scientific fields.”

Khamenei touched on the scientific achievements of the country in such fields as nuclear technology, stem cells, nanotechnology and environmental technology and the pride of the Iranian nation in such achievements, adding: “In order to complement these achievements and expand the scope of such achievements to all fields, we have to develop an interrelated scientific cycle and system.”

World Shia Leader said that preparing the required software and hardware facilities for the elites is the most important way of supporting the elites and reiterated: “The elites are after making efforts, deep thinking and promoting progress of the country and the ground should be prepared for the elites to achieve this goal.”

Khamenei said that the country’s comprehensive scientific plan outlines an important part of the country’s scientific requirements. He further added that it is necessary that the elites make efforts in order to fulfill these needs.

Elsewhere in his speech, Imam Khamenei said that a cycle has to be developed in the country whereby thoughts are turned into commercial products.

He added: “We should create a cycle whereby the thoughts of elites are presented to scientific centers. Technological and industrial elites can turn these ideas into industrial and non-industrial products after they are scientifically nurtured. And the organizations in charge can prepare the ground for the production and industrialization of these products.”

Khamenei stressed the importance of industrialization and said that scientific and industrial products should have the potential to help produce wealth. “The officials of the organizations in charge should think of industrialization from the moment when scientific and industrial projects are started.”

His Eminence said that it is necessary to constantly monitor the results of the investments that are made with regard to elites and added: “It is necessary to constantly monitor the scientific activities and achievements of neighboring and Islamic countries and take them into consideration in our plans and activities.”

Khamenei said that the Islamic Republic’s emphasis on the importance of science is based on accurate calculation and thoughtful judgment and reiterated: “Constant emphasis on the importance of knowledge and scientific progress is not rooted in standing on ceremony and fleeting emotions. This is because according to accurate calculations, science and knowledge are the bases of the material and spiritual power of every country. And any nation who falls behind in this regard will be forced to imitate other countries.”

Khamenei said that the purpose of achieving scientific progress is different in the Islamic Republic than it is in the west and added: “Western countries seek to achieve wealth through making scientific progress. They did not respect the rights of the people or observe ethical and religious principles when they came across nations in the Indian subcontinent, Africa, East Asia, and Latin America on their way towards achieving scientific progress.”

His Eminence said that promoting oppression, class distinction and inattention to the basic rights of nations are the results of the incorrect scientific goals which are set in the west and added: “In Islam, purification precedes the acquisition of knowledge because in the absence of purification and human education, knowledge will turn into a tool for wickedness and committing crimes.”

Khamenei said that promoting human virtues and defending human rights in the true sense of the word are the main goals pursued by the Islamic Republic in the process of achieving scientific and technological progress and reiterated: “We seek knowledge in order to achieve true power and raise the flag of justice and humanity in the world. This will enable us to support innocent people in the face of the oppression of oppressive and domineering powers.”

The Pakistani Shia tribe that is taking on the Taliban


JNN 10.10.10 Parachinar : Pakistani tribal district of Kurram, where members of the Turi tribe are waging a war of attrition with the Taliban.

A couple of miles east of Alizai town in the Kurram tribal district, north-western Pakistan, boundary walls of two large compounds are rising fast.

Elders of the region’s largest tribe, the Turi, say they are building homes for eight families from western parts of Kurram who have volunteered to resettle here.

“Apart from a house, each family will get four acres of land for agricultural use,” says Haji Hashim Ali, a Turi elder and in charge of the community project.

“We hope to attract more than 200 families to this colony in a year’s time,” he says.

Community volunteers

The idea is to boost Turi presence in an area that belongs to the tribe but where the population has thinned out.

That has allowed others to step in and bring Taliban militants with them, Mr Ali explains.

The Turi tribe, which belongs to the Shia sect of Islam, abhors the Taliban who adhere to a hardline Sunni form of the faith and consider Shias to be non-Muslims.

Two years ago, the Turis fought a major battle with the Taliban in the surroundings of Alizai.

They are now consolidating their hold on the region.

To the south of Alizai, across the Kurram river, the tribe is building a 14km (8.6 miles) road to link Alizai with the Turi stronghold of Parachinar in the west.
Syed Abid JanWhen [the Taliban] went away, I looked around. My grandson was dead. He had fallen on me. I had fallen on my wife. She was also dead” Syed Abid Jan

The Shurko road detours the Sunni-dominated town of Sadda, which is located on the region’s main road that links Parachinar with Alizai and the rest of Pakistan.

In Parachinar, the district centre, and all along the Shurko road, community volunteers man checkpoints and also guard the region’s airport.

There are no military checkpoints anywhere in the Turi lands from Parachinar to Alizai – and no Taliban.

To a casual observer, this comes as a surprise because Kurram is the most important strategic site from where to launch guerrilla attacks inside Afghanistan.

Its western tip is only 90km (56 miles) from the Afghan capital, Kabul.

Local people say that Taliban started pouring into the area in 2006 and set up base at a mosque in Parachinar.

“When we came to know of their presence, we took up the matter with the authorities, but they refused to expel them, saying the decisions were taken at a much higher level,” says Ali Akbar Turi, another local elder”.

Bombed

Fighting between the locals and the Taliban erupted in April 2007, and dozens of people were killed over the next year.

evoid of local support, the Taliban were forced to retreat to their bases in Sadda and Alizai in eastern Kurram, but from there they enforced a blockade of Kurram’s only road link to Pakistan.

“Our traders lost millions of dollars worth of merchandise when our trucks were bombed and burned down, and dozens of our people were beheaded,” recalls Haji Hashim Ali.

In August 2008, local elders decided that if the army wasn’t prepared to deal with the Taliban, it was time to raise a tribal force and storm the militant bases themselves.

Najib Hussain, a Kurram resident, fought on a front that finally led to the fall of Bugzai, a village that housed the Taliban’s main base in the region, just across the river from Alizai.

“We had about 100 to 150 fighters. We would rotate them in four hourly shifts,” he says.

“Fighting was intense. During the first 27 days I only came down twice from my position on the hill to take a bath. On the 27th day, I was hit and had to be carried away to the hospital.”

It took the tribal force 46 days of fighting – and the loss of around 400 fighters – to inflict a final defeat on Taliban.

Nearly two years after the war, this entire area remains free of Taliban.

Kurram is one of the few tribal districts in Pakistan where the Christian population lives in peace

‘Trapped”

But further east, the Taliban continue to block their exit route.

People can only leave Kurram in convoys, and only when the government provides security. Even then, they are regularly attacked.

In the last attack in July, suspected Taliban gunmen killed 18 people travelling in a passenger van from Parachinar to Peshawar, the regional capital.

Syed Abid Jan, 75, was one of four survivors.

“We started in the convoy but our van fell behind,” he says.

“In Charkhel area, some 20km (12.4 miles) east of Alizai, about 10 gunmen fired at the van, causing it to overturn. Then they came closer and fired at the passengers trapped inside from all sides.”

Mr Jan was hit in the back.

“When they went away, I looked around. My grandson was dead. He had fallen on me. I had fallen on my wife. She was also dead.”

After three years of road blockades, the intensity of war has left a mark on the people of Kurram.

Trading and development work have come to a halt, much of the infrastructure of health, education and agriculture has been destroyed, and there is of course the emotional toll.

“A friend of mine told me to beware of going mad. I think that warning has kept me from going mad entirely,” says Aqeel Hussain, the owner of a petrol station in Alizai.

“But sometimes I think I’m half mad. My blood pressure shoots up sometimes. It never used to happen before.”

After the fall of Bugzai, the Taliban twice offered to guarantee the safety of the road from Kurram to Peshawar in return for access for their militants through Kurram into Afghanistan.

But this is an offer which the people of Kurram say they are determined never to accept.

'Bahrain continues to suppress Shias'


JNN 10.10.10 Bahrain’s suppression of the Shia opposition figures in the run-up to parliamentary elections has been underlined in a new report by rights groups.

The Human Rights Watch (HRW) — a non-governmental organization which has been raising awareness about the country’s political crisis — and the Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED) — a non-profit body with the stated aim to promote democratic standards in the region — addressed the issue in a joint report a copy of which was obtained by Press TV on Saturday.

The report focuses on the Bahraini government’s arrest of hundreds of Shia since August.

The organizations said that among the detainees, “at least 23 well-known political activists and Shia clerics” had been charged “with acts of terrorism. Many are vocal critics of the government, and appear to have been targeted for what they say rather than for anything they have done.”

“The charge sheet is replete with accusations of ‘spreading false information’ and ‘inciting contempt against the regime,’ as well as more recognizable criminal offenses,” the report added.

“Persons who have seen the detainees claim they complained of torture, and lawyers have not been able to meet with their clients, in violation of Bahraini law.”

The Shia opposition refuses to recognize the 2002 constitution and has called for a boycott of upcoming parliamentary polls, due to be conducted on October 23.

The Shias enjoy demographic predominance in the kingdom. They, however, have long complained about being discriminated against by the Bahraini government when it comes to employment opportunities and the right to services.

The Bahrain Human Rights Society (BHRC), which became the country’s first human rights organization when it was founded in 2000, recently reported out the apprehension of the 23 Shias for criticizing the Sunni-dominated government.

BHRC had its board subsequently suspended and was forced to take in Manama’s choice of director. The Amnesty International said the suspension was part of Manama’s crackdown on the Shia opposition figures and rights activists.

HRW and POMED also reminded that the Bahraini body had its board suspended “just weeks before elections.”

They also said that the government had “closed down the newsletters and websites of the main opposition political societies. The government has rejected international elections monitoring, and with the takeover of the BHRS, this leaves local monitoring mainly in the hands of groups close to the government.”