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Showing posts with label FT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FT. Show all posts

Karachi situation to improve after SC verdict, says CJ

KARACHI: A special bench of the Supreme Court was hearing the suo motu case on the violence in Karachi on Wednesday, DawnNews reported.


The special bench is headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry and includes Justices Anwar Zaheer Jamali, Sarmad Jalal Osmany, Ghulam Rabbani and Amir Hani Muslim.

During the hearing, Chief Justice Iftikhar remarked that after the apex court’s decision on the case, the government would become alert and Karachi’s conditions would improve.

He moreover said that if Karachi’s situation was worse than that of Waziristan, then how could the government be termed as successful.

Also during today’s proceedings, counsel for the federal government, Babar Awan, said that international powers were trying to prove that Pakistan was a failed state and if the court’s judgment was along similar lines then that would have a negative impact.

To that, the court said that a government’s failure was not the failure of the state.(Dawn.com)

Evanescence Avoided 'The Classic Route' With 'What You Want' Video

Almost since the day she wrote it, Amy Lee has referred to Evanescence's "What You Want" as being "really different" from any song in the band's back catalog. So, when it came time to cook up a concept for the video, well, why would that change?

"We'd been working really fast, and we were still finishing the album and it was almost time to shoot the video, and I didn't have an idea, which is weird for me, I usually have a big vision right away," Lee laughed. "But the song is really different for us, so I knew that I didn't want to go the classic, sort of fantastic, epic [thing]. I mean it's still epic, but we didn't want to go the classic route — I wanted to do something different."

Lee actually invited her sister, Carrie, to the recording studio for a few fresh ideas. "She's a writer, so I was like, 'Would you just sit here with me and listen to the song a couple times and just tell me what you see?' " Lee recalled. "She just started saying things that were right on. She was like, 'This should be in New York. You guys need to do something different, this song feels different.' And she started talking about running across the Brooklyn Bridge, and it being where I live, and I was like, 'Oh my God, this is great.' " Keep Reading at MTV

Top official among four die of dengue


LAHORE, Sept 12: Dengue continues to haunt citizens as on Monday it claimed the lives of four more people, including Punjab mines and minerals department secretary Attaullah Siddiqui, a UAE-returned Pakistani youth and a school teacher.

Mr Siddiqui was the first senior government officer to have fallen prey to the fatal virus which, according to official figures, took the lives of seven people over the past one month or so. But sources claimed that more than 15 people had lost their lives in Lahore alone during the period.

Mr Siddiqui, a resident of GOR-IV and a grade-19 official, was suspected of contracting dengue a week ago. Later clinical reports tested him positive for the virus with low counts which continued to decline till his death. He remained on ventilator for three days. His body was taken to Muzaffargarh.

Thirty-year-old Haji Shahzad had returned from the UAE 15 days ago to celebrate the birth of his son. Shahzad, a resident of Iqbal Road, was taken to a private hospital on Ferozepur Road. He was diagnosed with dengue and his platelet counts continued to decline. He was later shifted to Ittefaq Hospital with massive bleeding from mouth, ears and nose. He died late on Sunday night.

Samina, a 25-year-old school teacher and resident of Waris Road, and 12-year-old girl Farwa Naveed, resident of Chungi Amer Sidhu, died in hospitals.

Six more Chinese engineers tested positive for dengue on Monday. They were working on the project site of under-construction Information Technology Tower on Ferozepur Road. They were taken to the Jinnah Hospital, where their other colleagues were already under treatment for the virus.

Two of them were kept in the intensive care unit because of low platelet counts. Allama Iqbal Medical College Principal Prof Dr Javed Arkam told Dawn that Mr Wong was immediately given two mega units of platelets and Mr Lee one mega unit.

Meanwhile, some 655 more people, including Abdul Latif (brother-in-law ofPML-N chief Nawaz Sharif), PML-N MPA Saiful Malook Khokhar, Housing Secretary Sohail Amir and three senior doctors, tested positive for dengue in Lahore, showing a visible surge in the number of patients suffering from the virus.

The number of dengue patients has shot up to 3,800 in Lahore and 4,000 in other parts of the province.

Heavy rains cripple Karachi; businesses, schools closed

KARACHI: Floods triggered by heavy monsoon rains crippled Pakistan's biggest city and commercial hub of Karachi on Tuesday, with few people able to make it to work or school.

In Karachi, the capital of Sindh, rain was forecast through Wednesday at least.
Rains that began Monday evening still continuing in the city. The convoy of Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry was also stuck.

Many streets were impassable, cars were stuck, several fuel stations were inundated and no visible efforts were underway to drain water.

"We have recorded 50-100 mm (2 to 4 inches) of rain in Karachi and the situation is pretty bad. Many main roads and areas are inundated at the moment and it can turn even worse," said Mohammad Hussain Syed, the city's district coordination officer.

He said no casualties had been recorded.

The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) will close at the usual 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, reversing an earlier decision to close at noon because of floods in Pakistan's commercial capital, an exchange official said.

"I thought I would be able to make it to work, but it was a wrong decision. Now I am stuck. My car has broken down and I can't even find anyone for help," said banker Khalid Hussain, standing knee-deep in water. (The News Pk)

UN kicks off relief effort in flood-hit Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: The United Nations on Monday began a drive to feed half a million people affected by torrential rains in Pakistan where a second year of flooding has killed more than 200, officials said.

The crisis came just weeks after aid agency Oxfam accused the government of failing to invest in prevention measures after floods last year hit 21 million people and cost the economy $10 billion in the country's worst natural disaster.

Pakistan has now seen vast swathes of farmland inundated for a second year in the southern province of Sindh, the nation's breadbasket. One official said the situation there was even worse than last year.

"So far, 209 people have been killed and 5.3 million affected," Zafar Qadir, head of the country's disaster management authority, told reporters.

"Around 1.7 million acres of agricultural land has also been affected by the rains and floods."

The UN food agency said Monday it had started to provide emergency supplies to the first of half a million people, following a weekend appeal from Pakistan, which already relies on billions of dollars of international aid.

World Food Programme (WFP) spokesman Amjad Jamal said that the agency had provided food packages to more than 600 families in Badin, one of the worst affected districts of Sindh.

"This is the first UN food response after Pakistan's government's appeal. We will expand this program to half a million people in coming days," he said.

China, Pakistan's most trusted foreign ally, said it had pledged $4.7 million for urgent humanitarian assistance and its ambassador on Monday handed over a cheque worth $50,000 to the disaster management authority.

The authority said it was working to quantify "huge" losses with cash crops such as sugar cane, banana and cotton now under water.

The government was last year pilloried by flood victims who accused civilian authorities of a delayed and inadequate response to the disaster.

A special parliamentary committee, formed by Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani to coordinate relief efforts this time round, said it was facing huge problems.

"We have provided 80,000 family food packages and 45,000 tents. We have procured 10,000 more tents but there are serious distribution problems," Qamar Zaman Kaira, a member of the committee, told reporters.

"The helicopters are unable to fly in the continuous rains and roads have been flooded. The crisis is worse than last year in Sindh province. There are huge losses."

Gilani has said recent rains in Sindh were nearly two-and-a-half times normal levels, and inundated 4.1 million acres, including 1.7 million acres of crops.

He said 700,000 houses had been damaged, 150,000 people in relief camps needed immediate assistance and that 64,000 livestock had been lost.

The UN children's agency said up to 2.5 million children in southern Pakistan had been affected by the floods. (AFP)

Source: The News Pk

Jennifer Lopez, Bradley Cooper 'spotted on dinner date'

Jennifer Lopez and Bradley Cooper were spotted on a romantic dinner date over the weekend.

The pair shared a meal at trendy New York City eatery Per Se on Saturday night, a restaurant employee told Us Weekly.

Another eyewitness revealed that Lopez and Cooper spent much of the evening together at the restaurant, which is located in Columbus Circle.

Representatives for Lopez and Cooper have not commented on the report.

Lopez filed for divorce from husband Marc Anthony in July, with the American Idol judge later suggesting that Anthony didn't treat her properly.

Cooper and former girlfriend Renée Zellweger reportedly ended their two-year romance in March.

Clashes flare at Kadhafi strongholds, son in Niger

NEAR BANI WALID: Former rebels clashed on Sunday with pro-Moamer Kadhafi forces at Bani Walid and were closing in on Sirte, poised for all-out attacks on his final bastions, as one of his sons arrived in Niger.
The deputy head of the National Transitional Council (NTC), meanwhile, told reporters in Tripoli that a new transitional government will be formed within 10 days.

"A new government will be formed within one week to ten days," said Mahmud Jibril, who serves as NTC "prime minister."

Rebel forces are still "in the process of liberating Libya, and revolutionary combatant are still on the fronts," Jibril said, adding that another government will be formed once "Libya is liberated."

An AFP correspondent said at least three fighters were killed and 15 wounded in the skirmishes on the outskirts of Bani Walid, near to where forces loyal to Libya's new rulers were massed, waiting for the signal to storm the oasis town.

Interim leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil on Saturday gave the green light to attack Bani Walid southeast of Tripoli, Kadhafi's hometown Sirte to the east and Sabha in the deep south after declaring the deadline for pro-Kadhafi enclaves to surrender over.

Saadi Kadhafi arrived in Niger on Sunday, government spokesman and Justice Minister Marou Amadou said.

"Today, September 11, a patrol of the Nigerien armed forces intercepted a convoy in which was found one of Kadhafi's sons," Amadou said, identifying him as Saadi.

"At this moment the convoy is en route to Agadez (northern Niger). The convoy could arrive in Niamey between now and tomorrow," he added.

Saadi, 38, the third of Kadhafi's seven sons, is a playboy who renounced a football career in 2004 to join the army, where he led an elite unit.

The whereabouts of Kadhafi himself remain a mystery. Niamey has insisted Kadhafi was not on Nigerien soil.

Streams of NTC fighters backed by armoured vehicles mounted with anti-aircraft guns arrived during Sunday on the edge of Bani Walid, 180 kilometres (110 miles) from Tripoli, an AFP correspondent said.

The fighters said they had routed Kadhafi loyalists and snipers from Wadidinar, a valley in the shadow of Bani Walid, as they pushed towards the town.

Clashes erupted in the afternoon in the neighbourhoods of Al-Mansila and Al-Hawasim, according to fighter Ahmed al-Warfalli.

Military commanders insisted that the main assault had yet to begin.

"Today we are still on standby and waiting for orders," said one commander, General Atiya Ali Tarhuni.

A pro-Kadhafi radio station all afternoon broadcast an appeal to residents to rally against the attackers.

"They want to spread corruption and destruction everywhere. Go today, today, today -- now you are armed there is no excuse. This is the time for jihad (holy warfare)," it said.

By evening, ambulances were rushing to and from the front line, amd an AFP reporter counted three fighters killed and 15 wounded.

An emergency services doctor operating a field clinic in the hamlet of Wishtata, 40 kilometres (25 miles) from Bani Walid, said most of the wounded were treated for "sniper shots and explosions."

"There are Kadhafi military people in the heights of Bani Walid shooting down at rebels," said Dr Mehdi Barut.

After dark a pick-up truck arrived with four men the fighters said were pro-Kadhafi prisoners. They were locked in a room at the clinic.

Similar skirmishes on Friday night saw four NTC fighters killed and 26 wounded.

Sami Saadi Abu Rweis, a fighter returning from Bani Walid, reported snipers everywhere.

"They are shooting at us from two kilometres away. Bani Walid is full of arms -- every household has them.

"There is some type of treason going on. People pretended to be with the rebels but are really with Kadhafi."
(The News Pk)

Zardari undergoes tests, angiography

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari underwent a medical check-up in a London hospital on Sunday and his doctors gave him a clean bill of health.
“After carrying out tests the doctors gave a clean bill of health as President Asif Ali Zardari is absolutely fine,” said President’s Spokesman Farhatullah Babar.

He said that according to a medical bulletin issued by Dr Major General Azhar Kiani, personal physician of the president, from London, Mr Zardari underwent a medical check-up in a hospital as planned in advance. “He underwent some routine medical tests and angiography,” the spokesman said.

According to AP, Pakistan’s High Commissioner to the UK Wajid Shamsul Hasan said in a statement that Mr Zardari underwent an angiography and some routine medical tests at London’s Royal Brompton Hospital.

He said the angiography was performed by Royal Brompton Hospital’s head of cardiology, Carlo Di Mario, with assistance from leading US cardiologists.

Dr Di Mario was also assisted by Dr Major General Azhar Kiani, Dr Javed Suleman and Dr Samin Sharma.

Mr Babar said the president would stay in London for another three to four days before returning to the country.

Sources close to the president said Mr Zardari took prescribed diet because of some health problems.

Answering a question, the spokesman ruled out the possibility of President Zardari’s meeting Muttahida Qaumi Movement’s chief Altaf Hussain in London.

Meanwhile, an MQM delegation comprising Saleem Shahzad, Raza Haroon and Izhar Ahmed Khan visited the hospital to inquire after the health of President Zardari.

According to an MQM statement issued in Karachi, the Muttahida leaders presented flowers to the president on behalf of party chief Altaf Hussain.(DAWN.COM)

Stosur stuns Williams to win US Open title

NEW YORK: Australia’s Sam Stosur upset American Serena Williams 6-2 6-3 on Sunday to win an ill-tempered US Open women’s final.
Stosur played the match of her life to defeat the most formidable player of her generation and capture her first grand slam title, spoiling American hopes of a home-bred champion on the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.

Williams, bidding for a fourth US Open crown, failed to reproduce her best after sailing to the final without dropping a set and let her frustrations boil over.

Throughout the second set she repeatedly argued with the chair umpire in a petulant display that rekindled memories of her exit from the 2009 US Open.

“If you ever see me walking down the hall, look the other way because you’re out of control,” Williams said.

While Williams berated the official, Stosur remained a model of composure. The 27-year-old dominated the match from the outset and fully deserved her win, played in front of a raucous Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd.

She put Williams under pressure from the start with some thunderbolt returns that pinned Williams behind the baseline and attacked her backhand, forcing her to make errors.

Stosur broke Williams’s serve twice in the first set then three times in the second and only lost her own serve once.

Stosur, seeded ninth, became the first Australian woman to win the US Open title since Margaret Court in 1973. The last Australian woman to win any grand slam was Evonne Goolagong-Cawley at Wimbledon in 1980.

Stosur, who was better known as a doubles player, emerged as Australia’s best prospect in years when she made the final at the French Open last year but lost to Italy’s Francesca Schiavone.(Dawn.com)

Imran Khan lays blame for Karachi violence on MQM


KARACHI: In a press conference on Sunday, Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaaf Chairman Imran Khan lambasted Mutahidda Qaumi Movement (MQM) as “the pioneer of belligerence in Karachi politics by instituting a militant wing,”.

The PTI chairman added that, “the major responsibility of the present situation is on the MQM’s shoulders since the party was the forerunner in organizing and funding land and bhatta mafias. The rest of the political parties followed this trend later on.”

He was addressing a press conference at the Palwal House in DHA phase four which is home to the party’s vice present Najeeb Haroon.

Khan said that the politics of militancy and accusations would ultimately divide this city along ethnic lines.

Expressing his views on the deteriorating law and order situation of the city, the PTI chairman said that major political parties cannot find a way out of the anarchy in Karachi because their armed militant wings are the root cause of the anarchy.

“Name any political party in Karachi that get votes and doesn’t have a militant wing,” Khan posed a question, adding that only a neutral governor rule under a powerful administration can restore peace and stability in the city.

“No PTI militant wing”

Khan said that the PTI took great efforts to curb pressure from inside that the party should establish a militant wing. “It has become a trend now. People can’t think of any political party devoid of a militant wing but PTI can’t compromise on principles,” he added.

Reiterating his stance on military intervention, the PTI chairman said that an army operation in Karachi is not a permanent solution, adding that an unbiased police force under neutral administration could control the law and order situation.

The PTI chairman urged the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court to ensure a free and fair probe into the allegations levelled and revelations made by former Sindh senior minister Zulfiqar Mirza against Rehman Malik and the MQM.

He added that the allegations made by Mirza were directly related to the integrity and stability of the country and the President, Prime Minister and Federal Interior Minister should step down.

Khan held President Zardari responsible for target killings, violence and a wave of crime across Pakistan.

“The present government is trying to complete its tenure by providing shelter to terrorists,” Khan said. Read more at Express Tribune

FIA keen on Mark Siegel’s testimony in Benazir case

RAWALPINDI: The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has decided to present late Benazir Bhutto’s friend and lobbyist Mark Siegel before an anti-terrorism court in the former prime minister’s assassination case.

The FIA’s chief prosecutor, Chaudhry Zulfikar, told Dawn on Saturday that Mr Siegel was ready to appear before the court as a prosecution witness. He said the FIA had even got Mr Siegel’s statement recorded under article 161.

According to Mr Zulfikar, the agency’s additional director, Azad Khan, recorded the statement in the US in which Mr Siegel said former president Pervez Musharraf had threatened Ms Bhutto with dire consequences if she returned home before the 2008 general election.

The statement said Ms Bhutto received a telephone call from Mr Musharraf at a time when she was with Mr Siegel. In the conversation that followed, the general allegedly told Ms Bhutto that he would not be responsible for her security if she returned before the election.

Mr Zulfikar said that one of Ms Bhutto’s emails on the matter and Mr Sigel’s statement would be made part of the court proceedings at “the right time”.

Mr Siegel would also appear before the court to verify the statement.(Dawn.com)

Taylor Swift a good girl gone better

In our imagination, she’s young, good looking, sold millions of her three albums, garnered awards, supported charities, spun off into acting, had high-profile relationships with two celebrities named John, has funnelled these into confession songs which her many fans admire her for her honesty and make them lover her all the more.

Taylor Swift is country – sort of – which has brought her a broad loyal audience.

Most seem comprised of young women – mothers and their daughters.

Swift upholds old values, is positive and upbeat.

She has to be the antidote to something. Read Full Story at The Province

Heavy rains hit Karachi

KARACHI: Many roads and streets in the city went inundated as heavy rains lashed Karachi on Saturday afternoon.

Inundation of a number of roads was creating problems for motorists.

Areas near flyovers and underpasses were also badly affected.Read more at The New Pk

Obama thanks Canadians for help after 9/11

MONTREAL: US President Barack Obama has thanked the Canadian people for their support in the days following the 9/11 attacks, in a letter to Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper made public Friday.

“In one of the darkest moments in our history, Canada stood by our side and showed itself to be a true friend,” Obama wrote.

“On the 10th anniversary of September 11, 2001, we remember with gratitude and affection how the people of Canada offered us the comfort and friendship and extraordinary assistance that day and in the following days, by opening their airports, homes and hearts to us.”

In the letter, dated Thursday, the US president pays special tribute to the city of Gander in Newfoundland, which only has a population of 9,600 – but took in about 6,600 air passengers diverted when US airspace was shut down.

“As airspace over our two countries was shut down, hundreds of flights en route to the United States were landed safely by Canadian air traffic control in seventeen Canadian airports from coast to coast,” Obama wrote.

“For the next 3 days – before our airspace was reopened – those displaced passengers were treated like family in Canadian homes, receiving food, shelter, medical attention, and comfort.”

Harper is due to speak in New York on Sunday at a ceremony honoring the victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

I might be killed for patriotism: Altaf Hussain

LONDON: During a video conference Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) chief Altaf Hussain claimed that if the army, ISI, and MQM joined hands than they could even face a superpower, Geo News reported.

The MQM chief spoke of an international conspiracy to divide Pakistan. He said his life was at risk due to this conspiracy.

Presenting a map in which Punjab along with half of the country was marked as a part of Afghanistan he said, "I fear I may be killed as I am a hurdle in plans of dividing Pakistan."

The map also showed Balochistan as an independent state while some parts of Karachi were also included in Afghanistan.

Hussain said that he was willing to provide all MQM workers to support the army in an effort to thwart international conspiracies to divide the country.

Accusing the present Awami National Party (ANP) leadership of misguiding Pakhtuns, Hussain said, "If I was against Pakhtuns the why was the MQM supported across Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa [when they had announced the day of mourning for the victims of violence in Karachi.]"

According to Hussain ANP chief Asfandyar Wali Khan was given several million dollars by the United States to win the 2008 elections.

Saying history taught in Pakistan was inaccurate, Hussain said, Pakistan today is a far cry from Jinnah's vision of secularism and equality for all.

He said innocent people were tortured and slaughtered by terrorists during the recent wave of violence in Karachi. "If I was not the chief of my party I would have been killed or taken someone's life."

He called on the president, prime minster, chief of army staff and ISI chief to view a video of people from the Urdu-speaking community being tortured. Hussain alleged the video was made by criminals from the Lyari Amn Committee.

He clarified that the MQM was not against the people of Lyari but against criminals whoever they may be.

He said the ANP, Jamaat-e-Islami, Peoples Amn Committee and Haqiqi were involved in terrorist activity in Karachi and if action was not taken than he would withdraw his appeal to MQM workers to remain peaceful.

Speaking about the carnage which took place on May 12, 2007 the MQM chief said his party had not taken out the procession against Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry nor did they shout any slogans against him.

Hussain accused the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) of paying Haqiqi members to fire on an MQM rally during May 12 and fuelling the violence which took place in Karachi that day.

Hussain demanded that action be taken against the JI's militant wing 'Thunder Squad'.

He added that 16 MQM workers were killed while 65 were injured on May 12.

Calling the Charter of Democracy (COD) a "document of false promises", Hussain said both the Peoples Party and Nawaz Sharif had failed to implement its contents.

When asked about accusations made by Zulfiqar Mirza against him and his party, Altaf Hussain said he would not answer them.

yed Mustafa Kamal Press Conference Against the Allegations of Dr. Zulfiqar Mirza






Source: The News Pk

Syed Mustafa Kamal Press Conference




Syed Mustafa Kamal Press Conference Against the Allegations of Dr. Zulfiqar Mirza

Obama tells Congress to pass $447 billion jobs plan


WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama Thursday told Republicans to halt a “political circus” and immediately pass a $447 billion jobs plan to jolt the stalled economy and cheer a disillusioned nation.

“These are difficult years for our country. But we are Americans. We are tougher than the times that we live in, and we are bigger than our politics have been,” Obama said, pleading for unity in a speech to a polarized Congress.

“So let’s meet the moment,” he said, seeking to restore public trust in his leadership with a plan that mixes tax cuts and investments and takes aim at 9.1 per cent unemployment which is threatening his 2012 reelection bid.

A combative Obama, standing before a large US flag in the House of Representatives, said his American Jobs Act would get people back to work and put more money into the pockets of those who had jobs.

“It will provide a jolt to an economy that has stalled…. You should pass this jobs plan right away.

“I intend to take that message to every corner of this country.” The bitterly divided nature of Washington was reflected as Obama belted out his speech. Democrats cheered plans for investment, Republicans stonily sat through his calls for higher taxes on the wealthy.

Prospects for Obama’s plan are uncertain given blanket Republican opposition to new spending not balanced by immediate budget cuts and a deeply polarized political climate already agitated by the coming election.

Mitt Romney, fighting fellow front-runner Rick Perry to be the Republican pick to take on the president next year, issued a quick campaign video, arguing America had lost nearly 2.5 million jobs since Obama took office.

“Mr President, you are 960 days late,” it said.

But Republican House speaker John Boehner, who may dictate the fate of Obama’s plan, offered a response more conciliatory in tone from the fiery rhetoric of a debt showdown in July.

“The proposals the president outlined tonight merit consideration. We hope he gives serious consideration to our ideas as well.” Senator Marco Rubio, a rising star in Republican politics, was also polite, but warned “a lot of it sounds like things we’ve already tried, such as more government spending.” Obama says his plan, worth half the amount of his 2009 stimulus program opposed by Republicans, will be fully paid for by spending cuts in years to come when the economic crisis has past.

He has already warned that if the plan is blocked he will hold Republicans to account at the polls and accuse them of putting a desire to eject him from the White House above a patriotic duty to revive the economy.

The centerpiece of the plan is a deeper than expected $240 billion payroll tax cut for employers and employees meant to keep money in the pockets of those most in need, spur demand and encourage firms to hire new workers.

Obama hit back at Republican critics who complain about White House proposals to raise taxes on the richest Americans and close corporate tax loopholes.

“This isn’t political grandstanding. This isn’t class warfare. This is simple math.

“I’m pretty sure I know what most Americans would choose. It’s not even close and it’s time for us to do what’s right for our future.” The plan’s $447 billion price tag contains $175 billion to cut employee payroll taxes in half, to 3.1 per cent in 2012.

The taxes fund the Social Security retirement and Medicare health plan for senior citizens, and officials said the cuts were a way to get money directly into the pockets of those who need it most and those most likely to spend it.

Obama also proposed cutting the payroll tax in half for 98 per cent of businesses on payroll up to $5 million in a bid to induce hiring of new workers.

Firms can get a complete payroll tax holiday if they add workers or increase the wages of current employees up to $50 million in payroll.

One administration official said that using payroll taxes to spur demand was an “elegant” way to ensure that people “have more money in your check, more money in your pocket.” Obama also proposed a $50 billion program to invest in highways, railroad and airport modernizations, which officials said would put hundreds of thousands of construction workers back to work.

He called on Congress to provide $10 billion to capitalize a national infrastructure bank to leverage private and public capital to invest in a broad range of projects.

He also proposed a $35 billion program to prevent layoffs of 280,000 teachers and to keep police officers and firefighters on the job, in a bid to stem local and state government layoffs that are inflating unemployment figures.

Other projects included:

– A $30 billion project to modernize 35,000 public schools.

– A “returning heroes” tax credit to spur hiring of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans

– A $49 billion plan to reform an extend insurance payments for the long-term unemployed.

Analysts and industry groups gave a mixed response to the plan.

US Chamber of Commerce CEO Thomas Donohue said Obama’s “ideas appear to fall short” and called for the president to “unshackle” businesses by cutting regulations.

Lawrence Mishel, of the non-partisan Economic Policy Institute, said however that the plan was a “serious, solid effort” that could save or
create several million jobs.(Dawn.com)

India police detain three people over Delhi blast


SRINAGAR: Indian police detained for questioning three people on Thursday, including the owner of an Internet cafe in Indian-administered Kashmir over an email allegedly claiming responsibility for a deadly bombing of the New Delhi High Court, police said.

A powerful bomb hidden in a briefcase outside the High Court killed at least 11 people on Wednesday.

Senior police officers told Reuters said they had detained the owner of an Internet cafe in the Kishtwar region of Kashmir where they suspect the email was sent from early on Wednesday.

Indian authorities are investigating a claim of responsibility allegedly made in the email by the Harkatul Jihad Islami militant group, an al Qaeda affiliate. It has claimed responsibility for attacks in India in the past.

Several groups have been fighting against Indian rule of the disputed region of Kashmir.

Photo by AFP

Bomb at New Delhi High Court kills nine

NEW DELHI: A powerful bomb placed in a briefcase outside the High Court in New Delhi killed at least nine people and injured 45 on Wednesday, a senior official said, prompting the Indian government to put the capital on high alert.

Home Secretary R.K. Singh told CNN-IBN the explosives were placed in a briefcase at the High Court reception in central New Delhi where hundreds of people come through every day to attend court cases.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Television images showed scores of lawyers in black coats running from one of the main gates of the building. Police cordoned off the area, not far from parliament and the prime minister’s office.

“This appears to be a bomb explosion and it is at least a medium-intensity bomb… The site has been fully secured and Delhi has been put on high alert. Whatever precautions need to be taken are being taken,” said U.K. Bansal, in charge of internal security at the home ministry.

The blast in the heart of the capital will renew concern about the authorities ability to prevent attacks, particularly in high-security areas.

Several ambulances took away the injured to a nearby government hospital. Fire trucks were also sent to the scene.

“There was a bomb blast where you enter the court… there was panic everywhere. Now we are on the way to the hospital,” witness Kriti Uppal told CNN-IBN. “It seems to be very powerful (blast). Seems to be many casualties.”

In May, a low-intensity blast outside the same court triggered panic but injured no one.

Near-simultaneous triple bomb attacks in India’s financial capital, Mumbai, in July killed 24 people. Police have yet to identify those behind the attacks.(Dawn.com)

Mirza’s allegations not PPP policy, says MQM

KARACHI: Former city nazim and MQM leader Mustafa Kamal has said Dr Zulfikar Mirza’s allegations against the Muttahida Qaumi Movement and its chief are not PPP’s policy, adding that his party will continue the dialogue with the ruling party on rejoining the government.

Talking to a private TV channel on Tuesday night after holding a lengthy press conference, Mr Kamal said President Asif Ali Zardari had advised MQM chief Altaf Hussain not to watch Mr Mirza on television channels. He quoted the president as saying that he himself had been disappointed.

He said there was an inbuilt mechanism in the MQM which barred criminals from entering the party which stood for politics of peace and democracy in the country.

At the press conference, Mr Kamal severely criticised the media and human rights organisations while responding to former Sindh home minister Dr Mirza’s outburst. He said his party could not be stopped from mainstream national politics merely on the basis of allegations, tricks and biased statements.

He did not invite the PPP-led coalition government to intervene, but appealed to the Chief Justice of Pakistan and state institutions and agencies to fairly examine Dr Mirza’s allegations and recent spell of killings in the city and give their opinion.

Mr Kamal said the elements hatching conspiracies to end the Muttahida and push Muhajirs to the wall should know that the MQM enjoyed the full mandate of people belonging to different ethnic groups and was needed for survival, integrity and independence of the country.

“The negative and biased thinking and acts of accusing the MQM and Quaid-i-Tehreek Altaf Hussain of indulging in anti-Pakistan activities should be stopped forthwith in the interest of the country and its people.”

Mr Kamal advised workers of his party not to be provoked, but stay united and steadfast as time would once again prove that all allegations against the MQM and its leadership were false and baseless.

It was the second press conference by the MQM after Dr Mirza had levelled serious allegations against the United State, Interior Minister Rehman Malik and Mr Hussain on August 28.

Mr Kamal said the Muttahida had not been prompt or harsh in countering Dr Mirza only in the interest of the province and the country. “We think that a mild and civilised reaction by Faisal Sabzwari on behalf of the MQM was enough to Dr Mirza’s baseless and nonsensical allegations, but unfortunately different quarters, including the media and TV anchorpersons, have been trying to get something out of these,” he added.

Accompanied by other members of the coordination committee, including Nasreen Jalil and Dr Sagheer Ahmad, the former city nazim criticised a statement by Dr Mirza that the MQM chief had written a letter to then British prime minister Tony Blair in 2001, saying that his party was ready to bring thousands of people to the streets in his support.

Mr Kamal said this was a heinous allegation. The letter was fake and baseless because the address of MQM secretariat in it was Colindale which was incorrect.

He also denied allegations mentioned in the alleged letter that the party had sought dismantling of the ISI. “The letter’s genuineness is yet to be proved; it aims at creating misunderstandings about the MQM among sections of Pakistan army.”

Mr Kamal said MQM was a patriotic party which believed in security and stability of Pakistan, but it was shameful that uncalled for statements and allegations were being levelled against the party and its chief.

If Dr Mirza is so firm in his statements and got firm grounds to prove his allegations he should go to courts instead of resorting to ‘Muhajir bashing’ and telling lies.

He asked why was Dr Mirza silent when he being the home minister had reports that MQM’s port and shipping minister was behind the theft of Nato containers. Dr Mirza should have lodged FIRs, instead of making false claims now, he added.( Dawn News )