Tuesday 30 April 2013

PM Khoso befooled by powerful bureaucrats on energy crisis




No Chance of Electricity throughout election Day



SAEED MINHAS
ISLAMABAD: The energy crisis has become such a headache that after Raja Rental's failure even Caretaker Prime Minister Mir Hazar Khan Khoso was made to look like a proverbial Mamoo on Monday by the federal bureaucracy as he was first made to promise to the Election Commission that there will be no loadshedding on election day and now the Ministry says that due to empty coffers it may not be possible.
Prime Minister Khoso had to eat humble pie on Monday as he was informed that Finance Ministry would not be able to comply with his earlier orders of furnishing Rs. 10 billion to pacify the fuel providers to various IPPs, hence to cover up this commotion he was advised to form a 3-member committee to play around with the power crisis even more.
Like Raja Rental, Khoso too failed to resolve the actual current shortfall of over 6000 MWs, as he was informed that the Finance Ministry could not furnish the required sum to bridge the existing gaps in circular debt to oil and gas providers. The government owes a whopping Rs. 450 billion to these fuel providers. The government has to collect over Rs. 122 billion from various IPPs, which they have been withholding on various pretexts mainly because of irregular fuel supplies.
Sources at Ministry of Water and Power said the PM was seen quite upset at this situation and hence has ordered a 3-member committee be formed to look into the matter. The PM was informed about the empty coffers of the state and was advised by his financial guru, Mr. Asadullah Mandokhel, to keep quiet about the matter till May 11.
The PM's meeting was attended by ministers for Water and Power Dr. Musadiq Malik, Petroleum and Natural Resources, Mr. Sohail Wajahat H. Siddiqui, Communication, Ports and Shipping, Mr. Adadullah Khan Mandokhel, Advisor on Finance, Dr. Shahid Amjad Chaudhry, Chairman WAPDA and senior officials of the Ministries of Finance, Water and Power, Petroleum and PM’s Secretariat.
The meeting was informed that the current generation was 9200 MW against a suppressed demand of 13000 MW.  The PM was informed that only 55 mmcfd gas was being provided to the thermal power plants against the promised 150 mmcfd. The meeting also reviewed the position of recovery of dues and the quantum of funds required to produce optimum generation. It was also decided during the meeting to setup a mechanism to monitor the generation of and demand for electricity in the country.
Despite knowing the reality, the press statement reads that the PM had directed the Ministry of Water and Power to ensure uninterrupted electricity from the evening on May 10 for the next 36 hours to ensure polling and counting of votes is completed smoothly.

A new kid on the block: Bilawal Bhutto

A new kid on the block: Bilawal Bhutto


A new kid on the block: Bilawal Bhutto
Saeed Minhas
There has hardly been an election since 1970s when a real Bhutto was not seen running through rallies, addressing gatherings and waving to the crowds across the country to harvest support for the party candidates but all this has changed in this election.
To understand this phenomenon, The Spokesman ventured into the party ranks and interviewed multiple layers of leadership. Given below are some of the thoughts transpired from these discussions held with Benazir loyalists, Zardari lovers and political pundits.
Threats from Taliban, Zardari-centric party politics, new rules of the election game and a half-hearted and half matured legal chairman of the party are all being cited as the reasons for Peoples Party’s absence from political campaigning. There are others who believe that it is but usual to see the ruling party’s popularity going for a dip in Pakistan’s chequered political history.  Yet there are those who are blaming the courts for throwing the party in the arena with their hands chained to contest those who seem to have received special treatment throughout PPP’s five-year rule from My Lords.
The fact remains that master Bilawal, despite hiring a surname, is yet to transform into a Bhutto, whom people remember as challenging the threats and posing questions to opponents while standing right in the middle of the masses. The transformation from Zardari to Bhutto is considered not a small one by many of the seasoned party stalwarts. A new kid on the block is how many political opponents have started calling Bilawal even before the upcoming elections. Party loyalists refer to him as young master with all due reverence for his adopted family name of Bhutto.
Many are drawing parallels with the defiance of his late mother Benazir Bhutto, without understanding that Benazir launched herself in Pakistani politics at a time when state funded fanatics had not started hitting inwards. Ziaul Haq and Company’s strategic assets were busy in foreign lands and Pakistanis had never heard of suicide bombers or IED attacks. She learned the art of leadership on the job and defiance came with the passage of time. There was a time when she agreed to all the dictates of the Khakis before the 1988 swearing in and then came the 2007 parleys where she pulled uniformed junta into NRO negotiations to ensure her own and Mian Nawaz Sharif’s return to the country. She defied the same Khakis only after gaining a hard-earned maturity.
Bilawal, on the other hand, did not have to go through house arrests, did not see a tyrant holding his grandfather and neither could he find the time to mix and mingle with the Pakistanis. The result is that he hardly knows anyone but those who were considered loyalists by his mother during their self-exile days in Dubai or London. Shifting schools from Islamabad to Karachi then on to Dubai and ending up in London was how he completed his studies since his birth in 1988. He was only three months when his mother weathered the heavy hands of Khakis and earned an election victory.
Bilawal, for all practical purposes, revealed in many interviews with all those who saw him raised in all those places, has grown up under the shadows of his mother and, at the most, with his two sisters. His chemistry with the father’s Zardari clan has never been in place till his crowning as party chairman in December 2007 or even as Tuman (Chief) of Zardari tribes in 2010. All those whom he had seen surrounding his mother were systematically kept out of the gates by Zardari and resultantly he could find himself doing nothing but posing for the photo-ops where his father would be running the show. Proverbial uncles and aunties looked at him with apathy and cared for him like a political infant, revealed those insiders who have seen him for months in Garhi Khuda Bukhsh or Karachi.
The result is that Bilawal is seen at a distance from the real party and more close to the huge legacy he has been asked to carry on, without much time and liberty to choose between his likes and dislikes. Having his mother’s looks is not the only resemblance he brings to the political table of Pakistan; he is already subjected to many rumours ranging from his personal relations to his liking or otherwise for many aunties and uncles surrounding him. He is already facing many of the questions being raised in the current elections about the conduct and politics of his father and much more reverence from the same critics for his mother that it might take him another—depending on many factors—election cycle to fathom the difference between his acquired status and his bloodline. As one of the old family servants once revealed about one of the last meetings of Benazir Bhutto with all her three kids, she distributed the majority of her properties and belongings amongst her two daughters and quite a little to Bilawal. But as the servant quotes, she told Bilawal that “you will get much more from your father than you and I can both imagine.” Bilawal has already got so much more from father’s side that he might need lot more time to understand what his mother had advised him before leaving for Pakistan after signing the NRO in Dubai. For the time being social media might remain the only domain for this little master of the political field, as he does not even know what to do and who to trust.

Monday 29 April 2013

I’m a lumberjack and I’m OK — but what about journalists?

The White Report

Catherine White connects and creates worth through powerful story telling

I’m a lumberjack and I’m OK — but what about journalists?

It’s official: CareerCast.com has named the newspaper reporter the worst job in America, behind lumberjacks.
Newspaper Reporters
When CareerCast first started ranking the best and worst jobs in the U.S. in 1988, newspaper reporter was in the middle  ranking at number 126. It slipped in 2012 to 196, before coming in last, behind lumberjacks, at number 200 this year.
This doesn’t come as any surprise, given newspapers continue to cut jobs as they compete with free news online. In some cities in the U.S. newspapers have almost bypassed journalists  by moving  to an online-only model.
Many question if newspapers will survive, slating papers must start charging for their web content in order to support print issues. Others say printed papers will soon go the way of the Studebaker and that newspapers are destined to become online-only entities. But what the future holds, no one really knows.
Chip Scanlan of the journalism think-tank, The Poynter Institute,  argues the predicament the internet poses for newspapers today, is reminiscent of the Pony Express riders who in 1860 started what was meant to be a speedy mail delivery service, only to be rendered obsolete a year later by the telegraph.
They represented a great leap in communication delivery but it only lasted a year,” … “As they were whipping their horses into a lather to deliver the mail, beside them were these guys ramming in long wooden poles and connecting wires for the telegraph. It’s a reflection of what changes in technology mean.
Nonetheless, many still feel that newspapers continue to represent an unrivaled source of in-depth news, analysis and opinion, and that if papers disappear entirely, many feel there will be nothing to take their place.
Either way, journalists are not lumberjacks, and that’s OK.

MQM, PPP, ANP question legitimacy of polls under terror

MQM, PPP, ANP question legitimacy of polls under terror

MQM, PPP, ANP question legitimacy of polls under terror
ISLAMABAD: A shock and awe situation in their election camps has finally brought Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), Awami National Party (ANP) and Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) on the same telephonic wavelength where they are pondering to question the legitimacy of the current elections if not boycotting them out-rightly besides asking the army and courts to take cognizance of the situation.
All three leaders have posed a straight question to the army, caretaker governments in federal and provincial as well as the Election Commission of Pakistan that “Whether only Punjab is Pakistan as it is the only province where electioneering was being carried out freely while the worst kind of terrorism was continuing in the remaining three provinces of the country.”
“Daily occurrences of terrorism in the camps of ANP, MQM and even PPP has left us with no option but to discuss that we all are asked to fight the elections blindfolded and hands-cuffed,” said Asfandyar Wali while talking to Altaf Hussain. Sources close to Presidency, however, were cautious and maintaining neutrality said “only liberal forces are being targeted and caretakers and ECP should take note of the situation forthwith.”
Initiating this telephonic politicking, MQM’s Chief Altaf Hussain on Sunday called President Asif Ali Zardari and ANP President Asfandyar Wali Khan to discuss overall political situation and law and orders situation in the country. Altaf is learned to have brought these leaders on one page by resolving that a joint strategy will be adopted in this regard. MQM has lost more than half a dozen workers and a candidate in Karachi and Hyderabad, while ANP has lost over a dozen workers and are subjected to worst kind of terrorist acts since the caretakers have taken over the rule from PPP and its allies. Most daring of them all, PPP is yet to come out of its safe holes yet it received first of its share of direct attack in Karachi on Saturday.
According to MQM sources, both Asif Zardari and Asfandyar Wali have expressed their grave concern over terrorist attacks on ANP and MQM offices. They expressed their resolve to launch a joint struggle against terrorism. MQM chief asked these leaders to openly term these elections between mini-Talibans and liberal forces. Presidency seems to have shied away from using these words but agreed that all the concerned quarter should take it seriously. ANP leader is learned to have agreed with MQM and has hinted at developing a joint front with the MQM and PPP to raise voice on this issue more strongly.
ANP, MQM leaders and Zardari said the acts of terrorism were rising disproportionately in the three provinces spreading fear and panic as compared to Punjab. They condemned act of terrorism on the ANP, PPP and MQM and asked all the liberal parties to join hands against the terrorists.

Flying squads of Imran & Nawaz bewildering many pundits


Flying squads of Imran & Nawaz bewildering many pundits



Flying squads of Imran & Nawaz bewildering many pundits

Free and Fair Elections?
Saeed Minhas
Unknown miscreants and Taliban seem to have earned the blame for terrorizing MQM and ANP almost out of the current election campaign. Peoples’ Party has found the safe havens of mini screens and social media without even holding a single rally with Master Bilawal or any other leader. Two parties namely, Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaaf (PTI) and PML (N), are the only parties holding public rallies, even in KP and FATA without any fear of an attack from the same forces, besides occupying a stinging campaign on TV and social media too.
Questions being asked these days by many political observers are whether these elections will determine a difference between pro and anti Taliban forces. Will its legitimacy not be questioned because of an uneven playground?
Whether it is true or not the question holds some ground because no matter how we look at this phenomenon, it remains a fact that two parties are hopping around from one political rally to another without even caring  whether they are being blamed, either for having sympathies for extremists or for having good connections with them.
These elections are so different from any other elections or even any referendum in the country that for the first time Peoples’ Party, despite not being banned, is out of the scene. However, on the positive side we can take some heart from the fact that some rules of the game have been laid out. No matter how much they are being flouted by almost all the political parties, at least an effort has been made by the heavily funded and Supreme Court backed Election Commission of Pakistan. There have been lots of slips in this entire procedure, not because of the rules but because of a typical mentally corrupt bureaucracy and lower judiciary. Other reasons can be lack of cooperation and coordination amongst various national institutions like SBP, FBR, NAB and ECP. ECP is also being blamed for many of its discrepancies and inconsistencies and so are the caretakers for failing to come up with a workable plan for the conduct of free and fair elections.
According to an independent observer’s report 80 per cent of the political campaigning is violating the very rules which all of them agreed to abide by while signing the ECP’s new code of conduct. PML (N) has been considered as the leading violator of ECP’s purported code of conduct by the same observers. As usual mudslinging and name calling remains top of the agenda of political campaigning and leading on this front is Imran Khan. Though ECP has taken notice of some of the recent fiery statements of Imran Khan against Sharifs and even those of Sharifs against President Asif Zardari, no one knows how the ECP will manage to control this usual election madness. More important is whether these notices make any difference to the leaders or the final outcome of the elections.
Another factor which is grabbing the attention of many observers is the fact that both Nawaz Sharif and Imran Khan have started using the choppers and cheapest language against each other considering that they are the only ones left to roam around the country without any threat from extremists. Details about Nawaz Sharif’s helicopter are that two Pakistani pilots and an Egyptian technician are operating it. Flying on the wings of his billionaire friends, Imran Khan seems to be matching Nawaz League like a proverbial eyeball for an eyeball. Riding in Jahangir Tareen’s hired chopper, Imran continues to impress the TV audiences by pulling crowds in Punjab, KP and even FATA. No further details of the choppers have been provided by any of the parties to the media while ECP is also just keeping mum on this. But that’s not it; if Imran has been given a financial cushion by his financial backers then Nawaz Sharif, despite claiming to have few assets, is showing all his financial gadgetry by riding in a cavalcade of 15 bullet proof vehicles donated by none other than the usual suspects of the Pakistani right wing; i.e. Saudi Kingdom. The gift of foreign government, no matter how cheap it may sound, is just another open violation of the Pakistani Election laws. Political Parties Order, 2002 clearly describes this as follows: “contribution made by members or supporters of any party shall be duly recorded by the political parties. Any contribution made, directly or indirectly, by any foreign government, multi-national or domestically incorporated public or private company, firm, trade or professional association shall be prohibited and the parties may accept contributions and donations only from individuals. Any contribution or donation which is prohibited under this Order shall be confiscated in favour of the State in the manner as may be prescribed.” Defining the contribution or donations the same order reads that it includes anything made in cash, kind, stocks, hospitality, accommodation, transport, fuel and provision of other such facilities.
“Are Imran or Nawaz behaving any different than other power grabbers? They are showing off their wealth, distributed party tickets to influentials, use the same foul language people heard in almost every election, then what change they want to bring? First it used to be two parties and now a third one has joined the chorus just to befool the people” observed Faqir Mohammad, one of the wrinkled local villagers observing Imran Khan flying above his head in a chopper from Jalalpur in Punjab. Whether it will be true or not only these leaders can tell but that feeling was shared by quite a few people in the same rally where Imran was challenging Sharifs not to amuse many in the dumbfounded crowd.
Just to add fuel to the fire, Altaf Bhai, President Zardari, Chaudhry Shujaat and even Asfandyar Wali have all started calling the entire election process foul. They have all questioned the Election Commission of Pakistan’s inability to control these violations as well as failing in providing an even, level playing field to all the contesting parties. Altaf Bhai has even raised eyebrows by asking the most pressing question that “only Punjab seems to have elections.” It may sound like a usual cry from an ally of a recently deposed government which failed to bring any relief to the people but it is likely to haunt the legitimacy of the elections in the coming days, observed many pundits.

Friday 26 April 2013

The changing face of Bacha Khan’s Party


The changing face of Bacha Khan’s Party


The changing face of Bacha Khan’s PartySAEED MINHAS Awami National Party (ANP) was supposedly founded on the principles of Khudai Khidmatgar propagated by Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, which talk about non- violence. Like any other political philosophy and party, though, it too has degenerated to such a level that its Senator is now openly warning of launching an insurgency if the demands of his constituents are not met. Khan Ghaffar Khan, known as Sarhadi Gandhi and a fast friend of Mohatama Gandhi since the start of 20th century, would never had thought of resorting to violence even when the British Raj let hell loose on his followers following the 1929 movement named Khudai Khidmatgar .  He did not even think of violence when he felt betrayed by Indian Congress for accepting the partition of subcontinent. His only words quoted in the annals of history after feeling hurt by Ghandhi’s non- consultative posture towards him were that “You have thrown us to the wolves.” One of his three sons, Khan Abdul Wali Khan, who later founded ANP, remained a member of Pakistan’s National Assembly and played an important hand in the formation of the 1973 constitution. Despite having a liberal stand against extremism, the party has hit the headlines for many odd reasons throughout these years. Starting from Begum Naseem Wali Khan’s undergarments episode in foreign lands to Hoti’s land grabbing, from Bilour’s cinemas and Railways sagas to Asfandyar Wali’s purported money-matters in the name of his son’s dwindling business fortunes in far eastern countries, Khudai Khidmatgars have become all but inward looking. In the latest breakaway from its pacifist posture, party’s Senator Abdul Nabi Bangash, who also happens to be the chairman of Senate’s standing committee for education and training, has warned the federal government of a Baluchistan like mutiny in Hangu for depriving its population of basic amenities of life. Though he did not set any deadline for starting such a violent insurgency, the intent and content of his talk with the media was enough to convey that it’s coming anytime sooner rather than later. No doubt the issue has been of great significance because the lands from where state run organizations, with the help of a
Hungarian oil company, have been extracting over 700 MMCFD gas and over 9000 barrels of oil on a daily basis. Despite assurances to the local tribes and residents, neither foreign firms nor local state organizations have fulfilled any of the promises. Resultantly, a group of 28 notables from TAL called upon Senator Bangash in Islamabad, where in front of the media teams they vowed to resort to a full scale insurgency if their demands are not met henceforth. Whether it’s a party policy or a political strategy Senator Bangash was towing was not clear. What remained absolutely clear was that he was hell
bent upon bulldozing the non-violent norms of his party and stage a revolt if his home town people are not compensated. OGDCL has been extracting Gas and Condensate/Oil since 2002 from TAL which accounts for 8% and 12% of the country’s total Gas and Condensate/Oil production respectively. It is a Joint Venture Partners since 2002. It was supposed to cater to almost 100% gas demand of the province of KPK. Areas under exploration of the ministry of oil and gas include districts Kohat, Karak, Hangu of KPK and some areas of North Waziristan and Orakzai agencies of FATA, spanning over 4600 square kilometers. MOL Pakistan owns 10.5264% exploration & 8.4210% production phase working interests as an operator of TAL block and has six successive discoveries to its credit. The first discovery was made at Manzalai-1 exploratory well in December 2002 whereas the second discovery was at Makori- 1 exploratory well in January 2005. However, a delegation of 28 notables from TAL area revealed before the journalists that neither they are given any gas for domestic consumption nor has their area been developed. With no educational facilities, safe drinking water, power, dilapidated roads, and utter backwardness, people feel agitated, the head of delegation Saba Khan told the reporters. In the presence of Senator Nabi Bangash, Saba Khan said that if conditions were not improved they will boycott the upcoming elections, bomb the gas and oil installations and pipelines and block all the roads leading to their area. Endorsing the delegation from his home town, Senator Bangash said that “these people are being forced to resort to open mutiny by the continued ignorance of the state institutions and political governments.” Accusing the former prime minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf of diverting the already announced development funds of over Rs. 900 million to his native constituency in Gujar Khan, the Senator revealed that Raja Pervaiz Asharf spent over Rs 48 billion in just a few months in his constituency but completely ignored the allocation done by his predecessor Yusuf Raza Gilani for TAL area. “Baluchs were forced to take up guns against the state after similar injustices and if people from TAL are not given their due rights, insurgency is sure to take place in these sensitive areas,” he said affirmatively when asked.

Thursday 25 April 2013

PPP allies gang up on poll security

PPP allies gang up on poll security

PPP allies gang up on poll security
Saeed Minhas
ISLAMABAD: Election Commission is coming under intense pressure from MQM, ANP and PML-Q for not ensuring peaceful elections.
All the coalition partners of the recent PPP government seems to have decided to take a stand on country’s worsening law and order situation which is hindering them from running their election campaign. “Aim is to expose the incompetence of caretakers and ECP,” revealed party affiliates. These parties are taking offence over the news of Punjab Caretaker CM holding property survey and caretaker PM looking after the job vacancies for his home province.
Caretakers and Election Commission, however, believe that owing to their previous government’s progress, they have landed themselves into this situation. However, both agree that law and order situation is a cause of serious concern for them for which they have been trying to wake up provincial caretaker governments to at least submit a security plan with the ECP. So far, no provincial government has submitted any security plan, that’s why controversial Interior Minister Habib Malik had to be sent to Karachi and announce a security plan for elections just to sooth some nerves, revealed sources.  
MQM, on the other hand has hinted at joining hands with Tahirul Qadri’s propogation that elections should be delayed.
Farooq Sattar, the central leader of the party was open to say that his party was being pushed against the wall by extremist elements. “Unfortunately, those who claimed to hold free and fair elections are silent over all this,” he lamented while hinting at Election Commission without hinting at it.
Another former ally of PPP, PML-Q’s chief Chaudhry Shujaat had already raised objections over caretaker interior minister while ANP had submitted two adjournment motions against partisanship of caretakers in the Senate last week.
 

Mushy seeking another safe exit


Mushy seeking another safe exit

Mushy seeking another safe exit
Saeed Minhas
There seems to be a plan in the offing to provide yet another safe exit to the former dictator Gen. (Retd) Pervaiz Musharraf in the name of imminent security threats to his life and even elections. Though the pretext this time might be hisailing mother—who for sure is ailing because of aging. The court or should we say the judge, however, is still an area where negotiators are stuck and have dubbed it a hard nut to crack so far.
Our sources have confirmed that efforts are afoot to send him off after getting assurances that not only his Interpol arrest warrants stand nullified but even his properties and bank accounts would not be confiscated by the courts (read Judge) for non-appearance. Assurances are being drafted, and some say even exchanged, to ensure the Court that Mushy will return whenever summoned by My Lord. However, just like the proverbial once bitten, twice shy, My Lords are hesitant to let the fish slip out of their hands. Remember how Hussain Haqqani begged for the same mercy from the Lords and, once granted, has made it a point not to return to the land where he grew his spinning skills. “Hurdles are there but not the extent that it cannot be resolved,” hoped one of the insiders. Kasuri and company, surrounding Mushy, believe that My Lords want to make a Pinochet out of Mushy—a Chilean dictator who was brought back to his country from UK and faced not only high treason but genocide charges till he died in 2006. However, Kasuri and party believe that with powerful hands backing Musharraf, that’s just not possible. A plot of explosives laden car has already been thrown open and pleas of sending him back are likely to grow, not in public but amongst real ‘publicists’, reveal Mushy supporters.
Regardless of what transpires with My Lords, it is strongly believed that Mushy has brought more of a bad name to his mother institution than himself. With no point in keeping him in a palatial safe house and drawing unnecessary attention towards the “institution”, Mushy has been given an olive branch to stick on to it not only for others but for his own sake. Knowing that his dreams of returning and making a show for himself have gone crashing like Kargil or many other adventures, close aides conformed that he too has agreed with his former subordinates.
The discussion going on amongst the guarantors, as transmitted through various emissaries, is that Musharraf was given a full opportunity to fulfill his desire of landing back in Pakistan. Against all the advice to the contrary, Mushy was assuming a heroic comeback to the land which he conquered as army chief in a bloodless coup in 1999. Musharraf has been pleading to all his foreign guarantors; including Americans, British and of course Saudis that his following is growing with every passing day in Pakistan. Reports from the homeland secret agencies were considered outdated by Musharraf when he was informed that he would only draw criticism for the armed forces as an institution and might not gain much on the political front. Citing his social media popularity where almost a million are following him on Facebook and Twitter, Musharraf just brushed off all the concerns of his former subordinates and insisted on touching the tarmac in Karachi.
It sounds astonishing that his main advisors, which included none other than one of his former spy masters Gen. (Retd) Pasha, his present counsel Ahmed Raza Kasuri and a handful of highflying youth from Karachi, remained persistent that the former general would just sweep everyone aside. Pasha who is doing a health consultancy for UAE from the lands of wheeling and dealing these days; i.e. Dubai was somewhat skeptical, informed the sources. He was getting the information not only from his own footmarks but also from guarantors and that’s why he tried to persuade his former boss from rescheduling his announced landing for the time being. The reason was simple, that having taken care of all the possible adversaries like Mian Nawaz Sharif and company, the threat was not from Peoples’ Party or Mushy’s former allies sitting in the caretaker set up, but it was obvious that courts will have a go at him anyway.  Knowing how vindictive, and as some say ‘outlandish’, the judiciary has become, every effort at pushing Mushy back into reality fell astray. APML insiders believe that having spent over 200 million to buy brand new vehicles for the posh boys and girls of Karachi, media campaign and even on cameramen of the local TV networks, Mushy was not in a listening mode.
The first big shock to Mushy occurred when he saw a handful of nosy media crowd and his paid staffers outside the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi. Supposedly, he had chosen Karachi not because of any other reason but because he firmly believed that after all those years of faithful association with the local political and gang masters of Karachi, he would be given some kind of backing, at least on ethnic grounds if nothing else. He was hoping that by airing some statements in favour of Imran Khan, he would pull some of the youth contingents to the airport for his classic return. Instead, what he could muster with those remarks was that Khan just kept quiet and instead of poking his nose in the Mian-Mushy affair, tried to persuade PML (N) to come up with their usual tantrum about the return of their tormentor.
Resultantly, Mushy refused to take out any procession by citing the threats from Taliban and instead opted to peter out from the airport with a retired colonel and a team of commandos which he had already hired before even landing in Pakistan or getting the pre-arrest bail from Karachi. His stay in Karachi was nothing but melodious for the media persons as they were lavishly paid by the youngsters handling APML’s impressive office at Kashmir Road--one of the elite areas of Karachi.
With no constituency to contest for and hardly any support from the social media followers, Mushy is all but waiting for a safe passage. His comrades believe that he will be brought back once the judiciary changes hands by the end of 2013. But then who knows whether the current leadership of My Lords might seek an extension on the pretext that their two precious years were spent on roads and they should be given that time to ‘serve the country’.

Sunday 24 March 2013

Bill in US Senate links aid to Afridi’s release

http://thespokesman.pk/index.php/component/k2/item/2757-bill-in-us-senate-links-aid-to-afridi%E2%80%99s-release
Bill in US Senate links aid to Afridi’s release
Momo Baig
WASHINGTON: A Republican Senator with presidential ambitions moved an amendment on the Senate floor to cut off all foreign aid to Pakistan until Shakeel Afridi, a key informant in the capture and killing of Osama bin Laden, is released from prison.
 “Pakistan’s actions are unacceptable and not suitable for any country wishing to receive a single dollar from US taxpayers — especially considering their country is one of the largest recipients,” said Senator Rand Paul, as he moved Amendment 379, to Senate Con Res 8, the Budget Resolution.  “Foreign aid to Pakistan must be prohibited until Afridi is released from prison, and his safety is guaranteed,” said Paul.
Senator Paul from Kentucky had won the conservative straw poll for potential Republican presidential candidates for 2016.
Meanwhile, the United States has reaffirmed its support for timely and free polls in Pakistan following the landmark completion of the constitutional term of the government. The US State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland at a briefing in Washington said that we look forward to timely‚ free‚ and fair elections that are going to result in the first civilian‚ democratic transition of power in Pakistan's history. 

Thursday 28 February 2013

Transparency: Zardari Lover Jumps Que for top slot

 Zardari lover jumps queue for top slot


Zardari lover jumps queue for top slot
Saeed Minhas
ISLAMABAD: Facilitating the pre-elections flow of funds for PPP’s political mileage, the government on Saturday installed a member of Zardari club as secretary of Water and Power, leaving the ranks and files of bureaucracy perturbed.
Rai Sikandar has been elevated to replace the iron lady Nargis Sethi superseding both the Special Secretary of Water and Power Himayatullah Khan and Additional Secretary Arshad Mirza. Additional and special secretaries of the Ministry who are working respectively in grade 21 and 22, whereas Rai has recently been given promotion in grade 21. Rai Sikandar has served as personal secretary to President Asif Ali Zardari during the hey days of Benazir government (1996-98) when Mr President was serving in her cabinet as senior minister holding the portfolio of environment.
Even during those days when Rai was a grade 18 officer, he used to live in a palatial house in F 6/3 entitled for grade 22 officers — which he is holding till now despite weathering all seasons of governments in between. Rai had to be sent to jail along with Mr. Zardari and some other bureaucrats when Benazir government was sent packing by her own party president Sardar Farooq Leghari.
Sources in Bureaucracy believes that following Salman Farooqi and Dr Asim Hussain, Rai can be considered one of the new entrant in the list of Zardari favourites who can do anything for the boss.
Sources said Nargis Sethi, who was holding additional charge of the water and power ministry had to request the prime minister to relieve her of additional charge because the pressure from federal ministers like Mian Manzoor Wattoo and Chaudhries of Gujrat to award out of way subsidies was becoming unbearable.
Sources revealed that she refused to release subsidy of Rs40 billion and another Rs. 2 billion for the payment of projects not approved under prescribed rules and procedures just 23 days ahead of completion of tenure of the present government.
Since the iron lady has neither been entertaining the incumbent Minister for Water and Power Ch Ahmad Mukhtar nor Minister for Kashmir Affairs Mian Manzoor Wattoo and deputy prime minister, her removal was considered very much on the cards.
Another report said that the minister had recommended to Nargis Sethi to appoint Mehboob Alam, Acting Chief Executive Officer of Gujranwala Distribution Company as Managing Director of NTDC and in his place Javed Azad, Superintendent Engineer be appointed CEO Gujranwala but she refused to accept the recommendation on the plea that Mehboob Alam was junior officer and cannot be posted at such a senior position.
Two weeks back, during a meeting of a four-member committee comprising Minister for Defence, Minister for Kashmir Affairs, Secretary Finance and Secretary Water and Power, Mian Manzoor Wattoo pressed for giving flat rate subsidy of Rs. 40 billion for the tube wells which the finance and water and power secretary strongly opposed. However, the committee approved the flat rate subsidy proposal for tube wells which is considered to be the penultimate reason for her departure from the additional charge.

http://thespokesman.pk/index.php/national/item/1359-zardari-lover-jumps-queue-for-top-slot


 

Thursday 3 January 2013

Pakistani militant leader Maulvi Nazir killed in U.S. drone strike

Pakistani militant leader Maulvi Nazir killed in U.S. drone strike

By Jennifer Rowland Share

Leader downed
A U.S. drone strike launched Wednesday night killed top Pakistani militant commander Maulvi Nazir, who was considered by the Pakistani military to be one of the "good Taliban" because he focused his attacks on U.S. forces in Afghanistan rather than the Pakistani officials and security forces targeted by other factions of the militant group (AP, Reuters, LAT, NYT, Post, The News). The drone-fired missile struck a house in Angoor Adda, near the city of Wana, South Waziristan, killing nine people inside.
On Thursday morning, another drone attack, this time in North Waziristan, killed four people whose identities could not be verified (AP, Reuters).
The Pakistani Army is set to discuss the Pakistani Taliban's conditions for a ceasefire at a corps commanders' meeting on Friday, but has also asked the government to come up with an official response (ET). Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud said last week that his group could agree to a ceasefire if the government "adopted Sharia after changing the Constitution, revised foreign policy and ended its engagement with the war on terror in Afghanistan."
The father of Malala Yousafzai, who was shot in the head by Taliban militants in October and is still recovering at a hospital in England, has been offered a job at the Pakistani consulate in Birmingham, close to Malala's hospital (AFP, CNN).
Familiar events?
Times reporter Thom Shanker published a must-read on Wednesday outlining the parallels between NATO's ongoing withdrawal from Afghanistan and the 1989 Soviet withdrawal strategy, which is widely remembered as a precipitator of the ensuing Afghan civil war (NYT).
A new look
Plastic surgery is on the rise in Afghanistan, and not just to mitigate the terrible effects that war has had on the appearances of many (LAT). As Bollywood movies and Turkish soap operas have soared in popularity in Afghanistan, and more women are entering the workforce, cosmetic surgery for the sake of beauty is becoming a much more common practice.
-- Jennifer Rowland

Can You Fight Poverty With a Five-Star Hotel? - By Cheryl Strauss Einhorn | Foreign Policy

Can You Fight Poverty With a Five-Star Hotel?

The story of how the World Bank's investment arm hands out billions in loans to wealthy tycoons and giant multinationals in some of the world's poorest places.

BY CHERYL STRAUSS EINHORN | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2013

Accra is a city of choking red dust where almost no rain falls for three months at a time and clothes hung out on a line dry in 15 minutes. So the new five-star Mövenpick hotel affords a haven of sorts in Ghana's crowded capital, with manicured lawns, amply watered vegetation, and uniformed waiters gliding poolside on roller skates to offer icy drinks to guests. A high concrete wall rings the grounds, keeping out the city's overflowing poor who hawk goods in the street by day and the homeless who lie on the sidewalks by night.
The Mövenpick, which opened in 2011, fits the model of a modern international luxury hotel, with 260 rooms, seven floors, and 13,500 square feet of retail space displaying $2,000 Italian handbags and other wares. But it is exceptional in at least one respect: It was financed by a combination of two very different entities: a multibillion-dollar investment company largely controlled by a Saudi prince, and the poverty-fighting World Bank. The investment company, Kingdom Holding Company, has a market value of $12 billion, and Forbes ranks its principal owner, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, as the world's 29th-richest person, estimating his net worth at $18 billion. The World Bank, meanwhile, contributed its part through its International Finance Corporation (IFC), set up back in 1956 to muster cheap loans and other financial support for private businesses that contribute to its planet-improving mandate. "At the World Bank, we have made the world's most pressing development issue -- to reduce global poverty -- our mission," the bank proclaims.
Why, then, did the IFC give a Saudi prince's company an attractively priced $26 million loan to help build the Mövenpick, a hotel the prince was fully capable of financing himself? The answer is that the IFC's portfolio of billions of dollars in loans and investments is not in fact primarily targeted at helping the impoverished. At least as important is the goal of making a profit for the World Bank.
I reached this conclusion after traveling to Ghana -- in many ways typical of the more than 100 countries where the IFC works -- to see firsthand the kinds of problems the World Bank's lenders are supposed to tackle and whether their efforts are really working on the ground. I pored through thousands of pages of the bank's publicly available reports and financial statements and talked to dozens of experts familiar with its performance in Ghana and many other countries.
In case after case, the verdict was the same: The IFC likes to work with huge corporations, funding projects these companies could finance themselves. Its partners are billionaires and massive multinationals, from oil giants like ExxonMobil to Grupo Arcor, the huge Argentine candy-maker. Its projects include not only glitzy hotels and high-end shopping malls, but also gritty gold and copper mines and oil pipelines, some of which end up benefiting the very corrupt, authoritarian regimes that the rest of the World Bank is urging to change. Nearly a quarter of the IFC's paid-in capital from member governments -- now standing at $2.4 billion -- came from U.S. taxpayers, and every president in the World Bank's 69-year history has been an American. But the United States has had little complaint with these practices, even when they have become a subject of public controversy.
Not long ago, the World Bank's internal watchdog sharply criticized the IFC's approach, saying it gives little more than lip service to the bank's poverty-fighting mission. The report, a major 2011 review by the bank's Independent Evaluation Group, found that fewer than half the IFC investments it studied involved fighting poverty. "[M]ost IFC investment projects generate satisfactory returns but do not provide evidence of identifiable opportunities for the poor to participate in, contribute to, or benefit from the economic activities that the project supports," the report concluded. In fact, it said, only 13 percent of 500 projects studied "had objectives with an explicit focus on poor people," and even those that did, the report found, had a "limited" impact. The IFC did not dispute the conclusions.
There is certainly need in countries like Ghana, whose per capita GDP ranks in the bottom third of the world, with life expectancy in the bottom 15 percent and infant mortality in the bottom fourth. The IFC committed about $145 million in loans and equity in Ghana just in fiscal year 2012. Yet Takyiwaa Manuh, who advises the Ghanaian government on economic development as a member of the National Development Planning Commission, told me she doesn't think of the IFC's investments "as fighting poverty. Just because some people are employed, it is hard to say that is poverty reduction."
But the policies continue. Why? Tycoons and megacompanies offer relatively low risk and generally assured returns for the IFC, allowing it to reinvest the earnings in more such projects. Only a portion of this money ends up benefiting local workers, and critics contend that the IFC's investments often work against local development needs. "The IFC's model itself is a problem," says Jesse Griffiths, director of the European Network on Debt and Development (Eurodad), a Belgian-based nonprofit. "The IFC undermines democracy with its piecemeal, top-down approach to development that follows the priorities of private companies."
"We're not saying we're perfect," Rashad Kaldany told me. He is a veteran IFC executive and currently its vice president for global industries. The IFC operates "at the frontier," he said. "We know that not every project will work. It's about trying to make a difference to the poor and about achieving financial sustainability" -- twin goals that are challenging in combination.
When it comes to luxury hotels like the Mövenpick in downtown Accra, however, the IFC offers no apology for its investments, even making the case for them as an economic boon for poor countries. A January 2012 report from the World Bank says hotels "play a critical role in development as they catalyze tourism and business infrastructure," noting its partners include such "leading" firms as luxury chains Shangri-La, Hilton, Marriott, InterContinental -- and, of course, Mövenpick.
In Accra, Mary-Jean Moyo, the IFC's in-country manager for Ghana, told me the new hotel fights poverty by creating jobs. To illustrate, she recalled how the Mövenpick's manager "noticed that a few boys roller-skate on Sundays outside the hotel. The manager decided to hire them to work at the pool. That is development and helping local people." How many were hired, I asked. Six, Moyo responded.
When I spoke with Stuart Chase, the Mövenpick's manager, he told me that other kinds of investments besides the new hotel he was clearly proud of would do far more to stimulate Ghana's economy and reduce poverty. Chase, who has lived and worked in Ghana for years, mentioned the country's congested and potholed roads, poor electricity system, limited food supplies, and lack of trade schools. "There is no hotel school and no vocational training in the country," he complained. As a result, all the top staff members among his 300 employees are foreign.
Besides, Accra already has close to a dozen luxury hotels. Before taking over the Mövenpick, Chase managed another nearby five-star hotel owned by Ghana's Social Security and National Insurance Trust, the country's pension system. So when the IFC decided to finance Prince Alwaleed's hotel, it was entering into direct competition with the people it claims it wants to lift out of poverty. Moyo acknowledged to me that the IFC didn't study the local hotel scene before making this investment, unlike its standard practice. "We knew the company and had another successful investment in Kingdom that made the Ghana deal attractive to us," she said. The other investment? A $20 million deal in 2010 to help develop five luxury venues in Kenya, complete with heated swimming pools, golf courses, and organized safaris.
U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat who sits on the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that has jurisdiction over U.S. participation in the World Bank, called the Ghana loan "not an appropriate use of public funds" when alerted to it by a 2011 Washington Times article. The U.S. Treasury Department, which administers American participation in the World Bank, defended the loan, telling the newspaper that the IFC package replaced funding expected from private banks that pulled out when market conditions soured, putting the entire $103 million project at risk. When I was in Accra in July, however, at least two other major hotel projects were under construction with private financing obtained in the same period. The prince's representatives didn't respond to requests for comment.
LUXURY HOTELS AND RESORTS are hardly the only IFC investments that offer at best limited prospects for serving its poverty-fighting mandate. Founded just a dozen years after the World Bank itself, the IFC has in recent years become its fastest-growing unit. It now has a staff of some 3,400 people in 103 countries and made $15 billion in loan commitments in 2012 across about 580 projects -- more than double its 2006 total and a figure that's projected to grow to about $20 billion in the next few years.
The original notion was that while the World Bank was lending directly to poor countries, the IFC would stimulate the growth of private business, entrepreneurship, and financial markets in some of those same countries by lending to and investing in for-profit corporations. The founders, notably including a General Foods executive named Robert Garner, emphasized that the IFC would participate only in projects for which "sufficient private capital is not available on reasonable terms."
That concept has become muddied over the years, as well-heeled borrowers with excellent credit have sought to take advantage of the IFC's relatively attractive loan terms and other investment vehicles, plus, in some cases, the cachet associated with World Bank support. The IFC's growth got a boost in the early 1980s when it was permitted for the first time to raise money from the global capital markets by issuing bonds. More recently, its growth has accelerated as it has entered new businesses, including trade finance, derivatives, and private equity, sometimes to the annoyance of private banks with which it competes.
Today, the IFC's booming list of business partners reads like a who's who of giant multinational corporations: Dow Chemical, DuPont, Mitsubishi, Vodafone, and many more. It has funded fast-food chains like Domino's Pizza in South Africa and Kentucky Fried Chicken in Jamaica. It invests in upscale shopping malls in Egypt, Ghana, the former Soviet republics, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia. It backs candy-shop chains in Argentina and Bangladesh; breweries with global beer behemoths like SABMiller and with other breweries in the Czech Republic, Laos, Romania, Russia, and Tanzania; and soft-drink distribution for the likes of Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, and their competitors in Cambodia, Ethiopia, Mali, Russia, South Sudan, Uzbekistan, and more.
The criticism of most such investments -- from a broad array of academics and watchdog groups as well as local organizations in the poor countries themselves -- is that they make little impact on poverty and could just as easily be undertaken without IFC subsidies. In some cases, critics contend, the projects hold back development and exacerbate poverty, not to mention subjecting affected countries to pollution and other ills.
The debate is swirling as the World Bank has a new leader, installed in July: Jim Yong Kim, an American physician who recently stepped down as president of Dartmouth College. The bank declined to make him available to comment for this article, and in his brief tenure so far, he has given little hint of his view of the IFC. In both his statement when he took office in July and on his first overseas visit, to Ghana's neighbor to the west, Ivory Coast, he did note briefly the importance of the IFC within the World Bank Group and of the private sector to global job creation.
The IFC is also in the middle of a change in leadership. Its former head, Lars Thunell, recently completed his term, and Chinese national Jin-Yong Cai, a Goldman Sachs partner who was in charge of the firm's Chinese banking operations, succeeded him in October. At that time, Kaldany, who had been serving as the IFC's acting CEO, stepped back to the post of vice president for global industries.
The IFC's operations have been the subject not only of outside criticism but of significant parts of 2011's stinging internal report and other critiques from within the World Bank. The 2011 document, in which the bank's Independent Evaluation Group examined the IFC's activities over the previous decade, portrayed a profit-oriented, deal-driven organization that often fails to reach the poor, and at times may even sacrifice the poor, in a drive to earn a healthy return on its investments: "Greater effort is needed in translating the strategic intentions into actions in investment operations and advisory services to enhance IFC's poverty focus."
But the IFC's money-generating strategy has at least one benefit: It sustains the jobs of the people who work for it. The "more money the IFC makes, the more the bank has [available] to invest," says Griffiths, the director of Eurodad. "Staff is incentivized to make money."
Francis Kalitsi, a former IFC employee who is now a managing partner at private-equity firm Serengeti Capital in Accra, has a similar view. "To get ahead, you had to book big transactions," he recalls of his time at the IFC. "The IFC is very profit-focused. The IFC does not address poverty, and its investments rarely touch the poor."
The IFC sets annual targets for the number, size, and types of deals employees should complete, and it awards performance bonuses for reaching these targets, according to several current and former IFC staffers. "If you don't reach the target, you don't get a bonus," says Alan Moody, a former IFC manager who now works elsewhere at the World Bank. Deals often come to the IFC from private companies, not the other way around. "We choose our projects by identifying key clients and asking them what their needs are," says the IFC's Moyo. That means, though, that by following private companies' priorities, the IFC makes investments that are not necessarily aligned with countries' own development strategies.
Even if the IFC focused more of its resources on poverty, it doesn't have a good way to track whether its work has any impact. The 2011 report -- which advises that the IFC "needs to think carefully about questions such as who the poor are, where they are located, and how they can be reached" -- criticizes the IFC for lacking metrics for its investments, saying it fails to "[d]efine, monitor, and report poverty outcomes for projects."
The IFC does not contest these criticisms. Its management responded to the evaluation group's report by stating, "We broadly agree with [the] report's lessons and recommendations" and conceded that the "IFC has not been consistent in stating … the anticipated poverty reduction effects of a project." The IFC notes that it several years ago began using a Development Outcome Tracking System (DOTS) to measure the effectiveness of its projects at spurring economic development and alleviating poverty. This system, however, has drawn snickers from a number of IFC clients. They note that the DOTS ratings rely heavily on self-reporting by the recipient companies and depend to some extent on financial data for the entire firm, often with multiple divisions around the world, rather than focusing on the specific area of the IFC-funded project. Still, Kaldany expresses enthusiasm for the effort, saying it is pathbreaking and getting better.
Meanwhile, there has been little evidence of change on the ground. Everywhere I looked -- in Ghana, in nearby West Africa, and globally -- the IFC still seems to be giving its mandate to fight poverty short shrift.
In finance, for example, R. Yofi Grant, executive director of Databank, one of Ghana's largest banks, told me that the IFC's practice of providing loans at attractive terms to multinational companies "crowds out local banks and private-equity firms by taking the juiciest investments and walking away with a healthy return."
Grant says that the IFC recently organized a $115 million financing package for global telecom giant Vodafone to expand its operations in Ghana, even though six telecom companies already operate in the country. Despite such robust private investment, the IFC's loan package for Vodafone was its second in two years. "That is not poverty reduction, and these are not frontier investments," Grant says, referring to the IFC's refrain that it invests where other financiers might not. "The IFC says all the right things and does all the wrong things."
A THOUSAND MILES EAST of Ghana are Cameroon and Chad, which exemplify a major and highly controversial domain of IFC investment, one where the stakes are often higher than with hotels and shopping malls. That domain is energy.
As of the end of 2011, the IFC reported a $2 billion oil-and-gas portfolio, investing with 30 companies in 23 countries and, the IFC boasted, achieving "Award Winning Recognition from the Market." But critics, including environmentalists and nonprofit groups such as the Bretton Woods Project and Christian Aid, contend that the projects often exacerbate the poverty they are supposed to alleviate. The projects, they say, frequently escalate local conflict and corruption, displace communities, disrupt livelihoods, and contribute to the emission of greenhouse gases and other pollutants.
In 2003, an independent review panel within the World Bank even recommended that the bank, including the IFC, pull out of all oil, natural gas, and coal-mining projects by 2008, saying such loans do not benefit the poor who live where the natural resources are found. But the World Bank's board overruled these recommendations. The bank ultimately agreed to an approach that is "business as usual with marginal changes," Emil Salim, the Indonesian official who led the bank's review, told Bloomberg News in 2004. In a conference call with reporters at the time, IFC executive Kaldany said, "There was very broad consensus that we should remain engaged; we do add value."
The example of Chad and Cameroon, however, offers a more complicated picture. In 2000, the IFC invested roughly $200 million with ExxonMobil, Chevron, and others, along with the governments of Chad and Cameroon, to support the construction of a nearly $4 billion oil-pipeline project that experts estimate will generate more than $5 billion in revenue over the 25-year life of the project from wells mainly in landlocked Chad to a port in Cameroon.
The two countries are even poorer than Ghana to the west. Per capita income in Chad ranks 193rd in the world, compared with 185th place for Cameroon and 172nd for Ghana. Life expectancy at birth in Chad, at 48.7 years, is the world's absolute worst, and the country has been ruled for the last two decades by heavy-handed dictator Idriss Déby.
"Conditions were and are a hardship and horrible," says Peter Rosenblum, co-director of the Human Rights Institute at Columbia University, who argued that the pipeline project should demand protections for the civilian population. The bulk of the oil revenue was supposed to be set aside for food, education, health care, and infrastructure. But in the face of attacks from rebel groups supported by neighboring Sudan, and asserting a need to defend the pipeline, Déby instead channeled substantial chunks into arms purchases, bringing criticism not only from human rights groups but from the World Bank. As critics of the project had warned, the oil bonanza increased the stakes for control of the country and added to the civil strife.
What happened with Chad is not an isolated incident. Despite perennial controversies over energy and mining projects, often the subject of fierce disputes related to everything from their environmental impacts to the extent they boost authoritarian regimes, the IFC continues to invest in them extensively. Just in 2012, the IFC announced investments in mining projects for gold, copper, and diamonds in places like Mongolia, Liberia, and South Africa, as well as investments in oil and gas projects in Colombia, Ivory Coast, the Middle East, and North Africa.
Moreover, as with Chad's Déby, the IFC continues to lend and invest in countries with heavy-handed rulers such as Syria (Bashar al-Assad) and Venezuela (Hugo Chávez). Kaldany told me there were about a dozen dictatorships, which he wouldn't name, where the IFC would simply not do business. But then there is a second tier, where he is inclined to work. "It is a tradeoff. We can have a positive influence," he said, referring to a recent IFC deal in now civil war-torn Syria to fund microfinance. He said the IFC is insisting on increasingly tight financial controls in such countries to ensure that the proceeds from the projects are targeted directly to the poor rather than to sustaining the dictators' hold on power. He acknowledged that the controls in the Chad case were not nearly tight enough and that the IFC ultimately had to pull out.
The IFC's critics see two obvious ways to fix it: dramatically overhaul its priorities or sharply reduce its funding and channel those resources toward the type of World Bank projects that more closely align with its anti-poverty mission.
Kaldany said that the IFC is seeking to increase its number of small projects, of under $5 million and tightly targeted on the poor, and to devote more attention to the poorest of the poor countries. In the most recent fiscal year, it generated 105 of the smaller projects, 20 percent of its total deals, although a much smaller percentage of its total dollar outlays. (IFC officials couldn't immediately provide that number.)
But don't count on a new direction. Although its new leadership has remained publicly mum, the IFC's new chief, Cai, has told people he strongly supports its current strategy.
IN ACCRA, NOT FAR from the new Mövenpick, the IFC's posh offices -- sporting a lawn, flowers, and private parking -- sit amid a slum, surrounded by an imposing concrete wall topped by coils of barbed wire. The only paved part of the road to the IFC is directly in front of the guarded complex, which has no sign announcing its identity. The rest of the road is a winding, dusty dirt path filled with potholes and surrounded by hovels erected out of battered metal or wood.
Barefoot children sit amid goats and roving chickens, on ground dotted by garbage and litter. Women cook tiny fish strung onto sticks over an open fire, ignoring the near-100-degree temperatures. I approached them one day in July, and some of them said they had lived there for 15 years. When asked whether they knew what the World Bank is, they said no. When told that it fights poverty, many of them laughed.
"We need help, and we know there are places that help," said one woman who was cooking as two young boys clung to her legs. "But we have never heard of them.

Wednesday 2 January 2013

Pakistan to seek technology from China to monitor Social Media







 
   
 
   



 
   

India: Gang Rape: Forgotten Facts

Gang Rape: Forgotten Facts
By
Dr Javed Jamil
The New Year celebrations were postponed in many places throughout the country as India did not feel like ceebrating in the wake of the gang rape of its “brave daughter” and her subsequent death. That the people felt enraged gives some hope that social vices would now start receiving much greater attention than they get till now. For last 20 years, I have been speaking and writing extensively on commercialization of human susceptibilities particularly alcohol, gambling and commercial sex. I have often felt frustrated why these issues do not jolt even those whose religious consciousness regards them “Prohibited”. I am piqued even more now because not even the mass rage against Delhi rape case attracted any debate on the real factors involved in sex related crimes. The whole issue has unfortunately been given a man-woman turn, as if it is only crimes against women that are on the rise and all other crimes have disappeared. Three factors that have been completely sidetracked are:
1.      The failure of judicial system as a whole at the international level in controlling crimes;
2.      The largescale commercialization of sex and its destructive effects; and
3.      The relationship between rapes and alcohol/drugs.
We are living in a world where the more advanced and extensive the judicial system of a country is the more horrendous are its crime statistics. This is true of all the developed countries including US, Eurpea and Australia. In all thee countries, Fear of God and Fear of Law have become too week to have any demeaning effect on crimes. Thanks to the rise of New World Order, the judicial system has not only been catering to the neds of the forces of globalisatiob but has become a big money-spinner, which makes people engaged in the system rich without delievering what it is supposed to it. Despite their horrible failure, they have no dearth of people showering encomium on these systems. No wonder then that rapes are becoming increasingly common throughout the world; and Western countries including USA, France, UK and Australia occupy top ranks in the list of maximum rates of rapes. More than once a minute, 78 times an hour, 1,871 times a day, girls and women in America are raped with more than 90000 raped every year. India with its mixture of Westernise legal systems and fast wesrternising socioeconomic system is also becoming increasingly criminal.
Sex has of course become the pivot on which the wheel of world economy revloves. The merchants want men and women together everywhere to keep the wheel rolling without caring much for their security. They are busy in publishing reports that prostitution and pornography in fact have a depressing effect on the incidence of rapes, as if  prostitution and pornography are no crimes themselves. I have seen people arguing for hours to prove that eve teasing is a much bigger crime than rapes, prostitution and promiscuity. I don’t blame them because this is the kind of the ideological feedback they get from the media.
In  this article however, I would like to focus more on the relationship between alcohol/drugs and all sex related problems including rapes.
It is widely known that alcohol increases the risks of unhealthy sexual behaviour. Studies of AIDS in other countries, such as Thailand, indicate that alcohol consumption influences many dimensions of sexual behaviour. One such study, which included students, soldiers, and clerks revealed that “heavy drinking increased the odds of having had sexual intercourse; increased the odds of having visited prostitutes; and decreased the odds of consistent condom use in sexual encounters with sex workers (VanLandingham and others, 1993).” Another report says, “The relationship between drinking and HIV risk behaviours, such as visiting commercial sex workers or having sex without condoms, is not one of simple causality. It has been argued that drinking behaviour co-occurs with other dangerous factors; such a risk-taking Includes beverages made from sugarcane alcohol and agaves, such as mescal and sotol. Aguardiente means "burning water" (Aledina-Mora, 1999).”
 
Here are sme of the findings of reports on the relationship between rapes and alcohol:
·           Alcohol use by the victim or the perpetrator is frequently associated with acquaintance rape.
 
  • In one, study 26% of men who acknowledged committing sexual assault admitted that they were intoxicated at the time of the assault, and an additional 29% reported being mildly buzzed—55% were under the influence of alcohol.
 
·          In the same study 21% of the college women who experienced sexual aggression on a date were intoxicated at the time of the assault, and an additional 32% reported being mildly buzzed—53% were under the influence of alcohol.
 
The effect of alcohol can also  be seen in the cases of abuses. The National Incidence of Child Abuse and Neglect reported that “there is certainly a reason to suppose the number of cases of actual abuse might be rising, since child abuse could be expected to rise when drug and alcohol abuse were increasing and when broken homes were becoming more complex.”
The Effects of Alcohol on Men
A report sumsup the effects of alcohol on men and women in terms of their sexual behaviour:
    “Men expect to feel more powerful, sexual and aggressive after drinking alcohol. Expectancies have power of their own, independent  of any genuine physiological processes. When people expect a  certain outcome, they tend to act in ways that enhance the  likelihood that the outcome will occur. For example, if a man feels  powerful and strong after drinking alcohol, then he is more
 likely  to assert his viewpoints forcefully and to end up in a verbal or  physical argument. Studies show that men who think they have been  drinking alcohol (whether or not they really have) feel sexually  aroused and are more responsive to erotic stimuli and rape scenarios.
“Many studies show that men are more likely than women to interpret a variety of verbal and nonverbal cues as evidence that  a woman is interested in having sex with a man. For example, males were more likely than females to rate revealing clothing, secluded date locations such as his room or the beach, drinking alcohol, complimenting a date, and tickling a
 date as more indicative of a desire to have sexual intercourse.
“The tradition of female reluctance and male persistence makes it easy for men to ignore the woman's "no" and force sex on a genuinely unwilling partner. Both the man and the woman might not view this situation as rape. But if sex occurred without verbal
consent, or force was used to obtain sex against the woman's will, then what happened is legally defined as rape.
Alcohol consumption by men is likely to enhance the likelihood that misperception will occur and lead to sexual assault. For example, for some men going out on a date or going to a party includes an
 initial hypothesis that sex will occur. Drinking alcohol may cause men to interpret or reinterpret a woman' s behavior as a sign of her desire to have sex with him-in a way that fits his initial hypothesis. And he will ignore what she is doing or saying that shows that she is not interested in sex. If a man starts out on a date thinking, "I'm going to have sex," he is starting out with a hypothesis that doesn't take the
other person into account. It is a rape mentality.”
 
 The Effects of Alcohol on Women
     
The same report also describes the effects of alcohol on women:
 
“Alcohol consumption may cause women to ignore or miss cues that suggest an assault is likely . It may keep a woman from realizing that her friendly behavior is being perceived as seduction. (Research studies have shown that men are inclined to misperceive a woman's friendliness as a sign of sexual interest.) Drinking may keep a woman from noticing a man's attempts to get her into an isolated location or his encouragement to drink even more. Alcohol consumption may also decrease the
 likelihood that women can successfully resist an assault, either verbally or physically.
 
“Men frequently feel justified in forcing sex on women who, they believe, have been leading them on or are being sexual teases. Legally sexual provocation, whether intentional or not, is not justification for rape; sex with someone unable to give consent (e.g. drunk) is also rape.
 
 “There are many stereotypes about women who drink alcohol. One common belief is that women who drink alcohol are more sexually available
 than women who do not drink. The results of one study showed that a woman who had a few alcoholic drinks was viewed as more likely than a woman who drank only soft drinks to respond positively to a sexual advance, as more willing to be seduced, and as more likely to engage in sexual intercourse.      Another study showed that men were more likely than women to assume that a woman who drank alcohol with her date was interested in having sex with him. Forty percent of the men who took part in this study felt that it was acceptable to force sex on a drunk date. In a different study 75 percent of a group of acknowledged date rapists said that they sometimes got women drunk in order to increase the likelihood of having sex with them. Many date rape victims report that their attacker fed them drinks for several hours before the attack.
 “Women who were drunk when raped are often viewed by others as partially responsible for what happened. Interviews with a group of  college students showed that the male attacker was held less responsible for the rape when he was intoxicated than he was when he was reported as being sober. In contrast, the female victim was
held more responsible when she was intoxicated than when she was reported as being sober. Thus, in terms of how others will perceive their behavior, the costs of intoxication are higher for college women than for college men. “
Alcohol remains the most commonly used date rape drug, being readily available as well as legal, and is said to be used in the majority of sexual assaults. Many assailants use alcohol because their victims often willingly imbibe it, and can be encouraged to drink enough to lose inhibitions or consciousness. Sex with an unconscious victim is considered rape in most if not all jurisdictions, and some assailants have committed "rapes of convenience" whereby they have assaulted a victim after he or she had become unconscious from drinking too much.
However, in the typical Western style, the emphasis in all such writings has been not on curbing drinking habits but on insisting that drinking of women do not absolve the rapist of his crime. An article by Jaclyn Friedman (WeNews commentator) says:
 
“Blasting women with warnings about getting drunk in public does little to help them and sidesteps men's responsibility for sexual assault, writes Jaclyn Friedman. She advocates three steps that could be more effective.
“(WOMENSENEWS)--In 1992, while I was an undergraduate, I was raped by a fellow student while we were both drunk. He was not a date. I didn't even like him when we were sober. But we were at a party together, a party at which I tried too hard to "keep up" with my friends in the alcohol department and wound up far more drunk than I wanted to be. So I went back to my room. And he followed me. And then he raped me.
Looking back, I can imagine a number of social or institutional interventions which might have helped prevent this attack from happening. But none of them includes the approach that so many articles on this subject take, which is to "raise awareness" among young women that getting drunk in public puts them at greater risk of exploitation and sexual assault.
Why is this an impotent approach? For all the same reasons abstinence-only education does nothing to stop the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (and may even contribute to it).
Very few people of any age or gender go out and drink enough to get drunk thinking it's a responsible thing to do. However true it may be that it's safer not to get drunk (approximately 70 percent of rapes among college students involve alcohol or drug use), it's not like young women don't already hear about the risks from parents, college administrations, the nightly news, or any of the 25 "CSI" or "Law and Order" clones on TV.”
While there is no reason why the act of a rapist should be condoned on account of the vulnerability of his victim due to any factor, including alcohol, there is no reason why a campaign against alcohol should not accompany the campaign against rape. It may be argued that in India’s case, it is mainly the rapists who are under the effect of alcohol; and women in most cases are not inebriated. But this gives even a greater reason why all the activists campaigning against rapes, particularly women,  must wage a simultaneous war against alcohol and drugs.
In the final analysis, three importane elements have to be recognised in any drive against rapes:
1.      In order to control rapes, rapes should be seen as one of the crimes. All serious crimes including murder and rapes are on the rise; and if the situation has to change we will have to adopt a different legal ideology which hanuts the criminals and adequately punishes them. The old dictum that “Ten criminals can be freed but one innocent should not be hanged” is nothing but an excuse for saving the criminals. Instead of looking things in indidividual caseds the net effect has to be ensured.
2.      The commercialisation of sex and nakedness has no place in a civilised society. There should be a concerted campaign against all its ramifications;
3.      There should be a campaign against all the factors that lead to crimes including rapes; neglecting anyone will have disastrous consequensces. Alcohol in particular needs urgent attention.
4.      Moral Empowerment of society is required if cvilised behaviour is to be ensured.
Comprehensiveness is the key to any planning, and this is what is also required in dealing crimes including rapes.
* Dr Javed Jamil is Executive Chairman, International Centre for Applied Islamics, and Director PEACE. He is also author of more than a dozen books including “Islam means Peace”, “The Essence of the Divine Verses”, “The Killer Sex”, “Rediscovering the Universe”, “The Devil of Economic Fundamentalism” and “Islamic Model for Control of AIDS”. Also has more than 200 articles and papers to his credit. His soon-to-be-published works include “Scientific & Social Paradigms based on Qur’an” and “Westernism: the Ideology of Hegemony”. His recent approach paper, “Muslim Vision of Secular India: Destination & Roadmap” has attracted huge attention.