Monday, 12 Muharram 1447 | 2025/07/07
Time now: (M.M.T)
Menu
Main menu
Main menu

Attack on Mehran Naval base is another attack on Pakistan's sovereignty by America Such condemnable attacks will persist as long as American forces remain at sensitive military places

A surprise attack by more then a dozen terrorists on a most sensitive area, the Mehran naval airbase, which is located at Karachi's most secure Shara-i-Faisal Street is as unbelievable as the 2nd May incident, when America intruded a hundred and fifty kilometers inside Pakistani territory to conduct a unilateral covert operation in Abbotabad, within a stones throw of the Kakul Military Academy.

Read more...

Headline news for 26-5-2011

  • Published in News & Comment
  •   |  

 Titles:

  • Obama: U.S., U.K. leadership is essential
  • China urges "democratic consultation" over IMF head 
  • UK considers using attack helicopters in Libya
  • Saudi troops sent to crush Bahrain protests 'had British training' 
  • UK ambassador airlifted as Yemen leader refuses to quit
  • US to withdraw troops from Pakistan

 

News Details: 

 
Obama: U.S., U.K. leadership is essential
In a historic speech to the two houses of Parliament, President Barack Obama said Wednesday that U.S. and U.K. leadership in the world is essential for the promotion of freedom and human dignity. "Our relationship is special because of the values and beliefs that have united our people through the ages," Obama said in the first-ever address by a U.S. president to both houses of Parliament in Westminster Hall.  "The time for our leadership is now," he said. "We are the nations most willing to stand up for the values of tolerance and self-determination that lead to peace and dignity." Obama also hailed the economic leadership of the U.S. and the U.K. and their support for free enterprise. He said that emerging economies such as China and India are moving toward market-based principles. "We live in a global economy that is largely of our own making," he said.

 

China urges "democratic consultation" over IMF head
China said on Thursday that any decision on who should lead the International Monetary Fund "should be made through democratic consultation," refraining from taking a firm public position on French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde's candidacy. The faxed statement from the Ministry, in response to a question about China's position on who should head the IMF, repeated Beijing's position that senior management of the organization "should enhance representation of the emerging market countries and reflect changes in the world economy."But the statement did not say directly whether China endorses or opposes Lagarde, or possibly the other declared candidate, Mexican Central Bank Governor Agustin Carstens. They are competing to succeed Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who faces charges of sexual assault and resigned from the position."There is a consensus among the leaders in the G20 group that the selection of the management of international financial institutions, including the International Monetary Fund, should abide by the principles of openness, transparency and being merit-based," said the statement, echoing the Foreign Ministry's earlier comments on the issue."China has noted that countries concerned have proposed candidates for the executive directorship of the IMF. We hope that the decision will be made through democratic consultation on the basis of these above principles."

 


UK considers using attack helicopters in Libya
Defence Minister Nick Harvey rejects French claims that Britain is about to send Apache attack helicopters into Libya - but confirms it is an option being considered by the UK. Military chiefs are considering deploying Apache attack helicopters in Libya but no final decision has been made, the Government has insisted. Defence Minister Nick Harvey contradicted claims by French defence minister Gerard Longuet that Britain would follow the French in sending helicopters into the fight against Colonel Gaddafi, after Labour MPs complained Parliament was being "kept in the dark" about the deployment of UK forces. Mr Harvey told the House of Commons: "My understanding is that the French have indeed taken a decision to deploy their attack helicopters in Libya. I state again for the avoidance of all doubt: no such decision has been taken by the United Kingdom.  "It is an option we are considering and there is absolutely no sense in which it is true to say that we have kept Parliament in the dark about a decision."

 


Saudi troops sent to crush Bahrain protests 'had British training'
Saudi Arabian troops sent into Bahrain to crush a popular uprising may have had British military training, the Government has admitted. The British Government has said it is "deeply concerned" by reports of human rights abuses in Bahrain, where the ruling royal family has used Saudi troops to put down Shi'ite demonstrations. The Sunni royal family in Saudi Arabia fears the growing influence of Shi'ite Iran in the Middle East, and is helping Bahrain's Sunni rulers retain power. The Ministry of Defence has now admitted that members of the Saudi Arabian National Guard sent into Bahrain may have received military training from the British Armed Forces in Saudi Arabia.  The revelation is likely to renew allegations that the Coalition is sending mixed messages on democracy in the Middle East. Despite British criticism of the Bahrainis' actions, David Cameron last week welcomed the Crown Prince of Bahrain to Downing Street, drawing criticism from human rights groups. Britain keeps a large and secretive military training team in Saudi Arabia. British In a written parliamentary answer, Nick Harvey, the Armed Forces Minister, said the Government could not rule out the possibility that British-trained Saudis took part in the Bahraini operation.

 


UK ambassador airlifted as Yemen leader refuses to quit
Britain's ambassador to Yemen had to be airlifted to safety from the United Arab Emirates embassy in Sanaa yesterday along with his international colleagues as an armed mob closed in, and president Ali Abdullah Saleh again refused to cede power. The militiamen, armed with knives and swords, blocked the entrances to the UAE mission, where Jonathan Wilks, along with the US representative and three Arab ambassadors, had gathered, expecting Mr Saleh to arrive to sign the agreement. Yemeni military helicopters landed at the embassy and ferried the diplomats out, taking them to the presidential palace. There, they witnessed several Yemeni ruling party officials sign the accord. But Mr Saleh, shown on state TV standing alongside the US ambassador, did not sign. Mr Saleh said later he would not do so unless opposition leaders attend and sign it as well in public, not "behind closed doors". "If they don't comply, they are dragging us to a civil war, and they will have to hold responsibility for the bloodshed in the past and the blood which will be spilled later on because of their stupidity," Mr Saleh warned in an address on state TV.

 


US to withdraw troops from Pakistan
The US military has announced the withdrawal of a number of its troops from Pakistan. The Pentagon said it had received a request from the Pakistani government to reduce its presence in the country. The request came after a raid by US special forces killed al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden in early May. The US has more than 200 troops in Pakistan helping to train the army. But there are said to be intelligence and special forces operating there.A spokesman at the Pentagon said that within the last two weeks Pakistan had asked the American military to reduce its footprint, and the Americans were doing so, pulling out some troops. The numbers are quite small. It is not clear if any of the American intelligence and special operations forces that are said to be in Pakistan clandestinely are also being pulled out.

 

Read more...

The leaders of the Jews command their army to kill us in the Golan, Maroun al-Ras and Beit Hanoun, and the rulers of the Muslim lands around Palestine command their armies to kill their own people!

The 15th of March 2011 - the remembrance day of the usurpation of Palestine - was a long day in the blessed land and its surroundings as the Jewish entity set its army loose on the unarmed people in Palestine

Read more...

Headline news for 18-5-2011

  • Published in News & Comment
  •   |  

Titles:

  • Strauss-Kahn must resign, say US treasury chief and European ministers
  • Secret desert mercenary force set up for Arab sheik by Blackwater founder
  • Yemen rivals cling to positions as GCC plan stalls
  • US steps up face-to-face peace talks with Taliban 
  • CIA used stealth drones to monitor Bin Laden 

 

News Details:

Strauss-Kahn must resign, say US treasury chief and European ministers
Pressure is building on Dominique Strauss-Kahn to resign as head of the International Monetary Fund, with the US treasury chief and European finance ministers questioning if he can carry on in the light of his arrest. In a speech in New York on Tuesday, Tim Geithner, the US treasury secretary, said Strauss-Khan was "obviously not in a position to run the IMF". He said: "I think it's important that the board of the IMF formally put in place for an interim period somebody to act as managing director." Geithner's comments came after Austria's finance minister, Maria Fekter, and others, said Strauss-Kahn was damaging the IMF: "Considering the situation, that bail was denied, he has to figure out for himself, that he is hurting the institution," she told journalists at a meeting of European finance ministers in Brussels. Strauss-Kahn is being held in isolation at the notorious Rikers Island in New York, having been refused bail after denying charges of a sexual assault on a 32-year-old chambermaid. His lawyers are expected to reapply for bail on Friday; one New York tabloid reported they might be preparing to argue sexual contact was consensual.

 

Secret desert mercenary force set up for Arab sheik by Blackwater founder
A crown prince has hired Erik Prince to build a secret army for him. Mr Prince, the controversial American who founded, then sold, private security company Blackwater, is charged with building up a force of several thousand commandos for Sheik Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan of Abu Dhabi, The New York Times reports in an investigative feature. The fighting force trains at a secretive compound in the desert sands of the United Arab Emirates, roughly 20 miles outside Abu Dhabi, according to The New York Times. The force, reported to number 580 men, had been reduced from an original goal of 800, but allegedly has plans to ramp up to several thousand.  The New York Times reported that Mr Prince's new company, Reflex Responses (also called R2) has been paid $529million to train the troops to assist the UAE government with intelligence gathering, security, counterterrorism and suppression of any revoltsIt is said to be preparing for a March 31 deployment, but The New York Times found evidence of delays and lack of readiness. The troops are said to be largely made up of Colombians and South Africans, a result of alleged orders from Mr Prince to recruit from areas that have seen conflict and to avoid hiring Muslims, whom the leader allegedly said couldn't be trusted 'to kill fellow Muslims', The New York Times reports. The New York Times points out that the legality of such mercenary forces is murky in the international sphere, and that it may be illegal for Americans to participate in such a venture, even though the force is apparently majority owned by local interests.

 

Yemen rivals cling to positions as GCC plan stalls
The Yemeni regime and its opponents refused to budge on Tuesday as a Gulf mediator tried to keep up efforts to resolve the political crisis in the impoverished country. "We have discussed with Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Secretary General (Abdullatif) al-Zayani the mechanism to implement a plan to end the crisis," ruling General People's Congress (GPC) spokesman Tareq al-Shami told AFP. "This plan needs a timeframe to implement it," said Shami.The six GCC states have proposed an exit plan that would see embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh out of office within 30 days. "In these circumstances, President Saleh according to the constitution has the right to serve his term until 2013," and he might not resign before the opposition commits to the GCC plan which calls for an end to street protests. But leading opposition figure Sultan al-Atwani slammed what he called "a new manoeuvre" by the regime. "The opposition is sticking to the agreement reached on April 21 and refuses to negotiate any new ideas," he said.Chief opposition negotiator Mohammed Salem Basandou "has expressed our position to Zayani when he met him in Sanaa in the presence of European and US diplomats on Sunday and Monday," said Atwani. Saleh has stalled by refusing to sign in his capacity as president, insisting on endorsing the agreement only as leader of the GPC, contrary to the demands of the opposition. He says that under the constitution he should serve out his current term of office, which expires in 2013. But Washington called on him last Thursday to sign the deal "now." The Gulf plan, which has lost Qatar's support, proposes the formation of a government of national unity, Saleh transferring power to his vice president and an end to deadly protests which have shaken the country since late January.

 

US steps up face-to-face peace talks with Taliban
The United States has stepped up face-to-face peace talks with the Taliban, holding at least three meetings in Qatar and Germany in recent days with figures believed to be close to Mullah Omar, the group's leader. Discussions were initiated before the killing of Osama bin Laden on May 2 but American and British diplomats believe that the death of the al-Qaeda leader could give added impetus to the talks and the drawdown of Nato troops, due to begin in July. President Barack Obama, whose hand has been strengthened by the assassination of bin Laden, is believed to be contemplating a withdrawal of several thousand American troops, some 100,000 of whom are in Afghanistan. Previous talks broke down when a supposed Taliban leader flown into Kabul in a Nato plane was revealed to be a shopkeeper trying to make some money. Other attempts at dialogue have foundered because would-be emissaries could not be confirmed as genuine. But American officials told the "Washington Post" that although these new talks were preliminary they were with Taliban officials with a direct line to Mullah Omar. A Western official in Kabul confirmed the United States was in direct contact with the Taliban following a sea change in American policy this year. Marc Grossman, the replacement for special envoy Richard Holbrooke, has been nicknamed "Mr Reconciliation" and told to focus efforts on trying to facilitate a political deal which would ease a US exit.  "Those are no longer preconditions, they are being seen as negotiated outcomes," said the Western official. At the same time, the Taliban has weakened its demand that no talks can take place before foreign troops leave. Speculation about talks has angered opponents of President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, who say that they undermine Afghan democracy. Any peace deal with the Taliban is likely to involve some element of the group sharing power in Kabul. The Taliban has demanded the release of 20 prisoners from Guantánamo Bay.

 

CIA used stealth drones to monitor Bin Laden
The CIA flew stealth drones on dozens of secret missions deep into Pakistan to monitor Osama bin Laden's compound before US commandos killed him, The Washington Post reported. Citing current and former US officials, the Post said the Central Intelligence Agency used the highly sophisticated unmanned planes to fly undetected at high altitudes and provide high-resolution video months before bin Laden was killed in a dramatic May 2 assault by US special forces. "It's not like you can just park a Predator (drone) overhead -- the Pakistanis would know," a former US official told the newspaper, noting the aircraft provided more enhanced surveillance than other available tools. But the CIA was also using satellites, eavesdropping equipment and agency operatives based at a safe house in the garrison town of Abbottabad where bin Laden is believed to have lived for about five years until he was found, according to the Post. The move would highlight the growing mistrust between the United States and Pakistan, two uneasy allies in the fight against terror. The US raid has further strained ties with Islamabad, which has already received about $20 billion in US aid over the past decade.
 

Read more...

Traitor Rulers Resort to Abduction of Hizb ut-Tahrir Activist, as They have no Truthful Answer Regarding Abbotabad Operation

To save their thrones and extensions of duty, the American agent rulers have mobilized their secret agencies, rather than allowing them to work to protect Islam and the Ummah. After just a few days of comical staged rallies and banners, the agencies descended to cheap thuggery.

Read more...

Agency Raids on the Homes of Hizb ut-Tahrir Activists After Hizb ut-Tahrir Exposed the Political and Military Leadership in Abbotabad Operation

The rulers are fuming at Hizb ut-Tahrir for exposing the role of the political and military leadership in the Abbotabad operation. The secret agencies have raided homes of five members of Hizb ut-Tahrir and in order to harass their families. In Karachi, plain cloth armed secret agents broke into the home of Hizb ut-Tahrir member Habibullah
Read more...
Subscribe to this RSS feed

Site Categories

Links

West

Muslim Lands

Muslim Lands