Nasheman News : In an obvious attack on Pakistan, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj told the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) that states which shelter and fund terrorists must be told to dismantle terror camps on their soil.
“If we want to save humanity, then we must tell the states whioh provide shelter and funding to terrorists to dismantle the infrastructure of the terrorist camps and stop providing funding and shelter to terror organisations based in that country,” she said.
Sushma Swaraj is attending the conference as a “Guest of Honour” from India. Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi kept away from the OIC meet due to her presence.
Sushma Swaraj’s remarks, without naming Pakistan, came three days after India targeted a training camp of Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) in Pakistan following the Pulwama suicide bombing in Kashmir which killed 40 CRPF personnel.
The Pakistan-based JeM claimed responsibility for the attack.
Sushma Swaraj said the menace of terror cannot be defeated solely through “military, intelligence or diplomatic” means but must be won by “strength of our values and message of religion”.
“This is not a clash of civilization and culture but a contest between ideas and ideals.
“Terrorism and extremism bear different names and labels. It uses diverse causes. But in each case, it is driven by distortion of religion, and a misguided belief in its power to succeed,” she said.
The Minister also spoke about India’s ancient civilizational values, its ethos of pluralism and its eternal message of peace.
“God is one but learned men describe Him in many ways,” she said.
Archives for March 2019
Pakistan court rejects plea to stop Indian pilot’s release
Nasheman News : The Islamabad High Court on Friday dismissed a petition filed against the release of Indian Air Force (IAF) pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman who was captured by Pakistan two days earlier.
The pilot was seized after his MIG-21 Bison fighter jet was shot down during a dogfight near the Line of Control (LoC).
Islamabad High Court Chief Justice Athar Minallah heard the case earlier in the day ahead of the pilot’s release, Samaa TV reported.
Justice Minallah told the petitioner the decision to release the pilot was made by Prime Minister Imran Khan during a Parliament session on Thursday and no parliamentarian raised any objections.
“So this is a policy matter and we must respect Parliament,” the judge said.
Khan had announced that Pakistan will release the pilot as a “gesture of goodwill”.
Man harasses couple, crowd joins him
BENGALURU: A married couple had a nightmarish experience on Tuesday night when an allegedly drunk man molested the woman, assaulted her husband for objecting to his moves, and mobilised a crowd against them, saying “outsiders” like them brought a bad name to the city.
The couple approached the police after a BMTC bus driver and conductor came to their rescue. The assailant has been arrested.The incident occurred at a traffic signal near Raghavendra Mutt signal in second phase, JP Nagar. Deepa (34) was riding pillion with her husband Rohit (names changed), when the accused Kiran S (31), a salesman, came on his two-wheeler and stopped next to them.
Kiran allegedly started staring at Deepa, which she initially ignored. But when he continued to do so, she told him to look elsewhere. An infuriated Kiran started verbally abusing her. When she asked him to watch his words, Kiran allegedly got off his two-wheeler and pushed Deepa off her bike. Rohit then rushed to his wife’s rescue.
Deepa told the police that Kiran started hitting her husband with his helmet and also touched her inappropriately. When she pushed him away, he allegedly slapped her, scratched her face and kicked Rohit in his abdomen.
The commotion attracted a crowd, and Kiran reportedly said something to them in Kannada, prompting them to start abusing the couple over their “outsider” status.Rohit is from Maharashtra, while Deepa, although born in Mangaluru, was brought up in another state. Neither of them understands Kannada.
Kiran, a resident of seventh phase, JP Nagar, even called his friends, who threatened the couple further, before the two were rescued by the driver and conductor of a passing BMTC bus. They then complained to Jayanagar police.
Kiran too followed them to file a counter-complaint. “But we verified the facts and found that Kiran was at fault. We have arrested him for outraging the modesty of woman, assault and sent him to jail,” an investigating officer said.
Amit Shah questions Pak PM’s silence on Pulwama attacks
BJP President Amit Shah Friday slammed Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan for not condemning the Pulwama terror attack and asked how can India trust him.
Speaking at the India Today Conclave, Shah said the Modi government has been able to create “fear” in the minds of those behind terrorism with its action against Pakistan-based terrorists.
“I believe the track record of our government has been the best in dealing with terror since Independence… Maximum number of terrorists have been eliminated under BJP government led by Modi,” he said.
Questioning Khan’s silence on the Pulwama attack, he said, “The Pakistan PM should have criticised the Pulwama attacks at least once. How can we expect anything from him, or trust him. Maybe the situation is not in his control. At least he could have done lip service”.
40 CRPF personnel were killed on February 14 in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pulwama district when a Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorist rammed an explosive-laden vehicle into a bus carrying security forces.
The BJP President also said that the return of pilot Abhinandan Varthaman was a diplomatic victory.
“Creating situation for return of pilot Abhinandan in such a short span of time is our diplomatic victory,” he said.
Varthaman’s MiG 21 was shot and he bailed out after bringing down one Pakistani F-16 fighter during a dogfight to repel a Pakistani attack on Wednesday morning. He has been in Pakistan since then.
Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan announced in Parliament on Thursday that Varthaman would be released on Friday as a “peace gesture”.
Coming down hard on Opposition parties which alleged the government was “politicising” the sacrifices of the armed forces, Shah said their joint resolution post the air strikes gave ammunition to Pakistan.
“The opposition’s accusation against the BJP that it was politicising the sacrifices of our forces has given happiness to Pakistan,” Shah said.
“The message has gone that now it is the Modi govt at the helm which is resolute in implementing its policy of zero tolerance against terrorism and has the political will to act,” he said.
Criticising former PM Manmohan Singh’s call for restraint to India and Pakistan, Shah asked how he could compare a country, which has been sponsoring terrorism, with India.
He also criticised Singh for his government’s “lack of response” after the Mumbai terror attacks in 2008.
“Now with its action against Pakistan-based terrorists Modi government has been able to create fear in the minds of those behind terrorism that they will face grave consequences for their actions.
PTI
IAF pilot reaches Wagah
Nasheman News : Indian Air Force (IAF) pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman reached the Pakistani side of the border on Friday evening from Lahore ahead of his release from Pakistani captivity.
Informed sources said that Abhinandan was accompanied by Indian High Commission officials from Islamabad. He will enter India after completing formalities at Wagah.
The IAF pilot was captured in Pakistan on February 27 after his MIG-21 Bison fighter jet was shot down during a dogfight near the Line of Control (LoC).
Masood Azhar “Is In Pakistan,” Admits Foreign Minister Amid Pulwama Outrage
Masood Azhar is “unwell”, so much that he “can’t even leave his house”, Shah Mahmood Qureshi said in an interview.
This is the first official acknowledgement of India’s allegation that Masood Azhar operates from Pakistan
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Terror mastermind Masood Azhar, whose Jaish-e-Mohammed carried out the Pulwama attack in which 40 Indian soldiers were killed, is in Pakistan, its Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi has confirmed. This is the first official acknowledgement of India’s allegation that Masood Azhar operates from Pakistan.
Masood Azhar is “unwell”, so much that he “can’t even leave his house”, Shah Mahmood Qureshi.
“He is in Pakistan, according to my information. He is very unwell. He is unwell to the extent that he cannot leave his house because he is really unwell. That’s the information I have,” the Pakistani Foreign Minister said.
Asked why not arrest him, “ill or not”, given India’s allegations of his role in terror attacks, Mr Qureshi repeated Pakistan’s much-repeated line of “evidence” that stands legal scrutiny.
Shah Mahmood Qureshi’s admission is significant at a time global pressure is building on Pakistan to act against terror groups operating on its soil (File Photo)
“If they (India) give us evidence which is acceptable to the courts of Pakistan – after all we will have to justify, they will go to court – and if they have solid, inalienable evidence, share it with us so that we can convince the people and convince the independent judiciary of Pakistan,” said the minister.
“We need to satisfy the legal process,” he said.
India has been pushing for the UN listing of Masood Azhar as a global terrorist, a move torpedoed multiple times by China, which calls itself an all-weather ally of Pakistan.
Masood Azhar’s Jaish-e-Mohammed was behind the 2001 attack on Parliament, the Pathankot air force base attack of 2016, the attack on an army camp in Kashmir’s Uri in 2016 and the suicide attack in Pulwama in which over 40 Central Reserve Police Force soldiers were killed on February 14.
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan’s announcement that pilot Abhinandan Varthaman would be released cleared the way for de-escalation (File Photo)
Amid grief and anger over the Pulwama terror attack, India renewed its call for a UN global terrorist tag on Masood Azhar. On Tuesday, India sent fighter planes to Pakistan for the first time in nearly 50 years, to target a Jaish-e-Mohammed terror training facility in Balakot. Pakistan’s subsequent attempt at airstrikes targeting Indian military facilities across the Line of Control led to the worst escalation between the neighbours in decades. Pakistan captured an Indian pilot who had ejected from his falling jet after an aerial duel with one of the Pakistani warplanes trying to target Indian facilities.
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan’s announcement that pilot Abhinandan Varthamanwould be released cleared the way for de-escalation.
India has handed over a dossier to Pakistan with “specific details of Jaish’s complicity in Pulwama terror attack and the presence of JeM terror camps and its leadership in Pakistan,” officials say. The dossier gives details of the route taken by terrorists from Balakot, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, to Jammu and Kashmir.
Mr Qureshi’s admission is significant at a time global pressure is building on Pakistan to act against terror groups operating on its soil.
Agencies
Every Indian proud of Wg Cdr Abhinandan: Modi
Nasheman News : Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared on Friday that every Indian was “proud that the brave” Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman who was taken captive by Pakistan hails from Tamil Nadu.
Speaking after laying the foundation stone of a railway line between Rameshwaram and Dhanushkodi, Modi added: “I am proud that India’s first woman Defence Minister is from Tamil Nadu.”
The Indian Air Force pilot is set to be released by Pakistan later in the day.
Modi also flagged off Tejas, described as the fastest train to link Madurai and Chennai in Tamil Nadu.
“This is one of the most modern trains and is a great example of ‘Make in India’ having been manufactured in the Integral Coach Factory of Chennai,” the Prime Minister said.
The Rameshwaram-Dhanushkodi rail line was damaged in a natural disaster of 1964 “but for over 50 years no attention was paid to this line”, he said. “But better late than never.”
Modi said that in 2014, after a gap of 30 years, a political party got a full majority on its own in Parliament.
“The people’s message was clear: they wanted a government that takes bold and tough decisions,” the Prime Minister said.
“People wanted honesty, not dynasty. People wanted development, not decay. People wanted progress, not policy paralysis. People wanted opportunities, not obstacles. People wanted security, not stagnation. People wanted inclusive growth, not vote bank politics.”
Modi said his government was “most sensitive” to the safety and well-being of Indian fishermen.
Due to sustained diplomatic efforts, since May 2014, hundreds of fishermen had been released by Sri Lankan authorities, he said.
Tamil Nadu and Sri Lanka are separated by a narrow strip of sea.
Bangladesh tells UN it cannot take more Myanmar refugees
Foreign minister accuses Myanmar of ‘hollow promises’ over 700,000 Rohingya living in refugee camps in Bangladesh.7 hours ago
Bangladesh has told the United Nations Security Council it cannot take any more refugees from Myanmar, some 18 months after more than 700,000 Rohingya fled across the border amid a brutal military crackdown.
Attacks on security posts by Rohingya fighters in Myanmar’s Rakhine state triggered the violence that the UN, the United States, Britain and others describe as ethnic cleansing. Myanmar denies the accusations.
“I regret to inform the council that Bangladeshwould no longer be in a position to accommodate more people from Myanmar,” Bangladesh Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque told the UN on Thursday.
Haque accused Myanmar of “hollow promises and various obstructionist approaches” during negotiations on returns.
“Not a single Rohingya has volunteered to return to Rakhine due to the absence of [a] conducive environment there,” Haque said.
Myanmar says it has been ready to accept returning refugees since January, but the Rohingya say they want guarantees over their safety and to be recognised as citizens before they go back to Rakhine.
The UN says conditions are not yet right for their return. The Western powers on the council on Thursday lamented the lack of action from Myanmar’s government.
‘Very disappointed’
“We’re very disappointed … that there hasn’t been more progress on getting the refugees back and that obviously includes creating the conditions where the refugees feel able to go back,” Karen Pierce, Britain’s UN Ambassador, told the council.
Several council members stressed the return of refugees needed to be safe, voluntary, dignified and secure, and pushed for the Myanmar government to allow the UN widespread and unconditional access to Rakhine.
UN envoy to Myanmar Christine Schraner-Burgener told the council that the UN access was currently “insufficient”.
“The scale of what has been done to the Rohingya Muslims and the allegations of crimes against humanity really mark this out as one of the most terrible events of this century so far,” she said.
The 15-member UNSC has been split over how to deal with the crisis, with Western powers pitted against Russia and China, an ally of Myanmar.
China’s Deputy UN Ambassador Wu Haitao said it was mainly an issue between Myanmar and neighbouring Bangladesh “and as such it is up to the two countries to work out a solution”.
Russia’s Deputy UN Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy agreed.
In December, Britain circulated a draft resolution to council members that diplomats said aims to put a timeline on Myanmar allowing the return of refugees and addressing accountability, but China and Russia have boycotted talks on the draft.
Deputy US Ambassador Jonathan Cohen said: “The international community cannot ignore the world’s largest refugee camp.”
Aljazeera
Pakistan set to free Indian pilot to de-escalate tensions
Captured fighter pilot to be handed back to India in the afternoon at the Wagah border crossing, Pakistan FM says.
Pakistan is set to release a captured Indian pilot in a “peace gesture” aimed at easing tensions with its nuclear archrival, after aerial clashes ignited fears of a dangerous conflict in South Asia.
Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, who has become the face of the crisis between Islamabad and New Delhi, will be handed back to Indian officials at the Wagah border crossing on Friday afternoon, Pakistani foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said.
In New Delhi, the announcement of his release by Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan on Thursday, was seen as a diplomatic victory, with Indian leaders welcoming the pilot’s return but announcing they would remain on “heightened” military alert.
“We have an Indian pilot. As a peace gesture we will release him tomorrow,” Khan told a joint sitting of parliament in the capital Islamabad on Thursday.
At raid site, no casualties and a mysterious school
Khan also said he had unsuccessfully tried to make a telephone contact with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi on Wednesday night.
“Yesterday, I tried to call Narendra Modi,” Khan said. “I wanted to make it clear that we do not want any kind of escalation.”
Abhinandan was shot down over Kashmir on Wednesday, after a dogfight in the skies over the disputed Himalayan region which sent tensions between India and Pakistan to their highest levels in years and alarmed world powers, who issued calls for restraint.
“As the prime minister has said, as a peace gesture and to de-escalate matters, the Indian pilot will be released. So today, this afternoon, he will be released at Wagah,” Qureshi told a joint session of parliament in the capital, Islamabad, on Friday.
A diplomatic source told AFP news agency, the handover was expected between 3-4pm Pakistani time (1000-1100 GMT).
The Wagah crossing gate is famed for hosting an elaborate daily ceremony by Indian and Pakistani soldiers at sundown.
Thousands of people had already gathered on the Indian side early on Friday to welcome the pilot home, an AFP journalist said.
The pilot’s parents travelled to Amritsar, near Wagah, via Delhi late last night and were applauded by all the passengers on the plane they travelled on, TV footage showed.
Media on the Pakistani side were being stopped by authorities around 1.5 kilometres (a mile) from the border.
The surging tensions had prompted Pakistan to close down its airspace, disrupting major routes between Europe and South Asia and grounding thousands of travellers worldwide.
On Friday morning the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) announced a decision would be taken on re-opening airspace “shortly”.
Earlier it had said flights would remain grounded until at least 1.00 pm local time (0800 GMT) on Friday.
#WelcomeBackAbhi
The latest confrontation between the neighbours, who have fought three wars since independence in 1947, erupted after a suicide bombing in Indian-held Kashmir killed at least 42 Indian paramilitary troops on February 14, with the attack claimed by Pakistan-based rebel group, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM).
Twelve days later, Indian warplanes launched an air raid inside undisputed Pakistani territory, claiming to have hit a JeM camp.
It was the first such aerial attack since their last war in 1971, before either country had nuclear weapons.
An infuriated Islamabad denied casualties or damage, but a day later launched its own incursion as a show of strength across the Line of Control, the de facto Kashmir border.
That sparked the dogfight that ended in both countries claiming they had shot down each other’s warplanes, and Abhinandan’s capture.
Residents on either side of the LoC also reported heavy shelling, which continued into the early hours Friday.
Analysts said the pilot could prove to be Islamabad’s trump card, but Prime Minister Imran Khan unexpectedly announced on Thursday that he would be released a day later in the first sign of a potential thaw.
Khan alluded to the catastrophic consequences of nuclear war and called for talks, even as he warned India should not take the announcement as a sign of weakness.
With the pilot attaining hero status and the hashtag #WelcomeBackAbhi swiftly trending on social media, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi called on his citizens to “stand as a wall” in the face of an enemy that “seeks to destabilise India”.
The last time an Indian pilot was captured by Pakistan, in 1999, the handover was facilitated by the Red Cross (ICRC), who met Flight Lieutenant K. Nachiketa at the Pakistani foreign office in Islamabad before escorting him to the Indian high commission overnight.
He left for India that same day.
On Friday a Red Cross spokesman told AFP the aid organisation is “ready to provide any assistance necessary”, but so far “is not involved” in Abhinandan’s return.
Kashmir is ruled in part but claimed in full by both India and Pakistan. Two of their three wars have been fought over the disputed territory.
Aljazeera
Terrorism is destroying lives, destabilising regions: Sushma Swaraj
Nasheman News : As India waits to welcome back Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman in middle of India Pakistan tension External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj addressed at Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) conclave as the Guest of Honour in Abu Dhabi on Friday.
“OIC members constitute 1/4th of the United Nations and almost a quarter of humanity. India shares much with you, many of us have shared dark days of colonialism,” said Sushma Swaraj.
“I’m honoured to join colleagues from nations that represent a great religion and ancient civilisations. I stand here as a representative of land that has been mountain of knowledge, beacon of peace, the source of faith and traditions, home to many religions and one of the major economies,” said Swaraj.
Many of us saw the light of freedom and ray of hope at the same time, we have stood together in solidarity in our quest for dignity and equality, said Swaraj.
Terrorism is destroying lives, destabilising regions and putting the world at great peril. Terror reach is growing and the toll it is taking is increasing, said Swaraj.
“Terrorism in each case is driven by distortion of religion. Fight against terror is not a confrontation against any religion. Just as Islam means peace, none of the 99 names of Allah means violence. Similarly, every religion stands for peace,” said Swaraj.
I carry the greetings of my PM Narendra Modi and 1.3 billion Indians, including more than 185 million Muslim brothers and sisters. Our Muslim brothers and sisters are a microcosm of the diversity of India, said Swaraj.
Indian Muslims practice their respective beliefs and live in harmony with each other and with their non-Muslim brothers. It’s this appreciation of diversity and coexistence that has ensured that very few Muslims in India have fallen prey to the poisonous propaganda of radical and extremist ideologies, said Swaraj.
“India has always embraced and found it easy to embrace pluralism since it is embedded in the oldest Sanskrit religious text “The Rig Veda” and I quote “Ekam sat vipra bahudha vadhanti”, which means “God is One but learned men describe him in many ways,” said Swaraj.
I come from the land of Mahatma Gandhi where every prayer ends with a call for ‘shanti’ that is peace for all. I convey our best wishes, support and solidarity in your quest for stability, peace, harmony, economic growth and prosperity for your people and world.
If we want to save humanity, we must tell the states who provide shelter and funding to terrorists, to dismantle the infrastructure of the terrorist camps and stop providing shelter and funding to the terror organisations based in that country, said Swaraj.
“Recognising India’s engagement with the Islamic world. EAM Sushma Swaraj arrives in Abu Dhabi for the Ministerial Meeting of India has been invited by HH Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Foreign Minister of UAE as the ‘Guest of Honour’,” Spokesperson of the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), Raveesh Kumar had written on Twitter.