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Showing posts with label Political Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Political Books. Show all posts
Friday, February 15, 2013
Taliban Ki Qaid Main By Yvonne Ridley
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Sayara Digest July 2012
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Of Imran Khan, Double Standards & Trolls

Keeping aside criticism by political opponents, most bashing (yes bashing) that Imran Khan receives from media and intellectuals (whatever that term means) has a very strong shade of double standard, to be polite (hypocrisy, to be harsh). How? Let me quote from TV anchor Moeed Pirzada’s Facebook status update on his page few days ago:
“Do you sometimes feel that not only the politicians - who can be excused for being rivals- but even the key commentators in media keep on portraying Imran Khan and PTI very unfairly; as if there is one standard to judge intelligence, ability and wisdom of all Pakistani politicians and another 'higher' or 'western' standard to judge Imran Khan and PTI? for instance when Imran Khan is referred to as "inconsistent" or "flip-flop" then who in Pakistan is he being compared to? and so on on many similar issues....”.
Moeed Pirzada says it all about the thinking pattern – involuntary or vested - of media and intellectuals when it comes to Imran Khan. It is for this reason that we find Imran Khan and PTI being scrutinized even for such minor issues as ‘mismanagement in PTI aftari’. Even though Imran Khan has never ruled the land of the pure (so has technically no responsibility or part in the mess Pakistan finds itself in today), he is the leader scrutinized (rather bashed) mostly over all issues; be it terrorism, economy, energy or foreign relations etc.
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It is not uncommon for intellectuals to single out IK for bashing over some particular issue. For example, Mr Feisal Naqvi wrote “Shame on you, Mr Khan” just because he thought IK failed to condemn the attack on Malala Yousafzai, even though IK was the 1st political leader to visit Malala at CMH Peshawar a day after the incident. He condemned the terrorists and offered to bear all expenses of her treatment. Compared to IK no other mainstream political leader visited her, even then Mr Naqvi had only IK to bash and not Nawaz Sharif or Maulana Fazl or Zardari (all rulers). Different standards to gauge?
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Take the example of Imran Khan’s stance on terrorism. Learned Zahrah Nasir called IK ‘Thoughtless Khan’ over his anti-WOT views while Mr Saleem Safi and Mr Saroop Ijaz vehemently objected to his Waziristan March, the latter calling it cowardly politics. None of the learned intellectuals however, question Nawaz Sharif or Zardari (the rulers responsible for controlling the mess) as to what is their plan, if any, to end the bloodshed? Different gauges?
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Many intellectuals love to call IK Taliban Khan for having proposed to hold talks for resolving the militancy problem, in FATA as well as Balochistan. However, when the same demand has been copied & relayed by Nawaz Sharif now, the silence of intellectuals is deafening. No names like Taliban Sharif etc. Why? Different standards to gauge?
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A related issue is the killings of innocent Shias in Quetta, GB and elsewhere. Imran Khan was the only political leader who went to express solidarity with Hazara Shia victims of Quetta twice (April 2012 and January 2013) and GB Shia victims (September 2012). He has unequivocally condemned LeJ for the killings and demanded action against them. Even then liberals and intellectuals bash Imran Khan for not doing ‘enough’ on this front (when he has nothing in hand actually). On the flip-side, PMLN has made electoral alliance with ASWJ (front of LeJ) but no intellectual or media anchor has seriously quizzed them over this fact. Why? Different gauges?
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Coming to policies; take Dr Pervez Hoodbhoy’s example who believes Imran Khan can’t save Pakistan because he thinks PTI’s stance is sheer rhetoric and it has no concrete policy (incidentally Mr Hoodbhoy considers PMLN as the answer to Pakistan’s economic problems :D). While writing this, the learned professor conveniently ignores the fact that PTI is the only (safely only) party to have presented comprehensive policies on all burning issues facing Pakistan; from Energy to Rural Governance to Economy to Health to Youth Empowerment to Curbing Corruption. Again bashing IK without even questioning Nawaz or Zardari. Different gauges?
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Take the example of PTI’s intra-party elections. Questions were raised by media and intellectuals about transparency of the membership campaign, errors in voter lists, delays in election schedule, grouping & lobbying in UC-level elections, rifts and infighting among workers. While pointing out flaws in PTI’s election process, detractors conveniently forget to acknowledge that it is the only party to take up such a huge task of multi-tier party elections down to UC level. (The election of lower middle class people is proof of transparency). The debate doesn’t take the focus that it should i.e. asking Nawaz Sharif and Zardari and others to follow suit and go for true party elections in their parties. Different standards to gauge?
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Thats not all. Come to asset declaration: PTI's leadership declared their assets in August 2012 and the same were posted on the party's website for public access. This was a huge step towards a corruption-free and financially transparent party - a phenomoneon not known to Pakistan. However, since the initiative was taken by PTI, it was taken for granted and the media & intellectuals failed to do the needful i.e. press PMLN, PPP and others to do the same. This step alone would have exposed the faces of the corrupt ruling Pakistan. It has been 6 months since August and one has yet to see the media or intellectuals raise this issue properly. Why? Different yardsticks?
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Thats not all. Come to asset declaration: PTI's leadership declared their assets in August 2012 and the same were posted on the party's website for public access. This was a huge step towards a corruption-free and financially transparent party - a phenomoneon not known to Pakistan. However, since the initiative was taken by PTI, it was taken for granted and the media & intellectuals failed to do the needful i.e. press PMLN, PPP and others to do the same. This step alone would have exposed the faces of the corrupt ruling Pakistan. It has been 6 months since August and one has yet to see the media or intellectuals raise this issue properly. Why? Different yardsticks?
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Another example may merit a mention. All hell broke loose when some electables from other parties joined PTI and everybody said Gen Pasha was behind it. However, when dozens of Q-leaguer electables joined PMLN, nobody said it was Gen Zaheer-ul-Islam pulling their strings. Different standards?
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Similarly when TuQ (Dr Tahir Ul Qadri) landed on the political horizon in Dec 12, MQM sided with it and then flip-flopped a dozen times over joining or not joining TuQ’s 14-January dharna. PTI didn’t even join TuQ but the whole media scene was rife with conspiracy theories predicting that Imran Khan would join him & thus derail democracy. Nobody apologized when that didn’t happen and nobody has quizzed MQM since that day as to the reason of their flip-flops on Qadri? Why? Different standards?
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Similarly when TuQ (Dr Tahir Ul Qadri) landed on the political horizon in Dec 12, MQM sided with it and then flip-flopped a dozen times over joining or not joining TuQ’s 14-January dharna. PTI didn’t even join TuQ but the whole media scene was rife with conspiracy theories predicting that Imran Khan would join him & thus derail democracy. Nobody apologized when that didn’t happen and nobody has quizzed MQM since that day as to the reason of their flip-flops on Qadri? Why? Different standards?
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And who has missed the latest. PTI leaders meeting TuQ was sensationalized with breaking headlines even though the same PTI leaders held similar meetings with leadership of all parties outside the parliament like JI and MWM. Intellectuals like Mr Kamran Shafi called it “nefarious plan of Imran Khan”. However, when Nawaz Sharif sat together the other day with Maulana Fazl (3 years PPP-ally), everybody praised his ‘political acumen’. Why is PTI meeting TuQ bad but PMLN meeting JUI perfectly cool? Different standards to gauge?
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While some of this double-standard opinion-making may be condoned as error-of-judgement on part of the media or intellectuals, there are some instances where the opinions take the form of senseless rant, mainly due to the hate (yes hate) that some so-called intellectuals and media folks have for Imran Khan (call it Lifaafa or whatever). The latest gems in this series came from Mr Kamran Shafi, the intellectual with some personal vendetta, may be. Imran Khan expressed his views about Asma Jehangir's candidature for caretaker PM politely and so did Asma Jehangir but what justifies these disgusting remarks by a supposedly learned intellectual like Mr Shafi (calling IK an 'idiot', 'fool' and 'idiot of the highest order')?
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When some random PTI supporter on Twitter or Facebook confronts such media folks and intellectuals (some spell the word as Intellect-Chawal) over this double standard, they are outrightly dubbed ‘abusers’ or ‘trolls’. No Sires, they are not trolls. May be their choice of words for complaint needs refinement but their substance is well-founded; the bias & double-standard is all too obvious.
In the end, I would like to quote Abraham Lincoln:
“You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time”.
This is history's lesson my dear intellectuals & media & IK’s political opponents.
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The writer is a tribesman from Bajaur Agency (FATA) and tweets at @PTI_FATA (Just a volunteer; no official association with PTI)
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....................Disclaimer: This blog is not an official PTI webpage and is run by a group of volunteers having no official position in PTI. All posts are personal opinions of the bloggers and should, in no way, be taken as official PTI word.
With Regards,
"Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf FATA Volunteers" Team.
Live Stream of PTI Jalsa in Sialkot (23 March 2012)
Watch live streaming video from ptilivestream at livestream.com
We Hope You find the info useful. Keep visiting this blog and remember to leave your feedback / comments / suggestions / requests / corrections.
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"Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf FATA" Team.
Who is Owais Muzaffar Tappi, Zardari's frontman & the man responsible for Lyari Operation?
As siege of Lyari enters 5th day, the question persist that who is really responsible for Lyari Operation? Who sent the ill equipped Police force in, rather than ordering the resourceful Rangers to do the task?
Those who know the who’s who of Pakistan’s politics, are aware of the director of this show of brute force. The person, responsible for Lyari Operation, is known as Owais Tappi.
Owais Muzzaffar Tappi (in black shalwar qameez) |
Ansar Abbasi wrote on Dec 31, 2010, that Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah has been virtually suspended by the de facto ruler of the province Mr Tappi, who just recently got his own man appointed as principal secretary of the CM, taking over even the little clout that was left with the aging PPP leader.
Mr Tappi, whose real name is Owais Muzzaffar, once a mid career civil servant long time confidante of President Asif Ali Zardari, who treats Tappi as his step-brother.
The report by Ansar Abbasi highlights how Sindh CM was over-ruled by the group of Zardari-ans, Faryal Talpur, Zulfiqar Mirza, Agha Siraj Durrani and Owais Tappi. Apparently Tappi got rid of Mirza and Durrani and his now only second to Adhi Faryal.
As per Abbasi (and that was in December 2010), Tappi is not alone in running his fiefdom called the Sindh Province, these sources said and add that he is very ably assisted by a highly controversial aging bureaucrat of all seasons from Islamabad.Over 70 bureaucrat, the sources said, has been visiting Sindh and holding meetings with the chief secretary as well as ministers and secretaries taking briefings, issuing instructions and reinforcing the writ of the president’s adopted step-brother. The officials are very clearly told to get major decisions from Mr Tappi and not to take instructions from the chief minister.
So, Owais Muzzaffar Tappi is the de-facto Chief Minister of Sindh, running the affairs of state from Bilawal House.
From XReports.net
Owais Muzzaffar, aka Tappi is the adpoted son of Hakim Ali Zardari and the step brother of Pakistan’s President Zardari. Tappi is the alleged land grabber and extortionist.
Tappi, the name that may sound strange to ordinary souls but not to those occupying key positions in the Sindh regime or are knowledgeable in the business circles in Karachi, Islamabad and Dubai, In the days when president’s father was running Bambino Cinema in Karachi and the family lived in the upper storey of the cinema building, one Muzaffar worked as manager of the cinema as well as the caretaker of the house, a source said, adding that one of his sons Owais frequented the house and was taken as a member of the family.
In 1995, he was appointed as an DDO (Revenue) in PCS by then chief minister without any exam by the Sindh Public Service Commission.
Tappi went into exile in Musharraf regime and stayed with Benazir in Dubai becoming a caretaker for the Bilawal House in Dubai.
The answer lies in a response by Zafar Baloch – that Tappi got irked when he was discourage to contest elections from Lyari.
Zafar Baloch, leader of PAC, says a lot in this video – including who gave weapons to the Balochs of Lyari and why – and what is the real reason of Lyari Operation.
This reveals another sorry page from our history – where people in power use the common men for their nefarious plans and then discard and disown them like trash.
This is what they did with Rehman Baloch. Now they are leading Uzair Baloch and his colleagues towards the same fate.
After PAC, PPP will form another armed militia head by Akram Baloch and it operate in direct supervision of Tappi. Thus another series of turf war to control Karachi will erupt between various political, ethnical parties and groups.
In this programme aired on CNBC TV on 30 April 2012, Uzair Jan Baloch (leader of PAC) tells the anchor about Owais Muzaffar alias Tappi. (see 30 minutes onwards)
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Disclaimer: This blog is not an official PTI webpage and is run by a group of volunteers having no official position in PTI. All posts are personal opinions of the bloggers and should, in no way, be taken as official PTI word.
With Regards,
"Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf FATA Volunteers" Team.
Capitalism's Achilles Heel By Raymond Baker with Urdu translation (Exposing corruption of Zardari and Nawaz Sharif) Free Download
Below are the download links for downloading the book "Capitalism's Achilles Heel" by Raymond Baker. This book contains description of the corruption of Asif Zardari / Benazir Bhutto family (Page 77 to 82), Mian Nawaz Sharif family (Page 82 to 85) and the military (Page 85 to 87).
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Capitalism's Achilles Heel in Urdu - by Raymond Baker (PDF format)
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Download: Capitalism's Achilles Heel in English - by Raymond Baker (PDF format)
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Excerpts related to Pakistan from the book Capitalism's Achilles Heel by Raymond Baker
Nawaz Sharif Family
Corruption and criminality run from the top down, with the political class constantly looting the national treasury and distorting economic policy for personal gain. Bank loans are granted largely on the basis of status and connections. The rich stash much of their money abroad in those willing western coffers, while exhibiting little inclination to repay their rupee borrowings. Pakistan’s recent history has been dominated by two families—the Bhuttos and the Sharifs—both merely tolerated by the military, the real power in the country. When it comes to economic destruction, there’s not a lot of difference among the three.

Pages 82-85 of the book cover the section on Nawaz Sharif: While Benazir Bhutto hated the generals for executing her father, Nawaz Sharif early on figured out that they held the real power in Pakistan. His father had established a foundry in 1939 and, together with six brothers, had struggled for years only to see their business nationalized by Ali Bhutto’s regime in 1972. This sealed decades of enmity between the Bhuttos and the Sharifs. Following the military coup and General Zia’s assumption of power, the business—Ittefaq—was returned to family hands in 1980. Nawaz Sharif became a director and cultivated relations with senior military officers. This led to his appointment as finance minister of Punjab and then election as chief minister of this most populous province in 1985. During the 1980s and early 1990s, given Sharif ’s political control of Punjab and eventual prime ministership of the country, Ittefaq Industries grew from its original single foundry into 30 businesses producing steel, sugar, paper, and textiles, with combined revenues of $400 million, making it one of the biggest private conglomerates in the nation. As in many other countries, when you control the political realm, you can get anything you want in the economic realm.
With Lahore, the capital of Punjab, serving as the seat of the family’s power, one of the first things Sharif did upon becoming prime minister in 1990 was build his long-dreamed-of superhighway from there to the capital,Islamabad. Estimated to cost 8.5 billion rupees, the project went through two biddings. Daewoo of Korea, strengthening its proposals with midnight meetings, was the highest bidder both times, so obviously it won the contract and delivered the job at well over 20 billion rupees.
A new highway needs new cars. Sharif authorized importation of 50,000 vehicles duty free, reportedly costing the government $700 million in lost customs duties. Banks were forced to make loans for vehicle purchases to would-be taxi cab drivers upon receipt of a 10 percent deposit.Borrowers got their “Nawaz Sharif cabs,” and some 60 percent of them promptly defaulted.This left the banks with $500 million or so in unpaid loans. Vehicle dealers reportedly made a killing and expressed their appreciation in expected ways. Under Sharif, unpaid bank loans and massive tax evasion remained the favorite ways to get rich. Upon his loss of power the usurping government published a list of 322 of the largest loan defaulters, representing almost $3 billion out of $4 billion owed to banks. Sharif and his family were tagged for $60 million. The Ittefaq Group went bankrupt in 1993 when Sharif lost his premiership the first time. By then onlythree units in the group were operational, and loan defaults of the remaining companies totaled some 5.7 billion rupees, more than $100 million.
Like Bhutto, offshore companies have been linked to Sharif, three in the British Virgin Islands by the names of Nescoll, Nielson, and Shamrock and another in the Channel Islands known as Chandron Jersey Pvt. Ltd. Some of these entities allegedly were used to facilitate purchase of four rather grand flats on Park Lane in London, at various times occupied by Sharif family members. Reportedly, payment transfers were made to Banque Paribas en Suisse, which then instructed Sharif ’s offshore companies Nescoll and Nielson to purchase the four luxury suites.
In her second term, Benazir Bhutto had Pakistan’s Federal Investigating Agency begin a probe into the financial affairs of Nawaz Sharif and his family. The probe was headed by Rehman Malik, deputy director general of the agency. Malik had fortified his reputation earlier by aiding in the arrest of Ramzi Yousef, mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. During Sharif ’s second term, the draft report of the investigation was suppressed, Malik was jailed for a year, and later reportedly survived an assassination attempt, after which he fled to London. The Malik report, five years in the making, was released in 1998, with explosive revelations:
The records, including government documents, signed affidavits from Pakistani officials, bank files and property records, detail deals that Mr. Malik says benefited Mr. Sharif, his family and his political associates:
At least $160 million pocketed from a contract to build a highway from Lahore, his home town, to Islamabad, the nation’s capital.
At least $140 million in unsecured loans from Pakistan’s state banks.
More than $60 million generated from government rebates on sugar exported by mills controlled by Mr. Sharif and his business associates.
At least $58 million skimmed from inflated prices paid for imported wheat from the United States and Canada. In the wheat deal, Mr. Sharif ’s government paid prices far above market value to a private company owned by a close associate of his in Washington, the records show. Falsely inflated invoices for the wheat generated tens of millions of dollars in cash.
The report went on to state that “The extent and magnitude of this corruption is so staggering that it has put the very integrity of the country at stake.” In an interview, Malik added: “No other leader of Pakistan has taken that much money from the banks. There is no rule of law in Pakistan. It doesn’t exist.”
What brought Sharif down in his second term was his attempt to acquire virtually dictatorial powers. In 1997 he rammed a bill through his compliant parliament requiring legislators to vote as their party leaders directed. In 1998 he introduced a bill to impose Sharia law (Muslim religious law) across Pakistan, with himself empowered to issue unilateral directives in the name of Islam. In 1999 he sought to sideline the army by replacing Chief of Staff Pervez Musharraf with a more pliable crony. He forgot the lessons he had learned in the 1980s: The army controls Pakistan and politicians are a nuisance. As Musharraf was returning from Sri Lanka, Sharif tried to sack him in midair and deny the Pakistan International Airways flight with 200 civilians on board landing rights in Karachi. Musharraf radioed from the aircraft through Dubai to his commander in Karachi, ordering him to seize the airport control tower, accomplished as the plane descended almost out of fuel. Musharraf turned the tables and completed his coup, and Sharif was jailed.
But Sharif had little to fear. This, after all, is Pakistan. Musharraf needed to consolidate his power with the generals, and Sharif knew details about the corruption of most of the brass. Obviously, it is better to tread lightly around the edges of your peer group’s own thievery. So Musharraf had Sharif probed, tried, convicted, and sentenced to life in prison, but then in 2000 exiled him to Saudi Arabia. Twenty-two containers of carpets and furniture followed, and, of course, his foreign accounts remained mostly intact. Ensconced in a glittering palace in Jeddah, he is described as looking “corpulent” amidst “opulent” surroundings. Reportedly, he and Benazir Bhutto even have an occasional telephone conversation, perhaps together lamenting how unfair life has become.
Corruption and criminality run from the top down, with the political class constantly looting the national treasury and distorting economic policy for personal gain. Bank loans are granted largely on the basis of status and connections. The rich stash much of their money abroad in those willing western coffers, while exhibiting little inclination to repay their rupee borrowings. Pakistan’s recent history has been dominated by two families—the Bhuttos and the Sharifs—both merely tolerated by the military, the real power in the country. When it comes to economic destruction, there’s not a lot of difference among the three.

1971, was ousted in a military coup in 1977, and was executed in 1979 on charges of conspiracy to commit murder. In and out of prison and house arrest, Benazir was not allowed to leave the country until 1984 but then returned to lead the democracy movement two years later. Her father’s usurper, General Muhammad Zia ul-Haq, was killed in a mysterious plane crash in 1988, which also took the life of the U.S. ambassador Arnold Raphel, and the head of the U.S. military aid mission to Pakistan, General H.M. Wasson. Benazir was elected prime minister that year, served until her ouster in 1990 on charges of corruption and nepotism, was reelected in 1993, and ousted again in 1996, amidst more charges of corruption. During her two terms in office and since, what has come out portrays Bhutto and her husband Asif Ali Zardari as world-class thieves.
Upon taking office in 1988, Bhutto reportedly appointed 26,000 party hacks to state jobs, including positions in state-owned banks. An orgy of lending without proper collateral followed. Allegedly, Bhutto and Zardari “gave instructions for billions of rupees of unsecured government loans to be given to 50 large projects. The loans were sanctioned in the names of ‘front men’ but went to the ‘Bhutto-Zardari combine.’ ” Zardari suggested that such loans are “normal in the Third World to encourage industrialisation.” He used 421 million rupees (about £10 million) to acquire a major interest in three new sugar mills, all done through nominees acting on his behalf. In another deal he allegedly received a 40 million rupee kickback on a contract involving the Pakistan Steel Mill, handled by two of his cronies. Along the way Zardari acquired a succession of nicknames: Mr. 5 Percent, Mr. 10 Percent, Mr. 20 Percent, Mr. 30 Percent, and finally, in Bhutto’s second term when he was appointed “minister of investments,” Mr. 100 Percent.
The Pakistan government’s largest source of revenues is customs duties, and therefore evasion of duties is a national pastime. Isn’t there some way to tap into this major income stream, pretending to fight customs corruption and getting rich at the same time? Of course; we can hire a reputable (or disreputable, as the case may be) inspection company, have the government pay the company about a one percent fee to do price checking on imports, and get multimillion-dollar bribes paid to us upon award of the contracts. Société Générale de Surveillance (SGS), headquartered in Switzerland, and its then subsidiary Cotecna, the biggest group in the inspection business, readily agreed to this subterfuge.
Letters in 1994 promised “consultancy fees,” meaning kickbacks, of 6 percent and 3 percent to two British Virgin Island (BVI) companies, Bomer Finances Inc. and Nassam Overseas Inc., controlled by Bhutto and Zardari. Payments of $12 million were made to Swiss bank accountsof the BVI companies. SGS allegedly has paid kickbacks on other inspection contracts around the world. Upon being accused in the inspection kickback scheme, Bhutto sniffed, “I ran the government to the best of my honest ability. And I did it for nothing but acknowledgment and love.”
Then there was the 1994 deal to import $83 million worth of tractors from Poland. Ursus Tractors allegedly paid a 7 percent commission to another of Zardari’s Caribbean companies, Dargal Associated. Bhutto waived import duties on the tractors, costing the Pakistani government some 1.7 billion rupees in lost revenues. Upon discovery of this scheme the Poles hastened to turn over 500 pages of documentation confirming the kickback.
The Polish tractor deal was just a warm-up for the French fighter jet deal. After the U.S. government cancelled a sale of two squadrons of F-16s, Bhutto dangled a $4 billion contract for Mirages in front of the French—Dassault Aviation; Snecma, the engine manufacturer; and Thomson-CSF, producer of aviation electronics. Without missing a beat they allegedly agreed to pay a “remuneration” of 5 percent to Marleton Business S.A., yet another of Zardari’s British Virgin Island companies. This would have generated a tidy $200 million for the Bhutto-Zardari couple, but unfortunately for them she was driven from office before they could collect.
Ah, but the gold deal gave some comfort to these aspiring kleptocrats. Gold is culturally important in the Asian subcontinent, in particular as a way for women to accumulate wealth. Upwards of $100 billion is invested in this unproductive asset in Pakistan, India, and surrounding countries. Smuggling is big business. Ostensibly to regulate the trade, a Pakistani bullion dealer in Dubai, Abdul Razzak Yaqub, asked Bhutto for an exclusive import license. In 1994, yet another Zardari offshore company, M.S. Capricorn Trading, was created in the British Virgin Islands. Later in the year, Jens Schlegelmilch, “a Swiss lawyer who was the Bhutto family’s attorney in Europe and close personal friend for more than 20 years,” opened an account for Capricorn Trading at the Dubai branch of Citibank. According to a 1999 U.S. Senate report: “Mr. Schlegelmilch did not reveal to the Dubai banker that Mr. Zardari was the beneficial owner of the PIC [private investment company], and the account manager never asked him the identity of the beneficial owner of the account. . . . Shortly after opening the account in Dubai, Mr. Schlegelmilch signed a standard referral agreement with Citibank Switzerland private bank guaranteeing him 20 percent of the first three years of client net revenues earned by the bank from each client he referred to the private bank.” In other words, Citibank was contracting to pay a finder’s fee for millions brought in from dubious sources. Citibank went on to open three accounts in Switzerland for Zardari, with Schlegelmilch as the signatory.
In October 1994, Citibank records show that $10 million was deposited into Capricorn’s Dubai account by Razzak Yaqub’s company, A.R.Y. International Exchange. In December, Razzak Yaqub received an exclusive import license and proceeded over the next three years to ship more than $500 million in gold to Pakistan. Additional deposits flowed into the Dubai and Swiss Citibank accounts, and funds also were shifted to Citibank Channel Island subsidiaries. The original ceiling on the accounts of $40 million was reached quickly
Toward the end of her second term, the Bhutto case took a bizarre turn. Representatives of thePakistan Muslim League, an opposition party, met in 1995 with private investigators in London who offered documentary proof from an unnamed source of Bhutto’s corruption, in return for a modest fee of $10 million. That deal was not consummated, but two years later, with Bhutto out of office and under investigation, the offer was reportedly concluded for $1 million. The documents “appeared to have been taken from the Geneva office of Jens Schlegelmilch.”
In 2000 Pakistan’s National Accountability Bureau, with the thankless task of investigating corruption, drew upon these documents and other sources and released details of assets and accounts belonging to Bhutto and Zardari. Even to jaded observers, the scale of their holdings was stunning: hundreds of properties, dozens of companies, and dozens of bank accounts. A partial listing of only foreign holdings reported by the National Accountability Bureau is

Summarizing this and other documentation, the New York Times reported that the material included “. . . letters from executives promising payoffs, with details of the percentage payments to be made; memorandums detailing meetings at which these ‘commissions’ and ‘remunerations’ were agreed on, and certificates incorporating the offshore companies used as fronts in the deals. . . . The documents also revealed the crucial role played by Western institutions. Apart from the companies that made payoffs, and the network of banks that handled the money . . . the arrangements made by the Bhutto family for their wealth relied on Western property companies, Western lawyers and a network of Western friends.”
Even the Swiss finally had had enough. Seventeen bank accounts linked to Bhutto and Zardari were frozen. The two were charged with money laundering in connection with bribes received from the inspection company SGS and were convicted by a Swiss court in 2003, with fines and suspended prison sentences. This was short-lived; the decision was overturned and referred back to cantonal prosecutors upon appeal. Meanwhile, Zardari was in prison in Pakistan from 1996 to 2004 on assorted charges.
Bhutto, with her father executed, two brothers assassinated, her mother an amnesiac, her husband still troublesome, and she living in exile between London and Dubai, portrays herself as the victim: “I never asked for power. I think they [the Pakistani people] need me. I don’t think it’s addictive. You want to run away from it, but it doesn’t let you go. . . . I think the reason this happens is that we want to give love and we receive love.” Save your tears. In the global collection of displaced leaders, Benazir Bhutto may be the least sympathetic character of all.
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Disclaimer: This blog is not an official PTI webpage and is run by a group of volunteers having no official position in PTI. All posts are personal opinions of the bloggers and should, in no way, be taken as official PTI word.
With Regards,
"Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf FATA Volunteers" Team.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Bhutto Khandan Ka Qatal By Munir Ahmad
Mera Dost Zulfi By Pilo Moodi
Jabar aur jamhoriyat by begam kalsoom nawaz shareef
Taleban ke qaid men
Badmaash america by walim belam Traslation by Syed Nasir Ali
International Agencies Ka Taaruf Aur UnKa Tareeqa e kaar by Israr Alam
Marshal Law ka Siasi Andaz by M A K Chaudary
Nawaz Shareef Terre Rahoon Ka Seedha Musafir by Sardar Muhammad Chaudry
Pakistan main intelligence egencies ka siase kirdar by Munir Ahmed
Secret Wars of CIA in Urdu Translation by Abdullah Tariq
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Main ny dhakha doobtey dekha by sadique salik
Benazir Hakoomat Ka Urooj-o-Zawal by Prof. Ghafoor Ahmed
Dictatorship Or Democracy BY Benazir Bhoto
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