Monday 19 March 2012

DAILY LATEST NEWS UPDATE: 20.03.2012



Pakistan ties very important: White House

WASHINGTON: As the Parliament in Islamabad prepared to debate recommendations on a viable way forward in Pakistan-US relations, the White House underlined the importance of the bilateral cooperation including the Pakistani help in elimination of al-Qaeda militants over the past several years.
“Our message hasn’t changed, which is that we consider that relationship very important, not least because of its importance to our national security interests,” President Barack Obama’s spokesman Jay Carney said.
The White House Press Secretary was asked about the US message for Pakistan on the eve of a Parliamentary discussion on relationship between the two countries, which were seriously hurt by deaths of 24 Pakistani soldiers in Nato cross-border strikes on November 26 last year.
Carney acknowledged the relationship as being “complicated,” one “that requires a lot of attention, and we give it that attention.”
“And we will continue to work with Pakistan on our shared goals of eradicating the threat of terrorism in the region, Carney said.”
The spokesman would not specifically address the contentious issue of strikes carried out by US drones against militant targets in the Pakistani tribal areas along the Afghan border but remarked the US understands challenges in the relationship.
“On Pakistan, again, without addressing the specifics of your question, we understand that there are challenges in the relationship.
We work very closely with our Pakistani counterparts and we are very clear about what our objectives are in terms of American national security interests,” Carney replied, when his comments were sought about the Pakistani anger on drone attacks on its territory.
According to reports, an end to violation of Pakistani sovereignty with drone strikes is likely to be a key issue in the Parliamentary discussion beginning Tuesday.

Joint sitting on US ties begins today


ISLAMABAD: Parliament will break new ground when it meets on Tuesday to frame guidelines about the future of Pakistan’s strategic ties with the United States.
A joint sitting of the National Assembly and Senate, summoned by President Asif Ali Zardari to begin at 11am, comes after a long wait for review of a relationship that has come under immense strains for months over incidents like the killing of Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad last May and a deadly American helicopter strike on a Pakistani military post near the Afghan border in November.
The outcome of the session, which is likely to continue for three days, has been awaited anxiously both in Pakistan and the United States because of its potential impact on the US-led war on terror at a time when Washington is preparing to draw down troops fighting Al Qaeda and Taliban in Afghanistan.
In Pakistan, the so-called military-led establishment has often been accused of dictating foreign policy for decades, particularly vis-à-vis relations with big powers with defence implications and with arch-rival India, with parliamentarians complaining of little say, particularly under military dictators, and civilians at times had to pay dearly for asserting their positions.
Foreign policy debates in parliament in the past may have influenced government decisions, but the one beginning on Tuesday will be the first institutionalised effort of its kind for a parliamentary guidance in foreign relations.
However, parliamentary sources said recommendations of the joint sitting would not be the final word and would serve only as a guideline for the government in negotiating arrangements with the United States so long as the Afghan conflict continues.
Ties between Islamabad and Washington, marked by periods of love and hate, have generally been a picture of American dictation and Pakistani submission, the latest instance of which was former military president General Pervez Musharraf allegedly acquiescing to only a threatening telephone call from Washington, and without consulting his civilian cabinet, to join US conditions of strategic partnership after the 9/11 attacks on the United States.
The previous military ruler, Gen Zia-ul-Haq, showed the door to his own hand-picked prime minister Mohammad Khan Junejo in 1988 after Mr Junejo consulted opposition parties at a conference and agreed to a UN-mediated peace accord for a Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Even when Ms Benazir Bhutto took over as the first post-Zia PPP prime minister, she had to accept a military-picked foreign minister, Sahabzada Yaqub Khan, and it was a foreign policy difference with the army over improving relations with India that led to the 1999 Kargil conflict in Kashmir and the toppling of then PML-N prime minister Nawaz Sharif by Gen Musharraf.
The present government of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, which took office in March 2008, by and large followed the arrangement left by Gen Musharraf but pressures for a review, mainly from the opposition parties, mounted because of tensions over deadly US drone strikes against Taliban hideouts in Pakistani tribal areas and the May 2 US commando raid that killed Osama bin Laden at his hideout in Abbottabad.
But the Nov 2 US helicopter raid on Salala border post in the Mohmand tribal agency, which killed 24 Pakistani soldiers, was taken as the last straw that forced the government to suspend Nato supplies to Afghanistan via Pakistani land route, order vacation of Shamsi airbase in Balochistan by US personnel, and ask an all-party Parliamentary Committee on National Security to formulate recommendations for a review of the strategic relationship with the United State and Nato.
The 17-member committee, headed by PPP’s ranking Senator Mian Raza Rabbani, finalised its report in the third week of January after more than a month of deliberations, whose sources of input included presentations personally by Prime Minister Gilani, Chief of the Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, then Inter-Services Intelligence director-general Lt.-Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha – who retired only on Sunday – and recommendations of a conference held in Islamabad in December of Pakistani ambassadors to major world capitals.
Though the report of the parliamentary committee has been kept secret, the government continued consultations with leaders of allied parties and the military until this weekend on possible implications of the recommendations, such as conditions for allowing the transport of Nato supplies to Afghanistan for possible transit charges and possible reaction to drone attacks, over which Pakistan has so far been only protesting though several American officials have, in the past, spoken of Islamabad’s tacit consent.
The presentation of the report by Mr Rabbani will be followed by a debate, likely to be opened by opposition leader in the National Assembly, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, and concluded with the passage of resolution to reflect the views of both the 342-seat National Assembly and the 104-seat Senate.
This will be the 12th joint sitting of parliament called since the present government took office in March 2008, including five ceremonial ones for presidential address to open a new parliamentary year just like the last held on Saturday and the third concerning war on terror, the other two of which (from Oct 8-22 on security situation that endorsed an anti-Taliban military operation in Malakand division and one on May 14 over the US raid in Abbottabad) were held in camera.
The sitting beginning on Tuesday will be open, a parliament official said.

Meeting at Presidency to discuss Karachi situation

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari has summoned a meeting over law and order situation of Karachi today at the President House, geo News reported.



Business News:
Tue, 20 Mar 2012
-Oil prices down on Saudi assurance
SINGAPORE: Oil prices inched lower in Asian trade Tuesday after the world s leading crude producer Saudi Arabia vo 
-Asia markets slip, Iran tensions lift energy firms
HONG KONG: Asian markets slipped in early trade on Tuesday as dealers looked for a foothold to spur buying despite 
-Lentils prices up by Rs3 to 29 at Utility Stores
ISLAMABAD: Prices of lentils have been increased by Rs3 to Rs29 per kilogram at Utility Stores across the country, 
-Oil prices extend gains in Asian trade
SINGAPORE: Oil prices extended gains in Asia on Monday, supported by concerns over Middle East supply and signs of 
-Asian shares mixed after weak US data
HONG KONG: Asian shares were mixed on Monday, as lingering optimism over the recovery in the global economy was te 
-Dollar weak on murky US economic data
TOKYO: The dollar moved narrowly against the yen and euro in Asia on Monday amid a mixed bag of US data that failed 
-Research firm: New iPad more expensive to make
NEW YORK: Apple appears to be making less of a profit from each new iPad than it did when it launched the previous 
-CNG stations back in business across Sindh
KARACHI: CNG stations in the metropolis as well as across the province reopened on Sunday morning after 24 hours o 
-Dell sees room to challenge Apple in tablets
LONDON: A growing dissatisfaction among office workers with the clunky computers their employers force them to use 
-Apple cements tablet market lead with new iPad
LONDON/NEW YORK: Apple Inc s newest iPad looked like another hot seller on Friday as hundreds lined up at stores a 
-Oil climbs on Iran tensions, weak dollar
NEW YORK: Oil prices rose more than 2 percent on Friday on support from the continuing tensions over Iran s dispute 
-Analysts worry that something''s amiss at Oracle
BOSTON: Oracle Corp may soon run out of excuses to feed Wall Street. When the world s third-largest software
-KSE-100 index loses 153.95 points
KARACHI: The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) benchmark 100-share index ended more than 1 percent lower on Friday as i 
-India''s crisis-hit government aims to rein in deficit
NEW DELHI: India s embattled government pledged Friday to curb a gaping public deficit, banking on higher economic 
-Asian shares mostly higher on US data
HONG KONG: Asian markets were mixed on Friday as another batch of upbeat US data was tempered by lingering concern




LATEST NEWS/BRIEF NEWS:





MOHAMMED SALEEM MANSOORI

No comments:

Post a Comment