Posts Tagged ‘Pakistan’
Wednesday, June 4th, 2008
Pakistan; 4/6/08; http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23808204-12335,00.html
Five children died when a mortar shell they were playing with exploded in the southeastern city of Quetta, while a landmine killed four people in Pakistan’s Kurram tribal region today, officials said Aside from the five children killed, five others were wounded. They all belonged to an Afghan family living in Quetta. Police said they found three more mortars in the children’s home. “We’re investigating where they got them from,” senior police officer Rematullah Niazi said. Children were also killed when a passenger van hit a landmine on a road about 60 km (37 miles) east of Parachinar, Kurram’s main town. “We have a confirmed report of four dead, including two children,” Ahsanullah Khan, a government officer in Parachinar, said.
Pakistan, Landmines
Tags: Landmines, Pakistan
Posted in Arms, Environment, Health & Children, Human Rights, Pakistan | No Comments »
Tuesday, May 27th, 2008
Hassna’a Mokhtar; 26/5/08
Court bureaucracy has further impeded the case of five Pakistani mechanics, who for five years have not been paid their salaries and are living destitute in a rundown defunct factory in south Jeddah. In order to get their case moving, the five men need a Power of Attorney (POA) to enable their lawyer to act on their behalf. However, of-ficials at the Jeddah Court refused to issue a POA, as some of the men do not have iqamas.
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Tags: Dubai, India, Pakistan, Saudi Arabi, Sri Lanka, Workers
Posted in Aid / Trade, Asia, Human Rights, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Workers | No Comments »
Saturday, May 24th, 2008
23/5/08
After almost three years of a hunger strike and force-feeding at Guantanamo, a Saudi detainee said he will persist with his protest until he sets foot in his native land. Legal papers obtained last week give the first detailed look at Ahmad Zaid Salem Zuhair since he was captured in Pakistan and taken to Guantanamo in 2002. The US military calls him an enemy combatant, an allegation he denies.
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Tags: Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay, Pakistan, Terrorism, USA
Posted in Afghanistan, Asia, Human Rights, Pakistan, Terrorism, USA | No Comments »
Tuesday, May 20th, 2008
Bruce Loudon; 20/5/08
The spectre of suicide bombings returned to Pakistan yesterday after a lull of almost three months, only hours after Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani personally confronted US President George W. Bush over “provocative” cross-border raids aimed at al-Qa’ida targets. The raids - in particular last week’s CIA missile attack on an al-Qa’ida compound at Damadola, in the Bajaur Tribal Agency - are blamed by Pakistani officials for sparking a suicide bombing on Sunday in a market at the Punjab Regiment garrison in Mardan, a town in North West Frontier Province. Thirteen people, including five soldiers, were killed and 23 injured - the biggest such attack since Pakistan’s elections in February, and one that casts a shadow over the Government’s attempts to negotiate peace deals with extremist groups linked to al-Qa’ida and the Taliban.
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Tags: Pakistan, Terrorism, USA
Posted in Human Rights, Pakistan, Terrorism, USA | No Comments »
Sunday, May 18th, 2008
18/5/08
The Pakistan army has taken issue with coalition forces in Afghanistan over a missile attack launched by a US drone aircraft that killed 14 people, an army spokesman said yesterday. Two missiles hit a house on Wednesday in the village of Damadola in Bajaur, a Pakistani tribal region where al-Qaeda, the Taliban and other Islamist militant groups are active, a security official said. “We have informed the coalition headquarters in Afghanistan … we have raised this issue in tripartite commission,” army spokesman Major-General Athar Abbas said. The commission comprises the military commanders from the US-led coalition forces in Afghanistan and the Afghan and Pakistani armies.
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Tags: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Terrorism, USA
Posted in Human Rights, Pakistan, Terrorism, USA | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 14th, 2008
14/5/08
The grey gates of Doctor Robin Sardar’s residence now bear a sign that says in red Urdu letters, “This is the house of a blasphemer.” The place has been deserted since police arrested Sardar, a Protestant, on May 5, after an angry mob of 200 armed Muslims, some carrying kerosene, sought him out for allegedly uttering derogatory remarks against Prophet Muhammad. The scene was one that the late Bishop John Joseph of Faisalabad had fought hard to keep from happening before he shot himself dead on the steps of the court building in Sahiwal a decade earlier on May 6, 1998. The bishop’s “self-sacrifice,” as local people refer to it, was a desperate plea for Pakistan to rid itself of blasphemy laws he and others charge have been widely abused since the late President Zia ul-Haq amended them in 1986. The prelate pulled the trigger in protest after a Christian was sentenced to death for blaspheming the Prophet.
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Tags: Bishops AnniversaryAdd new tag, Blasphemy Laws, Pakistan
Posted in Human Rights, Pakistan, Religion | No Comments »
Friday, April 18th, 2008
17/4/08
Hundreds of Afghans returning home after the closure of a refugee camp in northwest Pakistan have been left stranded because of a roadblock, the United Nations refugee agency has said. About 70,000 Afghans are being forced to either return to Afghanistan or relocate elsewhere in Pakistan after the closure of the Jalozai refugee camp. Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera’s correspondent reporting from the Peshawar-Torkham highway, said: “For the last three days the main crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan has been closed because of a dispute between tribal elders and a group known as Lashkar-e-Islam.” Laskhar-e-Islam, which is sympathetic to the Taliban, stopped trucks along the highway, saying that drivers must stop trafficking alcohol and drugs across the border.
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Tags: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Refugees, Terrorism, USA
Posted in Afghanistan, Human Rights, Pakistan, Refugee & Migrant, Terrorism, USA | No Comments »
Sunday, April 13th, 2008
Taghred Chandab & Paula Bronstein; 13/4/08
They are innocent victims of brutality, but now there is hope for women of Pakistan scarred and disfigured by vicious acid attacks. Dressed in a beautiful sari and Islamic head dress, Iram Saeed appears to be just like any other Pakistani woman.For a moment she is able to conceal the pain and scars from gazing eyes. Then she removes her heavy clothing and dark sunglasses, revealing devastation.Ten years ago, aged 19, Iram was the victim of an acid attack. Her crime? To reject a marriage proposal.
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Tags: Marriage, Pakistan, Womens Rights
Posted in Gender & Marriage, Human Rights, Pakistan, Womens Rights | No Comments »
Sunday, February 10th, 2008
Bruce Loudon; 10/2/08
A staggering new statistic on the so-called honour killing of women and girls in Pakistan was revealed yesterday when the country’s top human rights body reported that at least 565 died last year — double the number killed the previous year. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said in its annual report that the death toll could in fact be about 1000 — and it added that arrests had been made by investigators in only a derisory 128 cases.
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Tags: Honour Killings, Pakistan, Report
Posted in Gender & Marriage, Human Rights, Pakistan, Womens Rights | No Comments »