Monday, December 31, 2007

PA not decided on transitional issue

31 December 2007
Report: Soodh


People’s Association (PA) has not held any discussions on transitional arrangements, PA Vice President and MP for Gaafu Alif Atoll Abdullah Jabir has said.

In an interview given to Miadhu Daily yesterday, Jabir said that members of PA have never discussed about measures to be taken, in order to make the upcoming Presidential elections a free and fair elections.

“As we have not yet decided, I cannot tell PA’s thinking on the matter. But, I don’t support any form of transition arrangement. I don’t believe that there has to be any transition arrangements” Jabir said.

Maldivian Democratic Party, Islamic Democratic Party, Adhaalath Party, Social Liberal Party and the New Maldives movement had jointly formed an opposition alliance to enforce the government to hold free and fair elections next year and this alliance is calling for a transition government.

However the government has since refused to support a transition government. Speaking at a general meeting of the Dhivehi Rahyithuge Party, DRP, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, Leader of the party as well as the country’s President had said that DRP will not support the notion of establishing an interim government to govern the country during the transitional period. In his address to party members at the meeting, Leader of DRP, Maumoon said that there is no political and constitutional need to establish such an interim government. He said an interim government is normally established when the peace and security of the country is lost due to civil unrest or by any other means. He further said the country does not need such an arrangement and the he will not support the notion

Angry Miladhoo islanders take control of office

31 December 2007
Report: Soodh

The islanders of Noonu Miladhoo has yesterday surrounded and locked the Island office and island court. An informant from the island said that the island office was surrounded and locked yesterday morning at 7:30 after the islanders discussed the matter last Friday and unofficially informing the island chief that they would so this.

The informant said that the people had to do this as there had been no solution for the problems they are facing on inner lagoon, sewage system, electricity and water.

In 2006 October when the construction began at the harbor construction, it was informed that work would be completed within 5 months, but yet it had not been completed, he said. He also said that the small area which the work was completed had also been completely destroyed by now due to the waves and the government had tried to take away the equipment they brought to do the construction work.

“The government is saying that they want to complete the work of harbor very soon. But they are taking the equipments used. How could we believe that they are taking the equipments back if they want to speed up the work” he said.

He said that it had been so long since they have been complaining for a solution for the sewage system problems they are facing. He said that they would surely face various many health problems when 6 sewage systems have to be fit for a 150 sq feet land where there are 6 water wells. He said that the government had so far refused to build the sewage system of the island on the road.

“When Environment and water Minister Ahmed Abdullah visited the island early this year, we showed him the situation of our sewage system. He said he would look in to it. But since then, there had been no news from them” the angry islander said.

The informant from the island said that they face many problems in getting fresh water also. He said that Miladhoo did not get any black water tanks although water tanks had been distributed to all islands of Maldives and the government water tanks also could not be kept in the island due to some problem faced I allocating land for them. He said that they don’t get water in the hot season.

When looked into the situation of electricity in the island, he said that electricity was recently disconnected in the island for 2 weeks and the atoll chief did not even visit them within those two weeks. He said that the islander now could not even use a computer as electricity may go out at any time for the day and also frequently. He said that the island chief had done a lot of work to solve this problem.

The informant said that the members representing them at the People’s Majlis never helped them and there are neither answering their calls nor replying to their text messages.

There was no one in the island opposing the closure of the island office and even the fishermen who go for yellow fish tuna fisheries are also waiting in the island today, the informant said. He said that people are active, serving food and drinks for the other islanders and they have even sheltered the area near the office they are staying.

“Everyone is here. We have juice packets, food and even refrigerators are here” he said.

Noonu Niladho Island chief Mohamed Hassan, at the area said that he has nothing to say more than what the informant has said and said that there were no lies in what the informant said. The island chief said that he had informed the matter to the atoll office and the atoll office has told to open the island office and go on with paper work if the people want to solve the problems they are facing. But the island chief said that the people are refusing to open the island office unless high level government officials from the relevant ministries meet the islanders.

The informant said that he called the interim atoll chief Mohamed Ali at 4pm yesterday and requested hi on behalf of all islanders to visit the island and to see the people’s participation in this.

“Mohamed Ali said that he was in Maafaru, watching a football match. He said that he is working as according to the instructions by the Atolls ministry and he could not come to the island even though the people request. Then I asked whether he is there in Maafaru, watching a foot ball match after ignoring the problems at our island because the atolls ministry instructed so? He said that he has already said that he was working under the instructions from atolls ministry. I told him that I would give this information to media and he said that he had no problem with it”

Velidhoo News was unable to contact the atoll office on this matter.

MDP to hold dialogue with Conservative Party

31 December 2007
Courtesy: Miadhu


MDP Chairperson Mohamed Nasheed (Anni) has said that they are to hold discussions with English conservative party.

Speaking to Miadhu Daily, Anni said that the Chairman of English conservative party and some of their parliamentarians are scheduled to visit Maldives next February.

“There were talks with conservative party. That is to discuss things to be done within these 2 months. The Chairman of the party was met. He is a senior British politician. It was discussed about a meeting to be held with their parliamentary group from 11th to 18th February. They are coming to share information on Conservative Party operates” Anni said.

“I have held discussions with EU parliamentarian group regarding their press release, and have very clearly said they will work towards achieving what is said in the release” said Anni.

Bhutto’s son named as successor

31 December 2007
Courtesy: Miadhu

Bilawal Zardari, the 19-year old son of Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan's assassinated former Prime Minister, and Opposition Leader, has been chosen to succeed her as chairman of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP).

Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto's husband, will serve as co-chairman, party officials said on Sunday.

"My mother always said that democracy is the best revenge," Bilawal told a press conference in Naudero, Bhutto's ancestral home in the Larkana district of Sindh province, shortly after being appointed the political successor.

Bilawal becomes the third Bhutto to lead the nation's largest political party after his mother and Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto - his grandfather and founder of the PPP who was executed in 1979.

Party officials said Bhutto's will had named Asif Zardari as the party chairman.

But Zardari requested that Bilawal be named the leader instead and the party leadership agreed.

Bhutto was assassinated Thursday in a gun and bomb attack as she left an election rally in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi.

The assassination shocked the world. Condemnation of the assassination was swift and strong and came from across the globe. World leaders were quick to condemn the extremist and murderous action and have called on the Pakistani government for a full investigation.

The Pakistani government earlier claimed that al-Qaeda was responsible was for the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.

But the Pakistani al-Qaeda leader, Baitullah Mehsud denied any involvement in the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto. Through a spokesperson, he has stated that it is against his tribal traditions to attack a woman. The spokesperson says there is a conspiracy between the Pakistani government, the army and the intelligence agency.

Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party has also dismissed government accusations that she was killed by al Qaeda, saying President Pervez Musharraf's embattled administration was trying to cover up its failure to protect her.

Hillary Clinton, US Democratic Presidential contender earlier suggested that Pakistani security forces or military might have been involved and called for an independent, international investigation into Benazir Bhutto’s assassination.

Bhutto’s Son, 19, Chosen to Lead Her Party

31 December 2007
Courtesy: Ny times

Opposition Parties Vow to Proceed With Jan. 8 Election

Benazir Bhutto’s husband, Asif Ali Zardari, and her son, Bilawal, at a news conference in Naudero, Pakistan.

Three days after the violent killing of its leader, Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan’s largest political party on Sunday picked her 19-year-old son to succeed her as chairman and vowed to forge ahead with elections next week, immediately creating a new quandary for the government about whether to delay the vote.

The moves by Ms. Bhutto’s opposition party, the Pakistan Peoples Party, were clearly aimed at marshaling an outpouring of grief and anger to electoral advantage in the Jan. 8 parliamentary election. The other main opposition party, led by Nawaz Sharif, another former prime minister, also decided Sunday to call off his previously announced boycott of the vote.

Aides to President Pervez Musharraf have suggested that the election could be postponed, perhaps for months, because of the chaos that has engulfed the country since Ms. Bhutto, the former prime minister returned from exile, was killed while campaigning Thursday. But now the prospect of a delay could further infuriate Ms. Bhutto’s supporters and allies, pressuring Mr. Musharraf to hold the vote and risk a huge defeat at the polls.

The announcement that Ms. Bhutto’s first-born son, Bilawal, an Oxford undergraduate with no political experience, would lead her party was made at a chaotic news conference at the family’s ancestral home here in a southern Pakistan village.

The decision to place burden of blood and history on him reflects not only an abiding dynastic streak in South Asian politics — three generations of the Nehru-Gandhi family have dominated politics in India, and hereditary politics pervade Sri Lanka and Bangladesh as well — but also how much the Pakistan Peoples Party relies on the Bhutto family name and legacy to bind its supporters.

In keeping with his new mantle, the new chairman took a new name, embracing his mother’s maiden name as the newly anointed Bhutto scion.

“My mother always said democracy is the best revenge,” he told reporters in a brief address.

His father, Asif Ali Zardari, said that his son would henceforth be known as Bilawal Bhutto Zardari. The elder Mr. Zardari said he would manage the chairmanship on his son’s behalf until he finished his university degree, for a minimum of three years. Mr. Zardari instructed reporters not to ask his son any further questions, saying he was “of a tender age.”

Later, in the backyard of the family’s house, the younger Mr. Zardari said in an interview that he had been tutored by his mother to play a role in Pakistani politics, but only after he completes his university education. “There was always a sense of fear I wouldn’t be able to live up to her expectations,” he said. “I hope I will.”

Asked about his most immediate challenge, he said, “First to finish my degree.”

That would appear to rule out any possibility that Ms. Bhutto’s son could become the new leader of Pakistan until he was significantly older. Nonetheless, the elder Mr. Zardari said in an interview, “As her son, he will become a uniting force.”

The younger Mr. Zardari is a student of history at Christ Church College at Oxford University, his mother’s alma mater. Mr. Zardari said that his wife had expressed the wish in her will that he be left in charge of the party, but that he had decided, with the consent of the executive committee, which met Sunday afternoon at the close of a three-day mourning period, to pass the baton to his son.

He said the will was written on Oct. 16, two days before her return to Pakistan, and given to him after her death, which is when he learned that she had chosen him to succeed her.

“It’s not an easy chair to sit on,” he said in the interview. “A, she leaves me. B, she ties me in this. To say the least, it’s overbearing.”

Senior party officials said, too, that the younger Mr. Zardari would be a far less controversial titular head than his father, who had been accused of a raft of corruption charges, jailed for a total of 11 years, and blamed in some quarters for some of Ms. Bhutto’s political woes.

It could not be a more difficult time for the party. Ms. Bhutto had held together a large and diverse organization, and even if, on the back of public grief, it were to win the elections, it would be likely to be under great pressure to bring a semblance of stability to a nation racked by a wave of extremist violence.

At the news conference, the elder Mr. Zardari said he would not run in the election and therefore would not be the party’s prime ministerial candidate.

That job, he said, would probably go to the party vice president, the veteran party leader Makhdoom Amin Fahim, but that was a decision, he added, that would have to be made by party leaders.

Mr. Zardari went on to say later in the interview that it would be “very difficult” for the party to survive without Ms. Bhutto. “My biggest job is to keep it from falling apart,” he said.

Ms. Bhutto, 54, was killed Thursday evening as she left a party rally in the city of Rawalpindi, when her car was struck by gunfire and a suicide bombing. Ms. Bhutto’s party and family insist that she was shot in the head. The government disputes it, saying that she struck her head fatally on the sunroof of her car.

Her party appealed Sunday for an international inquiry into her death, along the lines of the investigation into the killing of Rafik Hariri, the former prime minister of Lebanon.

The younger Mr. Zardari’s rise echoes the chilling, emotionally resonant path of his mother, who was thrust into public life after her father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged in 1979 by order of the military ruler, Gen. Mohammad Zia ul-Haq.

Shortly before the official announcement of his ascension at a crowded news conference came a ceremonious rearrangement of the dais. His newly constructed name was pinned to the back of a high-backed red chair, which was then adorned with a cushion and placed at the center of a long table. He entered, dressed in a black salwar kameez, the traditional long tunic and pants, and Armani glasses, biting his lips and carrying a portrait of his mother. He promised to carry on his mother’s legacy as “a symbol of the federation.”

Rehman Malik, a senior party official, said Ms. Bhutto had asked him to coach her son in the basic workings of politics and government, from teaching him how to assess others to taking him to the halls of Parliament.

“She has groomed up her husband,” he said. “She was grooming her son also. She was telling me many times he will grow up and take over the party.”

For his part, the younger Mr. Zardari said he had discussed with his mother the prospects of entering politics, but avoided getting into details about who would take over after her. “We always tried not to have this specific conversation because we hoped this day would come, if not never, then far, far in the future,” he said.

In the interview, he spoke quietly, but politely, in the backyard of a crowded house in a remote village in a country where he had spent little time. He and his two younger siblings were raised mostly in Dubai.

A cluster of relatives approached to embrace. “You raised our hopes just now,” one man told him.

The young man took that in, also quietly, and waited for them to pass before speaking again. He said he feared for the survival of the country. When reminded that he had not grown up here, his answer came swiftly. He said he was lucky to have been reared by his mother, who knew the country well. Asked if she had ever encouraged him to succeed her as the leader of the party, he was vague.

“She always said I had to finish my education before I got into politics,” he answered. “She always said I would do something for Pakistan.”

Politics here is as much about matters of the heart as anything else. Which is why Abida Hussain, another executive committee member, when asked about the options facing the party at this crucial juncture, said simply, “It’s Bilawal.”

BREAKING NEWS - Another Bhutto in Pakistan

31 December 2007
Courtesy: Google news


Pakistan, Bhutto, Bilawal
Newly-appointed chairperson of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the son of slain former premier Benazir Bhutto, speaks during a press conference on Dec. 30, 2007.

The son of assassinated former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was named co-chair of her Pakistan People's Party (PPP) at a party meeting in the Bhuttos' ancestral town on Sunday. Bilawal, a 19-year-old student at Christ Church, Oxford, will lead the party with his father Asif Ali Zardari. "I stand committed to the stability of the federation," Bilawal said in an extraordinary and emotional press conference following the meeting. Speaking in English, his voice rising to a youthful shout towards the end of his short initial statement, and fighting back tears, Bilawal told supporters, "My mother always said democracy is the best revenge."

Bilawal read his mother's will to a closed meeting of senior party officials on Sunday afternoon. The document, which Benazir wrote two days before she returned to Pakistan last October, after eight years of self-imposed exile, apparently called for Zardari to take the reigns of the party. But Bhutto's controversial husband says he wanted the family's political legacy to pass to his son, who he said would now be known as Bilawal Bhutto Zardari. Party supporters immediately began chanting, "Long live Bilawal Bhutto."

Bilawal, who has spent much of his life outside Pakistan, said that his father will handle the day-to-day affairs of the PPP until he finishes his studies in England. The younger man will then return to lead the party. Zidari was openly protective of his son during the press conference, at one point saying that he, not Bilawal, would answer all questions because while the young man may be the head of one of Pakistan's biggest parties he was "of a tender age."

The announcement of the PPP's new leadership team — party loyalist Mukhdoom Amin Fahim will be the party's prime ministerial candidate in any election — answered one of the many questions that Pakistan has faced since Benazir's murder in a shooting and suicide bomb attack as she left a political rally on Thursday evening.

The PPP confirmed that it would contest upcoming elections, which are due on Jan. 8. But those polls are now likely to be put off because of the continuing violent unrest around the country. The ruling PML-Q party said the election would likely be delayed by three months or so, in part because several electoral offices have been ransacked and burned in the chaos that was unleashed by Benazir's assassination. Tariq Azim of the ruling party said the vote would not be credible if held on Jan. 8 as planned.

The country's other major opposition party, Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), initially said that it would boycott the election. But today party officials said the party would participate if the PPP did.

The PPP will be keen for the poll to take place as soon as possible so the party can capitalize on the outpouring of sympathy for Benazir, who, though a divisive figure for many, was loved by millions. Bilawal's focus on the "stability of the federation" was significant. Following Benazir's death, the worst violence was in her home province of Sindh, where talk of separation has been growing. While Pakistan is under no immediate threat of a breakup, the presence of a Bhutto at the head of the country's main opposition party will be a reassuring sight to its supporters. Indeed, the PPP is the one party in Pakistan that draws significant support from across the nation. Its followers will hope that the party soon gets another chance to test that support.

At Oxford, Bilawal is known as "Bilawal Lawalib," the last name a backward spelling of the first. Although he seems to have made efforts to disguise his identity, it was well known at Christ Church that he was the son of Benazir, and he often made reference to his mother in his profile on Facebook.

Phillippa Neal, 19, lives in the same on-campus housing as Bilawal. She says he was not accompanied by any security at Oxford. According to Neal, Bilawal posted a statement from his mother the day of her assassination, which read: "You can imprison a man but not an idea. You can exile a man but not an idea. You can kill a man but not an idea. — Benazir Bhutto." The day of the assassination his Facebook status read: "Well behaved women rarely make history." Neal is not sure whether that quote was portentious or posted after Benazir's assassination. "I never discussed politics with him but there was a sense through his Facebook profile that he was very aware of the political situation in Pakistan," says Neal. "Several months ago, his profile picture on Facebook was a [satirical] Punch cartoon caricature of President Musharraf. He is a very sociable student and very well liked."

Luke Tryl, last year's president of the Oxford Union debating society, says Benazir was a former president of the society and her son took interest in the famous group. Tryl, 20 , says Bilawal attended many Oxford Union debates in his first few months at Oxford and says that Bilawal is an engaging and sociable young man. The question is, can he lead a party — or even a country?

Bhutto's son, husband to be co-leaders of party

31 December 2007
Report: Reuters


The 19-year-old son of assassinated Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, Bilawal, was on Sunday appointed chairman of her Pakistan People's Party (PPP) along with his father, party officials said.

"It has been decided that Bilawal will be the chairman and Mr (Asif Ali) Zardari will be co-chairman," one of the party officials said in the southern town of Naudero, where top officials of Bhutto's party were meeting.

Asif Ali Zardari was Bhutto's husband.

The party was also overwhelmingly in favor of taking part in a January 8 general election but had yet to reach a formal decision on participation in it, said the party officials, who declined to be identified.

Former prime minister Bhutto was killed in a gun and bomb attack as she left an election rally in the city of Rawalpindi on Thursday.

Her PPP had also set up a committee to urge the United Nations to demand that the Pakistani government allow an independent inquiry into Bhutto's killing, one of the officials said.

Sunday, December 30, 2007

މައުމޫނުގެ ނައިބު ރައިސެއްގެ ގޮތުގައި ނުކުންނަވައިފިނަމަ މައުމޫނަށް ކުރާވަރަ, ގާސިމަށް ކުރާނެ ކަމުގެ އިންޒާރު އަންނި ދެއްވައިފި

ު

އަލްއުސްތާޒު މައުމޫނު އަބުދުލް ގައްޔޫމުގެ ނައިބު ރައީސެއްގެގޮތުގައި ރައްޔިތުންގެ ކުރިމައްޗަށް, ފިނޭންސް މިނިސްޓަރު ގާސިމް އިބްރާހީމް, ނުކުންނަވައިފިނަމަ މައުމޫނަށް ކުރާވަރު, ގާސިމަށް ކުރާނެ ކަމުގެ އިންޒާރު އެންމެ ބޮޑު އިދިކޮޅު ޕާޓީގެ ޗެއާޕަސަން މުހައްމަދު ނަޝީދު (އަންނި) ދެއްވައިފި އެވެ

އިންތިގާލީ ސަރުކާރެއް ގާއިމުކުރަން ޖެހޭ ސަބަބުތަކާ ބެހޭ ގޮތުން މައުލޫމާތު ދިނުމަށް އިއްޔެ ހެދިގޮނޑުދޮށުގައި ބޭއްވި އެއްވުމުގައި ވާހަކަ ދައްކަވަމުން އަންނި ވިދާޅުވީ 30 އަހަރުގެ ހުދުމުހުތާރު އަނިޔާވެރި ވެރިކަމެއް ކޮށްފައިވާ މައުމޫނުގެ ނާއިބު ރައިސެއްގެގޮތުގައި ގާސިމު ރައްޔިތުންގެ ކުރިމައްޗަށް ނުކުންނަވައިފި ނަމަ ރައީސް މައުމޫނަށް ކުރާވަރު, ގާސިމަށް ވެސް ކޮށްފައި ނޫނީ ހުއްޓާ ނުލައްވާނެ ކަމަށެވެ

އަންނި ވިދާޅުވީ ގައުމުގެ ފޮރިން ރިޒާވް ދަށްވެގެންދާ މައްސަލަ އާއި ރައްޔިތުން ބަނޑަށް ޖެހެމުންދާ އިރު ރައްޔިތުންގެ ކުރިމައްޗަށް ގާސިމް ނެރޭނެ ކަމަށާއި އެ ފުރުސަތު ދީގެން ނުވާނެކަމަށެވެ

” އެ ފަދަ ކަންކަން ހުރުމާއެކު އަޅުގަނޑު ގާސިމަށް ގޮވާލަން ތިޔަ ތަނުން ނުކުމެ ވަޑައިގެން އަޅުގަނޑުމެންނާ ގުޅިވަޑައިގަތުމަށް. އެގޮތަށް ނުނިންމަވާ މައުމޫނުގެ ނައިބު ރައީސެއްގެގޮތުގައި ނުކުންނަވައިފިނަމަ މައުމޫނަށް ކޮށްލިވަރު ގާސީމަށް ވެސް ކޮށްފައި ހުއްޓާލާނީ,“ އަންނި ވިދާޅުވި އެވެ

މިހާތަނަށް އައި އިރު ވެސް ގާސިމާ ދިމާލަށް އިދިކޮޅު ފަރާތްތަކުން މިހާ ހާމަކަން ބޮޑުގޮތެއްގައި އެއްޗެހި ކިޔާ އިންޒާރުދީފައެއް ނުވެ އެވެ

ގާސިމަކީ އިދިކޮޅު ހަރަކާތްތަކަށް ފައިސާ ޚަރަދުކޮށް ހިތްވަރު ދެއްވާ ބޭފުޅެއްކަމަށް ވާހަކަދެކެވެ އެވެ

Nasheed to meet MDP regarding Transitional Govt

30 December 2007
Report: Soodh

Minister of Information and Legal reform, Mohamed Nasheed has said that he wants to meet MDP regarding the transitional arrangements as soon as the Special Majlis re-opens next January.

Speaking to press at “Fansavees” yesterday, Nasheeed said that the laws which needs to be finalized soon cannot be done so as how the way work is going on at Sp. Majlis. He said that discussions are needed to be carried out with MDP as the next topic to debate at the Sp. Majlis is about transition.

“There are a lot of problems which we need to come to an agreement. The date of the Presidential elections, what would happen to the people who are currently judges, on what principles, do judges become independent, and when will the judicial services commission be established. How long before the elections, do we need an independent elections commission, how do we make election laws, we also need to divide Maldives in to 75 parts and make a new electoral chart” Nasheed said.

Next scheduled in agenda of people’s Majlis is the chapter on the President and after that, transition. There were heated debates among the two parties in SP. Majlis about bringing the transitional chapter before the President’s chapter.

Nasheed met H&K twice: Dr. Shaheed

30 December 2007
Report: Soodh

Dr. Ahmed Shaheed, Former Foreign Minister has revealed that Information Minister Nasheed’s denial of knowing any information regarding Hill & Knowlton’s involvement with government was not correct. Dr. Shaheed said that Nasheed met with Hill & Knowlton twice.

Speaking to the press last Thursday at “Fansavees”, Nasheed said that Shaheed has refused to give him any information regarding Hill & Knowlton and he had no knowledge about Hill & Knowlton.

Refuting Nasheed’s comments, Dr. Shaheed said that Nasheed met with Hill and Knowlton’s Andrew Fharoah, Tim Fallon and Laalu Dasguptha twice in his presence. Dr. Shaheed claimed it was in November 2003 and late 2005.

“It is total rubbish that Nasheed is saying he knows nothing about Hill & Knowlton. He twice met them in my presence” Shaheed said.

From these two meetings, the 2005 meeting was held to obtain consultancy for transferring Strategic Communications Unit, SCU to Information Ministry and Shaheed said that the Chief Government Spokesperson then, Mohamed Hussein Shareef (Mundhu) was also attended the meeting.

“In this meeting, Nasheed said that his ministry did not have the necessary skilled staff for that job. So, SCU was transferred to my ministry” Dr. Shaheed said.

Dr. Shaheed said that it was big lie Nasheed is saying that he had no information regarding Hill & Knowlton. He also pointed out that Nasheed was the Information Minister; there was no reason why he should inform Information Minister on the affairs of the Foreign Ministry.
“Nasheed need to know about the work the foreign Minister does. The person to share government’s information was not the information Minister, but he was the Chief Government Spokesman. He will know about 90% of the work H & K was doing” Dr. Shaheed said.

Dr. Shaheed said that Nasheed is defaming him by saying that he was involved in corruption.

“He (Nasheed) is saying he has evidence of documents that indicate I committed an offense. He has to prove it. I don’t have to be responsible for a financial transaction carried out by the government” Dr. Shaheed said.

Dr. Shaheed revealed that he was aware some members of Majlis would ask the Majlis to hold an enquiry on the matter. He said that these members wants to hold an enquiry as a government minister is claiming that he has evidence that another minister has committed an offense.

Although he was a Cabinet Minister, he does not know any information regarding Hill & Knowlton who were used by the government to polish its image, Information and Legal reform Minister Mohamed Nasheed said earlier.

Speaking to press at “Fansavees”, Nasheed said that former Foreign Minister Shaheed did not respond to his questions when he asked about the transactions with Hill & Knowlton.

“Being the Information Minister, I asked Maldives Foreign Minister about it when I heard about it from the media. I asked whether it was a true new. But the foreign Minister did not want to respond. When one Minister asked another Minister from the same cabinet, a question, he did not respond to it. I asked him about it on 19th June 2007” Legal Reform Minister said.

ސްޕޮންސަރގެ ގޮތުގައި ލައްކައަށްވުރެ ގިނަ ޑޮލަރު ހޯދައިގެން މައުމޫންގެ ހަޔާތްޕުޅާބެހޭ ފޮތެއް ލިޔަނީ

ރައީސުލް ޖުމްހޫރިއްޔާ އަލްއުސްތާޒް މައުމޫން ޢަބްދުލް ގައްޔޫމުގެ ހަޔާތްޕުޅާ ބެހޭ ފޮތެއް (ބަޔޯގްރަފީއެއް) ލިޔުމުގެ މަސައްކަތް ކުރިއަށް ދާކަމުގެ މައުލޫމާތެއް ޖަޒީރާއަށް ލިބިއްޖެ އެވެ

ޖަޒީރާއަށް މައުލޫމާތު ލިބިފައިވާ ގޮތުގައި މިބަޔޯގްރަފީ ލިޔުމަށް ސްޕޮންސަރ ކުރާނެ ފަރާތްތަކެއް ހޯދުމުގެ މަސައްކަތް ކުރަމުން, ރާއްޖޭގެ ބައެއް ކުންފުނިތަކުން އެކަމަށް ފަންޑް ދީފައިވާ ކަމަށް ވެއެވެ

މި ފޮތް ލިޔުމަށް ފަންޑްދިން ފަރާތްތަކުގެ ތެރޭގައި ވިލާ ޝިޕިންގ އެންޑް ޓްރޭޑިންގ ކޮންޕެނީއާއި, ވަން އެންޑް އޮންލީ ރީތިރަށް ރިސޯޓާއި ދިރާގާ ގުޅިފައި އޮންނަ ކޭބަލް އެންޑް ވަޔަރލެސްގެ އިތުރުން ސީޕްރިއާ ފަދަ ބައެއް ކުންފުނިތަކުން ސްޕޮންސަރޝިޕް ދިން ކަމަށް ވެއެވެ

އެއްލަކަ ފަންސާސްހާސް ޑޮލަރާއި ދެލައްކަ ޑޮލަރުގެ އަދަދަކަށް ޚަރަދުވާ މިކަމުގައި ސަރުކާރުގެ އެއްވެސް ފައިސާއެއް ހިމެނިފައެއް ނުވެއެވެ. އަދި ސަރުކާރުގެ ކުންފުންޏެއްގެ ފައިސާއެއްވެސް ހިމެނިފައި ނުވާކަމަށް ވެއެވެ

ޖަޒީރާއަށް މައުލޫމަތު ލިބިފައިވާ ގޮތުގައި ސުނާމީގެ ސަބަބުން ގައުމު އޮތް ހާލަތާ ގުޅިގެން ސަރުކާރުގެ އެއްވެސް ހިއްސާއެއް މިކަމަށް ކުރަން ބޭނުންނުވީ ރައީސް މައުމޫންގެ ސީދާ އެދިވަޑައިގަތުމުން ކަމަށް ވެއެވެ

”ރައީސް މައުމޫން ބޭނުންފުޅުނުވީ މިކަމުގައި ސަރުކާރުގެ އެއްވެސް ފައިސާއެއް ނުހިމަނަން“ ޖަޒީރާއަށް މައުލޫމާތު ފޯރުކޮށްދިން ފަރާތަކުން ބުންޏެވެ

ޖަޒީރާއަށް މައުލޫމާތު ލިބިފައިވާ ގޮތުގައި މިފަހަރުގެ ބަޔޮގްރަފީ ލިޔަނީ އިނގިރޭސިވިލާތުގެ މީހެއް ކަމަށްވާ ގްރާމް ވިލްސަން ކިޔާ މީހެކެވެ

މައުލޫމާތު ލިބިފައިވަނީ މިދިޔައަހަރުގެ ތެރޭގައިފެށި މިމަސައްކަތް ނިންމުމަށްފަހު މިއަދު (ރައީސް މައުމޫންގެ އުފަންދުވަހު) އެބަޔޮގްރަފީ ނެރުމަށް ހަމަޖެހިފައިވާ ކަމަށެވެ

ޖަޒީރާއަށް މައުލޫމާތު ލިބިފައިވާ ގޮތުގައި ގްރާމްސް ވިލްސަމް މިކަން ފެށީ ސްރީލަންކާ ހައިކޮމިޝަން މެދުވެރިކޮށް ރާއްޖެއައިސް ރައީސާ ބައްދަލުކުރުމަށް ފަހުގައެވެ. އަދި ވިޔަފާރި ވެރިންގެ އަތުން ފައިސާ ހޯދުމަށް ފެށި މަސައްކަތް އޭނާއަށް ކާމިޔާބު ވެފައި ނުވާކަމަށާއި ދެން އެކަމުގައި ފަންޑު ހޯދުމަށް މަސައްކަތް ފެށީ ދިވެހިން ކަމަށް ވެއެވެ

މިއީ ކުރިން ނެރެފައިވާ ބަޔޮގްރަފީގެ އަޕްޑޭޓެއް ކަމަށްވެސް ޖަޒީރާއަށް ވަނީ މައުލޫމާތު ލިބިފަ އެވެ

Govt. calls to ensure safety of Maldivian students

30 December 2007
Report: Soodh


The Government of Maldives has requested the Government of Pakistan to extend all possible assistance and support to ensure the safety and wellbeing of Maldivian students in Pakistan following the state of turmoil brought on by the tragic assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.

The request was made to the Government of Pakistan, by Abdulla Shahid, Minister of Foreign Affairs in a letter sent to Inam ul Haque, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Pakistan.

Minister Shahid also spoke to His Excellency Muhammad Anwar Chohan, High Commissioner of Pakistan to the Maldives, and reiterated his request for assistance and support to any Maldivian student who may be affected by the situation in Pakistan. The Maldives’ Honorary Consul General in Karachi, Zafar A. Tapal is also monitoring the situation and enquiring after Maldivian nationals in Pakistan. In case of an emergency, all Maldivian students and their parents are advised to contact the Honorary Consul General, who’s contact number in Pakistan is +92-21-4386835.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is closely monitoring the situation and will facilitate assistance to Maldivian students in Pakistan affected by the situation. The focal point at the Ministry in this regard is Hussain Shareef, Executive Director, and Ministry of Foreign Affairs and can be contacted at the Ministry on 3323408.

Business down by 10 % during December – Taxi Centers

30 December 2007
Report: Soodh

Taxi Centers have revealed that business is down by 10% during this month. Centers reveal that this is a normal phenomenon as this part of the year coincides with school holidays and many have gone out of the country or to the atolls for holidays. Centers also reveal that normally during December, as compared to other months of the year, business usually goes down considerably.

Decreased business cannot be blamed on the recent increase in taxi fares but that can only be confirmed when the new academic new year commence.

However taxi driver informed Miadhu that business is not bad at all and even with the recent increase in taxi fare on the 1 of December, he hardly gets free time. He informed that most occupants now a days offer him Mrf 20 note or more and that he hardly sees small change.

Transport Ministry recently authorized the increase in taxi fares effective 1of December.

Transport Ministry said although the ministry stipulated the maximum fare per taxi trip and maximum charge a taxi center may levy on a taxi, the right to charge lower than stipulated is always the prerogative of the taxi center or the driver.

Transport Ministry also revealed that rates which were revised on 1 December were introduced in 2004 and that since then price petrol has increased 80.73% per liter.

Taxis now charge MRF 20 for a trip between 6.00is to 12.00 midnight and MRF 25.00 from midnight till 6.00am. If baggage is carried an additional MRF 5 is charged. Hourly charges are revised as MRF110 per hour, MRF 550 for 6 hours, MRF 840 per 12 hours and MRF 1400 for 24 hours. A taxi center charges MRF600 from each taxi operating under the center’s license.

Transport Ministry has revealed the fares were revised after discussions with all concerned. Transport Ministry also reported that the main reason for the increase was due high fuel prices and increased price of spare parts required for proper maintenance of taxis.

އިސްލާހު ގެނެވެން އޮތީ އެއް ކެންޑިޑޭޓް ނެރެގެން ކަމަށް ވާނަމަ އެކަންވެސް އިއްތިހާދުން ކުރާނެ: އިބްރާ

ު

މިހާރު އަމަލުކުރާ ގާނޫން އަސާސީ ނިމި އާ ގާނޫން އަސާސީއަކަށް އަމަލުކުރުމާ ދެމެދު ގައުމު ހިންގުމަށް ވަގުތީ ސަރުކާރެއް ގާއިމް ނުކުރެވުނަސް, އެމަސައްކަތުގައި އުޅޭ ޕާޓީތަކުގެ ގުޅިފައިވާ އިއްތިހާދު ރޫޅިގެން ނުދާނެ ކަމުގައި އެ އިއްތިހާދުން ބުނެފި އެވެ

އިންތިގާލީ ސަރުކާރާ ބެހޭ މައުލޫމާތު އާއްމުންނަށް ފޯރުކުރުމަށްޓަކައި އެއިއްތިހާދުން އިއްޔެ ބޭއްވި ސެމިނާރގައި ޖަޒީރައިން ދެންނެވި ސުވާލަކަށް އިއްތިހާދުގައި ހިމެނޭ ސޯޝަލް ލިބަރަލް ޕާޓީގެ އިސްވެރިޔާ އިބްރާހީމް އިސްމާއީލް ވިދާޅުވީ މައުމޫނާ ވާދަކުރުމަށް އެއްކެނޑިޑޭޓަކު ނެގުމުގެ މަރުހަލާއަށް އަދި އިއްތިހާދުގެ މަސައްކަތް ނުދާކަމަށާއި އިއްތިހާދުގެ މިވަގުތުގެ މަސައްކަތަކީ ރާއްޖޭގައި ދެން ބޭއްވޭ ރިޔާސީ އިންތިހާބަކީ މިނިވަން މުސްތަގިއްލު އިންތިހަބަކަށް ހެދުން ކަމަށެވެ

”އެކަން ކުރުން އިއްތިހާދުގެ މިހާރުގެ މަސައްކަތަކީ. ވަގުތީ ސަރުކާރެއް ބޭނުންވެޔޭ މިއިއްތިހާދުން މިބުނަނީ. އެކަން ނެވިނަމަވެސް އިއްތިހާދު ރޫޅިގެންނެއް ނުދާނެ. ދެންއޮތްގޮތާމެދު ވިސްނާނަން“ އިބުރާ ވިދާޅުވިއެވެ

އިބުރާ ވިދާޅުވީ އިއްތިހާދުގެ ބޭނުމަކީ މައުމޫނުގެ ވެރިކަން ނިންމާ ރާއްޖެއަށް އިސްލާހް ގެނައުން ކަމަށެވެ. އެކަން ނިމުމުގެ ކުރިން އިއްތިހާދު ރޫޅިގެން ނުދާނެ ކަމަށެވެ

”އިސްލާހް ގެނައުމަށްޓަކައި މައުމޫނާ ވާދަކުރަން އެއްކެނޑިޑޭޓަކު ނެރެން ޖެހިއްޖިއްޔާ ނެރޭނީ އެއް ކެނޑިޑޭޓަކު. އެކަމަކު ރަސްމީކޮށް އަދި އެކަމެއް ނުނިންމަން. ސަބަބަކީ މިހާރު މި ދައްކަނީ އެވާހަކަތަކެއް ނޫން. މިދައްކަނީ އިންތިހާބުގައި މައުމޫނާ ވާދަކުރާ ވާހަކައެއް ނޫން. އިންތިހާބު މިނިވަން ކުރެވޭނެ ގޮތްތަކެއްގެ ވާހަކަ. މައުމޫނާ ވާދަކުރުން އަދި އެއީ ފަހުގެ މަރުހަލާއެއް. އިއްތިހާދުގެ ބޭނުމަކީ އިސްލާހް ގެނައުން. އެކަމަށްޓަކައި ކުރެވެން އޮތްހާ ކަމެއް އިއްތިހާދުން ކުރާނަން“ އިބުރާ ވިދާޅުވިއެވެ

އެމްޑީޕީގެ ޗެއަރޕާސަން މުހައްމަދު ނަޝީދު (އަންނި) ވިދާޅުވީ ހުރިހާ ޕާޓީއެއްގެވެސް ވިސްނުން ހުރީ އެއްކެނޑިޑޭޓަކު ނެރުންކަން ޕާޓީތަކުގެ ވާހަކަތަކުން އެނގޭނެ ކަމަށެވެ

”އިރާދަކުރެއްވިއްޔާ އިއްތިހާދު ނުއެއް ރޫޅޭނެ. އެއްގޮތް ނެތިއްޔާ އަނެއްގޮތް ހޯދާނެ އިއްތިހާދުން“ އަންނި ވިދާޅުވިއެވެ

އަދާލަތުޕަޓީގެ ތަރުޖަމާން އަސަދުﷲ ޝާފިއީ ވިދާޅުވީ ރާއްޖޭގެ ސިޔާސީ މަޝްރަހް ވަރަށް ރަނގަޅަށް އިއްތިހާދުން ބަލަމުންދާ ކަމަށާއި އިސްލާހު ގެންނަން އަލަން ޖެހޭ ހުރިހާ ފިޔަވަޅެއްވެސް އަޅުއްވާނެ ކަމަށެވެ

”އިއްތިހާދު މިއޮތީ ހޭލާ. ވަރަށް ރަނގަޅަށް ސިޔާސީ މަޝްރަހް ބަލަމުން ދަނީ“ އަސަދުﷲ ވިދާޅުވިއެވެ

15 Million rufiyaa granted as loan to fisherman

30 December 2007
Report: Ayya

Ministry of Fisheries this year has granted Mrf 15 Million as loan aid to those involved in fisher activities. Ministry informs that out of the 15 Million, 10 Million Ruffiya was allocated to projects involving completion of fishing vessels and upgrading of facilities and fisher equipments. Ministry also informed that the 10 million rufiyaa loan scheme was opened on 7 November 2007.

Ministry also revealed that the remaining 5 million was allocated for soft loans. Loans under this scheme were given to projects involving fisher activities such as preparation of dry fish as well as to new comers to this field. Ministry also informs that this scheme is a managed under the 2 phase of the Fisheries Development Program. The opportunity to apply for loans under the 2 phase of the fisheries development project was opened to public on the 21 of October of this year.

Fish catch until the October 2007 was 30% less than that of last year. When looked into tuna fisheries, tuna of worth Rf 106265662952 was exported by the 5 companies who fish in the 4 regions of Maldives. Mifco exported most fish, which is worth Rf 2778303600.

Government and private industries worked to catch skipjack tuna, buy them from fishermen, to freeze them and to make and export secondary products from it. This includes establishing factories and processing factories in Northern and Southern Maldives, and also to increase capacity in the current industrial centers. Main fisheries project was held in early 2007. P.A.F.Z. system established by the Fisheries Ministry to determine places where fish live by satellite imagery would surely bring healthy developments to the Maldives fisheries.

National Alliance supports one candidate policy – Dr. Waheed

30 December 2007
Report: Jaxleee

National Alliance, a political party in the process of attaining registration has revealed that they would support one candidate or if not as few candidates as possible to compete on behalf of all parties in the upcoming Presidential elections.

Dr. Mohamed Waheed Hassan Manik interim leader of the National Alliance said so in response to a question posed by Miadhu Daily at a news conference held last night to brief the press.

Speaking on behalf of the party, Dr. Mohamed Waheed Hassan Manik said that it would be best if one candidate represent all the parties in the upcoming presidential elections. He said that it is too soon to say that a candidate from the party would compete in the Presidential elections if his party gets registered before the elections.

The purpose of forming the National Alliance according to Dr. Waheed was to enhance way for Maldivians who wish to serve the country via a political party to proceed with new thoughts for the good of the Maldivian citizens. He said youths are most welcome to join the party.

Dr. Waheed said that priority will be given by the party to build a democratic environment in the Maldives, increase people’s self suffiency, building a peaceful society, building human resources and to provide good quality health care.

He said that that the national Alliance wants the people to live a peaceful, happy life independently as according to Islamic principles and Maldivian traditions. He also said that National alliance would form good relations with all political parties and said that they support the Opposition Alliance formed by the major opposition parties as well as New Maldives Movement. He also said that he personally supports an interim government if it could be done in the right way.

4 National Film Awards ceremony held

30 December 2007
Report: Ayya

The 4 National Film Awards were given away held last night at a special ceremony held at Alimas carnival last night. The stars, producers and directors were given a red carpet welcome. The ceremony which commenced at 9 pm was ended shortly before midnight. In addition to giving away of awards, special entertainment items were also held.

The best film award was given to film “Vehey Vaarey Therin “. The film received President’s Memeorial Cup and prize in addition cash prices. The best actor award was received by Yousuf Shaffeu(Youpey) for his outstanding performance in the film Vehey Vaarey Therin “. The best actress award was received by Niuma Mohamed for her role in the film “Kalaa aai Nulaa”. The best director award was given to Abdul Fathah for his superb direction of film “Vehey Vaarey Therin.

In addition the best supporting award was given to Ali Seeson. The best supporting actress role was played by Sheela Najeeb for her role in “Zuleyha”. The best child actor award was given to Marium Inaashaa for her role in the film “Zuleyha”. The best story award was given to Fathumath Nahula’s Zuleyha. The best original screen play was done by Abdul Fathah for “Vehey Vaarey Therin”. The best cinematography award was given to Ibrahim Moosa and Hassan Haleem.

Young female editor Sadhaa Ahmed was chosen as the best editor. The best back ground music award was given to Aiyuman Shareef for “Edhathuru”. Mohamed Amjad was chosen for the best sound award. The best costume designer award was given to Laila and Jaadhulla while best make up award was given to Fathah.

The best art direction was given to Fathah while the best cerography award was given to Ravi Faaroug and Sunithaa. The best male singer award was given to Abdul Hannan Moosa Didi and the best female singer was Shifaa Thaufeeg. The best melody was chosen “Loobeege Ahseyri” and best lyrics award was given Copy Mohamed Rasheed.

Ravi Faroug was chosen as the best director in the short film category. The best actor in this category was given to Ahmed Shaaz. The best narrative documentary film was “Quest of the better life”.

Speaking to Miadhu after the ceremony, actor Mohamed Manik said that he was satisfied with how the event was organized and that the event was a complete success.

The best male actor Yousuf Shafeeu said the judges were very fair in their decisions and that event was well organized.

“Actually I would say that Miadhu Crystal Award played a big role in bringing the National Awards to the level it was today, because Miadhu Crystal Award was organized to a high standard and forced the National Center for Arts to follow suit, everything went very well” said Yousuf Shafeeu.

A film star who did not receive any award said” every thing was good” and the “decisions of the judges was fair”.

Bhutto Killing update

30 December 2007
Report: Soodh

The Pakistani al-Qaeda leader, Baitullah Mehsud denies any involvement in the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto On Friday, the Pakistani government said they had tapped telephone calls which indicate Mehsud gave the order for the attack and that al-Qaeda was behind it.

However, through a spokesperson, he has stated that it is against his tribal traditions to attack a woman. The spokesperson says there is a conspiracy between the Pakistani government, the army and the intelligence agency.

Earlier an Asian newspaper reported someone had claimed responsibility for the attack in the name of al-Qaeda.

There is also criticism of the explanation that Ms Bhutto was not hit by bullets, but died of a head wound she received when she ducked during the attack. Bhutto's party says the authorities are trying to gloss over what really happened.
Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party has also dismissed government accusations that she was killed by al Qaeda, saying President Pervez Musharraf's embattled administration was trying to cover up its failure to protect her.

Sources claim that it is a phenomenon peculiar to the South Asian continent that their leaders are assassinated. Some assassinated leaders of South Asia include Aung San, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Liaqat Ali Khan, Solomon West Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike. Sheikh Mujibur Rehman. Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. Mohammed Daoud. Hafizullah Amin. Indira Gandhi. Zia-ur-Rehman. Zia-ul-Haq. Rajiv Gandhi. Vijaya Kumaratunga. Ranasinghe Premadasa. Gamini Dissanayake. Najibullah. King Birendra and family. Lakshman Kadirgamar and Benazir Bhutto.

ބޭނަޒީރު އަވަހާރަކޮށްލީ އަލްގައިދާތަ؟ ނޫނީ މުޝައްރަފުތަ؟

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ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ ބޮޑުވަޒީރުކަން ދެފަހަރެއްގެ މަތިން ކުރައްވާފައިވާ ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ ކުރީގެ ބޮޑުވަޒީރު ބޭނަޒީރު ބުއްޓޫ ބުރާސްފަތި ދުވަހު ވަނީ އަވަހާރަ ކޮށްލާފަ އެވެ. އެކަމަނާ އަވަހާރަ ކޮށްލާފައި ވަނީ މިހާރު ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ 30 އިންސައިތަ މީހުން އެޕާޓީއަކަށް ނިސްބަތްވާ ފާކިސްތާނު Pީޕަލްސް ޕާޓީގެ އެއްވުމެއްގައި ވާހަކަ ދައްކަވައިފައި ނިކުންނަވަނި ކޮށް ބަޑީގެ ހަމަލާ އެއް ދީގެން ނެވެ. ޚަބަރުތައް ބުނާގޮތުން ބުއްޓޫގެ ކަރުފުލަށާއި މެއަށްވެސް ބަޑީގެ އުންޑަތައް އަރާފައި ވެއެވެ. މީގެ 21 އަހަރުކުރިން ބައްޕާފުޅު ބުއްޓޫގެ ޕާޓީގެ ލަގަނުގައި ހިއްޕަވައިގެން ސިޔާސީ ދާއިރާއަށް ނިކުންނެވި ބޭނެޒީރު ބުއްޓޫ އަވަހާރަކޮށްލުމަށް ދިން ހަމަލާއާއި އަދި އެހަމަލާ ދިން ފަރާތާ މެދު ދުނިޔޭގެ މީޑިޔާގައި ދަނީ ތަފާތު ގޮތް ގޮތަށް ވާހަކަ ދެކެވެމުންނެވެ

ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ ދުވަހު ބައެއް ނޫސްތަކުގައި, އެކަމާނާއަށް ހަމަލާ ދިނުމަށް ބޭނުންކޮށްފައިވަނީ އޭކޭ 47 ގެ ބަޑިއެކޭ ބުނެފައިވާއިރު އަނެއްބައި ނޫސްތަކުގައި އެސަރަހައްދުން ފިސްތޯލައެއް ފެނިފައިވާ ކަމަށްބުނެ ހަމަލާދީފައިވަނީ ފިސްތޯލަކުންކަމަށް ބުނެއެވެ

ބޭނަޒީރު އަވަހާރަ ކޮށްލާފައި މި ވަނީ އެކަމަނާ އަމިއްލަފުޅަށް އަރުވާލެއްވިގެން ގައުމުން ބޭރުުގައި 8 އަހަރު އުޅުއްވުމަށް ފަހު މި އަހަރުގެ އޮކްޓޯބަރު މަހުގެ 18 ވަނަ ދުވަހު އެނބުރި ގައުމަށް ވަޑައިގަތްތާ 70 ވަނަ އަށް ވީ ދުވަހު އެވެ

އެކަމަނާ ގައުމަށް ވަޑައިގަތް ދުވަހުވެސް ވަނީ އެކަމަނާ އަވަހާރަކޮށްލަން ހަމަލާ ދީފަ އެވެ. އެހެން ނަމަވެސް އެހަމަލާއިން އެކަމަނާވަނީ ސަލާމަތްވެ ވަޑައިގެންފަ އެވެ. ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ ތާރީހުގައި, އަމިއްލަ އަށް މަރުވެގެން ދިން އެންމެ ނުރައްކާތެރި އެ ހަމަލާގައި 136 މީހުން މަރުވެފައި ވާއިރު ބޭނަޒީރު ވިދާޅުވީ މުޝައްރަފްގެ އަރިސް ބޭފުޅުންގެ ތެރޭގައި ހަނގުރާމަވެރިންނަށް ވަފާތެރި މީހުން އެބަ ތިބި ކަމަށާއި އެ ހަމަލާގެ ފަހަތުގައި ވަނީ އެ ފަދަ މީހުން ކަމަށެވެ. އެހަމަލާ އާ ގުޅިގެން ބުއްޓޫ ވިދާޅުވެފައި ވަނީ އެ ހަމަލާ ދިން މީހުންގެ މަގުސަދަކީ ޕާކިސްތާނަށް ގެނައުމަށް މަސައްކަތް ކުރަމުންދާ ޑިމޮކުރަސީއަށް ހުރަސް އެޅުން ކަމަށެވެ

އެމެރިކާގެ ރެޑްކްލިފްޓް ކޮލެޖާއި ހަވާޑު ޔުނިވާސިޓީން މަތީތައުލީމު ހާސިލުކޮށްފައިވާ ބުއްޓޫ އަވަހާރަކޮއްލި ބަޔަކާއި ބެހޭ ގޮތުން ނިއުޔޯކުޓައިމްސް ގައި ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ ސަރުކާރާއި ހަވާލާދީ ލިޔެފައިވަނީ އެކަމަނާ އަވަހާރަކޮށްލާފައި ވަނީ ސައިކަލެއްގައި އައި ދެމީހުން ކަމަށާއި އެކަން ކުރުމަށްފަހު އެދެމީހުން އަމިއްލައަށް ޖާނުގޮއްވާލައިގެން މަރުވެފައިވާ ކަމަށެވެ. ނަމަވެސް މަންޒަރުދުއް ބައެއް މީހުންނާ ހަވާލާދީ ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ ބައެއް ނޫސްތަކުން ބުނާ ގޮތުގައި އެވަގުތު އެތަނަށް އެފަދަ މީހަކު ވަދެ ހަމަލާއެއް ދިނުމަކީ ވާނެކަމެއް ނޫންނެވެ. ސަބަބެއް ކަމަށް އެމީހުން ބުނަނީ އެވަގުތު އެސަރަހައްދުގައި މީހުން ޖަމާވަފައި އޮތްވަރުން ސައިލެއްގައި އައި މީހަކަށްވެސް ބުއްޓޫ ނުފެންނާނެ ކަމަށެވެ. މިހެން ކަމުން އުފެދޭ ސުވާލަކީ ޕާކިސްތާނު ސަރުކާރުން އެބުނާ ގޮތަށް އެކަން ކޮށްފައި ވެދާނެ ބައެވެ.؟ ބުއްޓޫ އަވަހާރަކޮށްލީ ކޮންފަރާތެއްގެ އަތެއް އެކަމުގައި އޮވެގެންބާ އެވެ؟

ދެން އުފެދޭ ސުވާލަކީ އަލްގައިދާއިން ބުއްޓޫއަށް ހަމަލާދޭނެ ކަމުގެ އިންޒާރު ދީފައިވާއިރު, އެކަމަނާގެ ސަލާމަތީ ކަންކަން އެހާ ދޯދިޔާކޮށް ހުރީ ކީއްވެ ހެއްޔެވެ؟ އަލްގައިދާއިން ކަމަށް ބުނާ ބަޔަކު މީގެ ކުރިންވެސް ހަމަލާ ދިފައިވާ އިރުވެސް ސަލާމަތީ ކަންތައްތައް އެފެންވަރުގައި ހުރީ ކީއްވެގެން ހެއްޔެވެ؟

ގިނަބަޔަކު ގަބޫލުކުރާ ގޮތުގައި ދީނީ ހަރުކަށި ޖަމާއަތްތަކުގެ ނުރުހުން ބޭނަޒީރަށް އަމާޒުވެފައި ވިޔަސް, ބޭނަޒީރު އަވަހާރަކޮށްލުމަކީ އެ ޖަމާއަތްތަކަށް ފައިދާއެއް ކުރާނެ ކަމެއްތޯ މިއީ އުފެދޭ ސުވާލެކެވެ. މޮޑަރޭޓް އުސޫލުތަކަށް ތާއީދު ކުރައްވާ ބޭނަޒީރު އަލުން ވެރިކަމަށް ވަޑައިގެންފި ނަމަ, ދީނީ ގޮތުން ހައްދުފަހަނަޅައި ދިއުމާ ދެކޮޅަށް މަސައްކަތްކުރައްވާނެ ކަމަށް ވައުދުވެ ވަޑައިގެންފައި ވާއިރު ބައެއް ފަރާތްތަކުން ބުނަނީ ބޭނަޒީރުގެ ލެޔަށް ފެން ބޮވައިގެންފައި ވަނީ ދީނީ ހަރުކަށި ޖަމާއަތްތައް ކަމަށެވެ. އެއީ ބޭނަޒީރުގެ ވެރިކަމެއްގައި ހަނގުރާމަވެރިންގެ އާރާއި ބާރު ކެނޑިގެން ހިނގައިދާނެ ކަމުގެ ބިރަށެވެ. ނަމަވެސް އަނެއްކާ ވެސް އުފެދެނީ އެހެން ސުވާލެކެވެ. ކުރީގެ ބޮޑުވަޒީރު ނަވާޒް ޝަރީފަކީ ވެސް ދީނީ ގޮތުން މެދު މިނުގެ ވިސްނުންފުޅު ގެންގުޅުއްވާ ބޭފުޅަކަށް ވާއިރު އޭނާ އަށް ހަނގުރާމަވެރިންގެ އިންޒާރުތައް ކުރިމަތި ނުވަނީ ކީއްވެހެއްޔެވެ؟

ބުރާސްފަތި ދުވަހު ބޭއްވި އެޕާޓީގެ އެއްވުމެއްގައި ތަގުރީރު ކުރެއްވުމަށް ފަހު ކާރުކޮޅަށް އަރައިވަޑައިގަންނަވަނިކޮށް ބަޑިން ހަލަދީ އަވަހާރަކޮށްލި ބުއްޓޫ ފަސްތާނުލާވާފައި ވަނީ އެކަމަނާގެ އައިލާގެ ގިނަ ބޭފުޅުންގެ މަގުބަރާ ހުރި ޒިއާރަތުގަ އެވެ

އާއިލާގެ ގިނަ ފުޅުން ފަސްތާނު ލައްވާފައިވާ މި ތިން ގުއްބު ލީ ޒިޔާރަތުގައި އެކަމަނާގެ ސަންދޯންކޮޅު ތިރިކުރި އިރު ފިރިކަލުން އާސިފް ޒަރުދާރީ ކީރިތިކުރައްވަމުން ގެންދެވި އެވެ

ބޭނަޒީރުގެ ޕާކިސްތާން ޕީޕަލްސް ޕާޓީގެ ދިދައިގައ ހިމެނޭ ކަޅާއި ފެއްސާއި ރަތް ކުލައިގެ ފޮތިން ފޮރުވާފައިވާ ސަންދޯއްކޮޅު ގެނައި އިރު އެއްވެފައި ތިބި ސަޕޯޓަރުން ހަޅޭއްލަވަމުން ގެންދިޔަ އެވެ. ޕާކިސްތާނު ސަރުކާރުން އަލްގައިދާގެ ބޮލުގައި ބުއްޓޫ މަރުގެ ތުހުމަތު އަޅުވަމުން ދިޔަ ނަމަވެސް ބުއްޓޫއަށް ސަޕޯޓުކުރާ ފަރާތްތަކުން ބުނަމުން ގެންދަނީ މިމަރުގެ ޒިންމާ އުފުލަންޖެހޭނީ ޕާކިސްތާނުގެ ރައީސް މުޝައްރަފް ކަމަށެވެ

ބުއްޓޫ އަވަހާރަކޮށްލުމާ ގުޅިގެން މުޅި ޕާކިސްތާނުގައި ހަމަނުޖެހުންތައް ހިގައި މުޅިގައުމު ހުއްޓުމަކަށް އައިސްފައި ވާއިރު މިހާތަނަށް ވަނީ 32 މީހުން މަރުވެފަ އެވެ. ބުއްޓޫގެ މަރާ ގުޅިގެން ޕާކިސްތާނު އަސްކަރިއްޔާއިން ވަނީ އެގައުމުގައި ސަލާމަތީ ކަންތައްތައް ވެސް ވަރަށް ވަރުގަދަކޮށްފަ އެވެ

ބޭނަޒީރު ބުއްޓޫ އަވަހާރަ ކޮށްލުމާ ގުޅިގެން ދުނިޔޭގެ އެކިކަންކޮޅު ތަކުން ދަނީ އެކަންކުއްވެރި ކުރަމުންނެވެ. އެގޮތުން އެމެރިކާ އާއި ރަޝިޔާ އަދި އިގިރޭސި ވިލާތްފަދަ ގައުމުތަމުގެ ލީޑަރުންވެސް ވަނީ މިކަންތައް ކުއްވެރިކޮށް ފައެވެ

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Opposition Alliance calls on President to join them

29 December 2007
Report: Soodh

At the first protest staged by Opposition Alliance, invitation was extended to President Maumoon and Finance Minister Qasim to join the alliance and work for the benefit of the people.

The protest was participated by all parties and societies that form the Alliance. In this regard key leaders like Dr. Hassan, Dr. Shaheed, Mohamed Nasheed (Anni), Mohamed Nasheed (Colonel) and Mohamed Jameel. In addition to some MP of the Special Majlis, Mohamed Musthafa Hussain, Principal of the EPS School also participated.

Mohamed Nasheed (Anni ) speaking at the gathering attended by more than 500 members and well wishers called on the Finance Minister Qasim Ibrahim to resign his government position and join the alliance to serve the people. Anni claimed that President Maumoon‘s “situation room” would try their best to discredit Qasim of his services to the people. Anni warned Qasim to be wary of the President as he may finally blame Qasim for the consequences that may arise due to high expenditure of the government. Anni also warned Minister Qasim that he may have to face the same fate as that of the President Maumoon at the very last minute.

Mohamed Nasheed (Colonel) speaking at the gathering called on Qasim to step aside if do not desire the good services he has rendered to the people to be “a river of blood”. Colonel said the Alliance is calling for an interim government as they do not wish Maldives to be in a situation similar to Pakistan.

President of Adhaalath Party Sheikh Hussain Rasheed said interim government is step taken towards a free and fair election. He said Maldivians are a group of people with “fish blood” and Mohamed Amin, the President of the country was deposed with the same hot blooded spirit. He said it would be an easy task for the people to get rid of President Maumoon and called on the President to join the Alliance before “he faces a situation which he might not like”.

Mohamed Musthafa Hussain who joined the Alliance recently said the new constitution would be of no use unless people respect it and abide by it. He called on the people to be patient as the rewards of the new constitution would be experienced a while later.

MP of the Special Majlis for Baa Atoll said the objective of the Alliance was to make the road to the new constitution orderly and peaceful.

Anni speaking at the rally said historically constitutions in Maldives were formed as an “easy fitting shirt for the leaders”. However he said the Alliance wants to form a constitution that would be in the best interest of the people.

Colonel continuing his address at the rally said the main obstacle faced MP of the Special Majlis in providing a constitution that protects the rights and welfare of the people is Qasim. He cited Qasim’s “change of sides” as the main reason. Colonel further said the main reason why he did not vote to elect Qasim to the position of Speaker of the Special Majlis was his fear that it may come to this situation.

“People’s Majlis has decided to award a 100 million rufiyaa subsidy to fisherman, I call on Qasim and President Maumoon not make use the money as a campaign tool, or they might face bitter consequences” Colonel said.

The rally was brought to a close at around 6 pm.

KD cannot prove he informed LP of his decision - Nasheed

29 December 2007
Report: Jaxlee

Commissioner of Elections KD Ahmed Manik could not prove that, according to the regulations, within 30 days he informed Ibra that his party could not be registered, Minister of Information and Legal Reform Mohamed Nasheed has said.

In a press conference held yesterday at “Fansavees”, Nasheed said that instead of informing Ibra that his party could not be registered, KD is talking about some ID cards. Nasheed said that as the regulation has not been acted upon, liberal party has the right to be active as a political party in the political scenario unless a court order is issued and KD should also have to believe it.

Nasheed said that when looked in to the regulation of political parties issued by a Presidential decree in the year 2005, Article 12 & 15 clearly shows evidence that liberal party is registered.

“According to article 15, once the party hold registration meeting, they have to submit to the commissioner to attain registration within 30 days. And within 30 days after submission, the commissioner must inform the party that they could not be registered. Very clearly it states that. If not, articles 15 says that that party would be registered and that party has the right to function as a political party and the registration certificate should be issued by the Commissioner if such a thing happens” Nasheed said.

Minister further said that the purpose of that clause was that it might take a long time for government to respond for the matter and the attorney general has also not said anything against that.

Nasheed said that he is not talking for the sake of Ibra, but he is speaking the truth according to the regulations.

According to a Press release from the Commissioner’s Office Ibra on four different occasions had submitted 3989 membership forms. The release detailed how the Commissioner disqualified 2372 names. The Commissioner’s release points out that, out of the 2372 names, 1371 are names already registered as members of other parties, 12 names that has been previously been submitted to the Commissioner’s Office to be registered as members of parties that are under registration process and 989 members were disqualified for failure to provide complete information.

However Ibra said the Commissioner is in possession of 3000 membership forms which were verified and accepted by the Commissioner himself and that this was duly informed to him as well. He said that among the documentations submitted to the Commissioner’s office were the agreements signed by those members, who the Commissioner claimed were members of other parties, requesting the Commissioner to cancel their previous membership and duly register them as members of SLP. Ibra further questioned how the 1371 names noted by the Commissioner can be members of other parties when 900 of the 1371 had never signed up to become member of any other party.

Ibra noted that dispute between the Commissioner and Liberal Party arose when the Commissioner imposed an extra legal requirement on the Party by demanding that the Party submit photocopies of National Identity Cards of some 1383 party members.

The view of the Party, that the demand for the submission of the national ID cards was an extra legal requirement was supported in writing by the then Acting Attorney General, Minister of Information and Arts, Mohamed Nasheed revealed the Media Release. However, the media release points out that Commissioner ignored the legal opinion of the Attorney General. He also noted that this extra legal requirement was not imposed on any other party before.

According to Ibra the 30 day period granted to the Commissioner by the Political Party Regulations to inform the party of his decision expired on the 2 of this month. He noted that during the 30 day period Commissioner had not informed him whether the party would be registered or not and KD Ahmed Manik has so far failed to prove that he informed Ibra that his party could not be registered.

Tourism Ministry to hold survey

29 December 2007
Report: Ayya

Tourism Minister Dr. Mahmoud Shaugee has said that a survey will be done on the resorts where more than 60% of their work force is Maldivian. Dr. Shaugee said this, speaking at the meeting held to release the regulation on operating tourist guest house in Maldives last Thursday.

Minister said that some resorts employ more than 60% Maldivians as their work force while others are saying that the don’t get Maldivians for jobs. Regulations stipulate that 50% of the resort’s work force should be Maldivians.

So, we need to find the reasons why these resorts employ more Maldivians and show it to the other resorts, Minister said. Dr. Shaugee said that this survey will find out why these Maldivians remain in job, salary, other allowances, food and accommodation and also the reason for their good relationship with the resort management.

If Maldivians don’t get employment opportunities in tourist resorts, one of the main objectives of developing tourism industry cannot be achieved and while some resorts say that they don’t get enough Maldivians for jobs, thousands of students finish O level and A level exam every year, Dr. Shagee said. He also said that it is important for youth to get employment opportunities, or else chances of them going in the wrong path increases and thus, it is important for resorts to increase salary and other allowances paid to their staff.

The Minister said that people would only go to jobs at resorts if the salary is good as they have to stay away from their families. Dr. Shaugee said that he believes the salary of resort staffs are less when compared to the income the tourism industry earns.

Year 2007, a successful one - Maumoon

29 December 2007
Report: Soodh

Maumoon Abdul Gayoom has said that this year was a very successful year for the people of Maldives.

He made the statement in a column written under the subject “To be thankful to Allah’s blessing” in the “Dheenuge Magu”.

In the column Gayoom noted that year 2007 was a year which took Maldives to new heights in development. He wrote that social and educational developments achieved provided a new stimulus to the progress of the country.

Referring to the recent Unity Day marked last Wednesday, Gayoom said it the day provided an opportunity to remember the events of the tsunami of 2004. President Gayoom noted that Maldivians should aspire to be law abiding people who follow noble Quruan and Prophet Muhammad’s sunnah.

In conclusion President Gayoom noted that yesterday was the last Friday of the year 2007 and wished the people a very happy new year.


Addu can be another UK- Dr. Hassan Hameed

29 December 2007
Report: Soodh

Dr. Hassan Hameed Rector of Maldives College of Higher Education has stated that Addu Atoll can be made to another UK or Australia. He made the statement speaking at the graduation ceremony held at the Hithadhoo Campus of the College.

He noted that the vision of the college was to make the Addu Atoll in to another UK or another Australia but that cannot be achieved by focusing on Addu Atoll only. He noted the aim of the people of the Addu should be to become good teachers and to make the Addu Center a regional center so that all students from other islands in the region can join.

“We can actually make Addu Atoll to be another UK; can the people of the Maldives make Addu to be another Australia? This is a vision we should be working to achieve, we cannot achieve this by focusing on Addu only, everybody must become teachers for a very special reason, we have to make this Center to be regional Center for all other students in the region to come and join” said Dr. Hameed.

Dr. Hameed said Addu has glorious history, a history where Addu was center of learning. He said he wanted this history to be repeated.

“We know that Addu was once a center for learning, we want to make the history to be repeated so that Addu can once again a great center of learning, as it was before” said Dr. Hameed.

World condemns Bhutto killing

29 December 2007
Report: Soodh

The assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto late Thursday evening shocked the world. Condemnation of the assassination was swift and strong and came from across the globe. World leaders were quick to condemn the extremist and murderous action and have called on the Pakistani government for a full investigation. Bhutto was assassinated Thursday in a gun and bomb attack as she left an election rally in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi.

Condemning the attack, US President George W. Bush said that "The United States strongly condemns this cowardly act by murderous extremists," and called upon the Pakistani government to bring those who have committed this crime to justice.

Obama, US Democratic Presidential contender said that he was “shocked and saddened by the death of Benazir Bhutto in this terrorist atrocity. She was a respected and resilient advocate for the democratic aspirations of the Pakistani people. We join with them in mourning her loss, and stand with them in their quest for democracy and against the terrorists who threaten the common security of the world”.

But Hillary Clinton, US Democratic Presidential contender suggested that Pakistani security forces or military might have been involved and called for an independent, international investigation into Benazir Bhutto’s assassination

Ban Ki-moon, UN Secretary General strongly condemned the attack and called for “perpetrators to be brought to justice as soon as possible."

"This was a cowardly terrorist act designed to destabilize democratic elections...” British PM Gordon Brown said. The British government strongly condemned this act.

India said that the assassination of Bhutto was sad news for them and said that this would cause obstacles in democracy.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, condemning the attack said that “the subcontinent has lost an outstanding leader who worked for democracy and reconciliation in her country."

The Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi described Bhutto as “a woman who wanted to fight her battle until the end with just one weapon - that of dialogue and political discussion." He condemned the act in strongest of words.

The Vatican called the assassination "terrible and tragic."
French President Nicolas Sarkozy condemned in the strongest possible terms and called it a heinous act of terrorism.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said Thursday that China was shocked at the assassination of Pakistan's opposition leader and former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and strongly condemned the terrorist attack.

Pakistan's president Pervez Musharraf has appealed for peace in Pakistan following the assassination of former Prime Minister and opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.

A report on state-run PTV said that Musharraf appealed to the nation to keep calm "so that the evil designs of terrorists can be defeated."

Nawaz Sharif, Pakistani opposition leader, vowed to continue Bhutto's work after the assassination and said he shared the grief of "the entire nation".

Speaking outside the hospital where Bhutto died he said: "I assure you that I will fight your war from now on," he told Bhutto's supporters. "I share your sorrow and grief along with the entire nation."

"Benazir Bhutto was also my sister, and I will be with you to take the revenge for her death," he said.

The Pakistani government has said it has evidence al-Qaeda was responsible was for the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.
Javed Cheema, Pakistani interior ministry spokesman, said security forces had intercepted a phone call from an al-Qaeda leader in Pakistan after Bhutto's death on Thursday.

"We have intelligence intercepts indicating that al Qaeda leader Baitullah Mehsud is behind her assassination," Cheema said.

Violence continued to grip Pakistan following Bhutto's funeral in the southern province of Sindh, with the death toll from disturbances across the country rising to 31.

Maldives condemn Benezir Bhutto killing

29 December 2007
Report: Soodh

Maldives has strongly condemned the assassination of the opposition leader and former prime minister of Pakistan, Benazir Bhutto.

A Press statement from the foreign Ministry said the Maldives strongly condemned the assassination of the opposition leader and former Prime Minister of Pakistan Benazir Bhutto and it was with great sadness and sorrow the government and the people of Maldives received this tragic news.

“Bhutto was a brave and well-loved politician and her untimely death is a terrible to her country” the press statement said.

It further said that this tragic event must serve to strengthen our resolve to combat and eliminate the global scourge of terrorism and the people who perpetrate such unspeakable acts must never be allowed to break our common will to enjoy lives free of fear and hate to live together in peace and harmony.

A Press statement said that Pakistan is a very close friend of the Maldives and the two countries are linked by strong regional ties as well as by the bonds of Islamic fraternity.

Further, President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom sent a message of sympathy to the President of Pakistan, Pervez Musharraf, on learning of the assassination of the country’s Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. He said that he was deeply shocked and saddened to learn of the assassination of Bhutto. He condemned this senseless act of terror in the strongest possible terms.

President noted that Bhutto had served Pakistan for many years, and during her years as Prime Minister, played an important role in regional and world affairs. He also said that Bhutto was a very good friend of the Maldives.

President further said that the Maldives has long been a strong supporter of the global fight against terrorism. He expressed his hope that the fight against terrorism will bear fruit and thereby lead to greater peace and harmony for the people of South Asia.

In the message, he also conveyed his profound sympathy to Bhutto’s bereaved family and to the families of all those who were killed by the suicide blast.

President also sent a message of sympathy to Benazir Bhutto’s husband, Asif Ali Zardari, on hearing the news of the assassination of his beloved wife.
A condolence book will be kept in the High Commission of Pakistan in Male’ from 30th and 31st December 2007 from 1000-1400 Hrs.

Pakistan accuses al Qaeda of killing Bhutto

29 December 2007
Courtesy: Resuters

Benazir Bhutto was laid to rest next to her father in the family mausoleum on Friday after the opposition leader's assassination plunged Pakistan into crisis and triggered violent protests.

Pakistan's government said it had evidence al Qaeda was responsible for killing Bhutto in a suicide attack at an election rally on Thursday, but her party dismissed the claim.

The 54-year-old's death stoked fears a January 8 election meant to return Pakistan to civilian rule could be put off amid a backlash threatening to engulf embattled President Pervez Musharraf.

"We have intelligence intercepts indicating that al Qaeda leader Baitullah Mehsud is behind her assassination," an Interior Ministry spokesman said. Mehsud, based near the Afghan border, is one of Pakistan's most wanted militant leaders.

But a spokesman for Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party rejected the official explanation.

"The government is nervous," he said. "They are trying to cover up their failure" to provide adequate security.

Troops were called out to quell protests in Bhutto's home province of Sindh, where she had huge support, particularly among the rural poor. Officials said 31 people, including four policemen, had been killed since Bhutto's assassination.

Tens of thousands of mourners cried and beat their heads as Bhutto was borne from her ancestral home to the domed mausoleum.

Bhutto's husband, Asif Ali Zardari, wept as he accompanied her coffin, draped with the green, red and black tricolor of her party, on the 7-km (4-mile) journey to the tomb in the dusty village of Garhi Khuda Bakhsh.

He then prayed there with the couple's three children, son Bilawal, 19, and daughters Bakhtawar, 17 and Aseefa, 14.

Many mourners chanted slogans against Musharraf and the United States, which has long backed the former army general in the hope he can maintain stability in the nuclear-armed country racked by Islamist violent.

"Shame on the killer Musharraf, shame on the killer U.S.," mourners cried.

Others wept in despair. "Bhutto was my sister and Bhutto was like my mother," cried farmer Imam Baksh. "With her death, the world has ended for us."

Musharraf, who seized power in a military coup in 1999 but left the army last month to become a civilian president, has appealed for calm and blamed Islamist militants for the killing.

But many accused him of failing to protect Bhutto, who died in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, home of the Pakistani army.

SMOULDERING VEHICLES

World leaders urged Pakistan to stay the course towards democracy, as Bhutto's death rattled markets and triggered a flight to less risky assets such as bonds and gold.

"Unrest in Pakistan is eroding the market sentiment dramatically as Pakistan, unlike North Korea or Iran, is known to really have nuclear weapons," said Koichi Ogawa, chief portfolio manager at Daiwa SB Investments.

In Sindh, authorities issued an order to shoot violent protesters on sight. Hundreds of cars, trucks and buses smoldered in the interior of the province and crowds of men set up road blocks and chanted slogans against Musharraf.

Meanwhile, a blast at an election meeting in Pakistan's troubled northwest killed six people including a candidate for the party that supports Musharraf, police said.

There were also sporadic protests elsewhere in the country and one person was killed in the eastern city of Lahore.

Bhutto returned home from self-imposed exile in October, hoping to become prime minister for a third time.

But as she left the rally she stood to wave to supporters from the sun-roof of her bullet-proof car. An attacker shot at her before blowing himself up, police and witnesses said.

The Interior Ministry said Bhutto had not been shot, nor hit by shrapnel, but had been killed when the force of the explosion smashed her head against a lever on the sun-roof. Security officials had earlier said she was shot in the head and neck.

She was buried alongside her father, former Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who was hanged in 1979 after being deposed by a military coup. Her two brothers, Murtaza and Shahnawaz, who both died in unexplained circumstances, are also buried in the mausoleum she herself had ordered to be built.

MUSHARRAF UNDER ATTACK

The United States, which relies on Pakistan as an ally against al Qaeda and the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan, had championed the Harvard- and Oxford-educated Bhutto.

Her death dashed U.S. hopes of a power-sharing agreement between her and Musharraf.

President George W. Bush urged Pakistanis to honor Bhutto's memory by going ahead with the election.

"Elections stand as they were announced," Prime Minister Mohammadmian Soomro told reporters. But analysts said the assassination, following a wave of suicide attacks and the worsening of an Islamist insurgency, could make this impossible.

"If it's left to Pervez Musharraf then he will try to ram it through but on the ground it's going to be very difficult," said Talat Masood, a retired general and political analyst.

"Now voices are being raised that he is the problem and not the solution as the Americans think," he said. "He may be a casualty as a result of that."

Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who was deposed by Musharraf in the 1999 coup, said his party would boycott the January election and blamed Musharraf for the instability.

Musharraf imposed a state of emergency in November in what was seen as an attempt to stop the judiciary from vetoing his re-election as president. He lifted emergency rule this month.

A State Department spokesman said Washington would oppose a return to emergency law, but said he was unaware of anyone suggesting that might happen.

In 1988, aged just 35, Bhutto became the Muslim world's first democratically elected woman prime minister. Deposed in 1990, she was re-elected in 1993, and ousted again in 1996 amid charges of corruption she said were politically motivated.

Bhutto escaped unhurt from a suicide attack in October that killed at least 139 people.

She had spoken of al Qaeda plots to kill her. But she also had enemies in other quarters including among the powerful intelligence services and some allies of Musharraf.

Friday, December 28, 2007





Tears for Bhutto mingle with anger against Musharraf

28 December 2007
Courtesy: Reuters

NAUDERO, Pakistan (Reuters) - Sounds of grief filled the dusty air of a southern Pakistani village on Friday as more than 100,000 people attended the funeral of slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

Her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, wept as he accompanied the closed coffin on the 7-km (4-mile) journey to the family mausoleum at Garhi Khuda Bakhsh, a village set among paddy fields in the southern province of Sindh.

The two-time premier was gunned down by an assassin who then blew himself up in an attack that killed a total of 16 people at the end of an election campaign rally in Rawalpindi on Thursday.

Zardari appealed to the crowd massed outside the family home to give pall bearers room to slide the casket, draped with the green, red and black tricolor of Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party, into the back of the ambulance.

Bhutto's son Bilawal, 19, and daughters Bakhtawar, 17 and Aseefa, 14, prayed with their father at the tomb.

Their grief was shared by millions of poor Pakistanis, particularly in the rural hinterland of Sindh, the Bhutto family's political stronghold.

"Bhutto was my sister and Bhutto was like my mother," cried Imam Baksh, a farmer, among the throng lining the road. "With her death, the world has ended for us."

Mourners sobbed, some beat their heads and chests, and others vented anger with the government of President Pervez Musharraf, as Bhutto's husband and son lowered her body into the grave.

Even political foes were shocked by the death of a woman many had criticized as a feudal leader who cultivated populist appeal while enjoying the riches of the family dynasty.

Bhutto, 54, had returned to Pakistan in October from more than eight years of self-imposed exile after reaching an understanding with President Pervez Musharraf, in power since a military coup in 1999.

Days after surviving a suicide attack on her homecoming parade in Karachi on October 19 that killed at least 139, Bhutto visited Garhi Khuda Bakhsh to pray at the tomb of her father, buried there after being overthrown and hanged three decades ago.

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Pakistan's first popularly elected prime minister, lies alongside his sons Murtaza and Shahnawaz in the white-domed mausoleum Benazir Bhutto ordered to be built.

Many had speculated that Bhutto and Musharraf, who quit the army last month to become a civilian president, could have ended up sharing power after a January 8 parliamentary election.

Bhutto, whose return to Pakistan was encouraged by the United States, had spoken out strongly against Islamist violence and had been threatened by pro-Taliban militants.

Educated at Harvard and Oxford, Bhutto was an articulate champion of democracy, although enemies say she was corrupt.

Islamist militants linked to al Qaeda are among the suspects, but many of her supporters blamed Musharraf and the United States for her death.

Chants of "Shame on the killer Musharraf, shame on the killer U.S." were heard from the throng lining the road and standing on rooftops.

Some protesters chanted defiance: "No matter how many Bhuttos you will kill, a Bhutto will emerge from each house."

Ordinary Pakistanis are filled with cynicism concerning the military intelligence agencies, even though Musharraf himself has been targeted by al Qaeda assassins.

"Agencies have killed Bhutto," said Ali Mohammad, an aged party supporter. "If it was the work of al Qaeda why is Musharraf still surviving?"

Two dozen dead in Bhutto protests

28 December 2007
Report: Reuters

KARACHI (Reuters) - Protests erupted in Pakistan for a second day on Friday after the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto and the violence was worst in her home province in the south.

Officials said 24 people, including four policemen, had died since former prime minister Bhutto was murdered on Thursday in a gun and bomb attack after an election rally in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.

The violence intensified on Friday into some of the worst political disturbances in years in nuclear-armed Pakistan.

All but one of the dead were killed in Sindh province in the south, Bhutto's home province and her main base of support.

Particularly hard hit was Hyderabad city where troops were called out to restore calm after an order to police to shoot violent protesters on sight failed to quell the trouble.

"The army is being moved into the city but there's no decision on imposing a curfew," said provincial interior ministry secretary Ghulam Mohtaram.

Officials had said they feared the disturbances would intensify after Bhutto's funeral at her family's ancestral home in the province on Friday afternoon.

Meanwhile, in an apparent militant attack, a bomb at an election meeting in the country's troubled northwest killed six people including a candidate in January polls for the party that supports President Pervez Musharraf, police said.

Islamist militants, probably linked to al Qaeda, top the list of suspects for Bhutto's murder.

In Hyderabad, police and witnesses said protesters had set fire to about 25 banks, 100 vehicles and foreign fast-food outlets. Several train coaches were also torched.

"A LOT OF DAMAGE"

The streets of Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city and its commercial capital, were largely deserted with shops shuttered and paramilitary troops and police patrolling.

In the east of the city, more than 2,000 people attacked a police station and set it on fire. They stole some weapons and torched cars outside, police said.

"Since last night a lot of damage has been caused. Shops, cars and government buildings are being burnt," said senior Karachi police official Azhar Ali Farooqi.

Fires also blazed across the interior of Sindh.

A Reuters reporter traveling from Karachi to the Bhuttos' home district of Larkana, where Bhutto was buried, said he saw hundreds of smoldering vehicles and many shops on fire.

Protesters shouted slogans against Musharraf, Bhutto's old rival.

Musharraf condemned Bhutto's killing, appealed for calm and declared three days of mourning. Banks and schools were closed across the country.

Nawaz Sharif, another opposition leader and former prime minister, had called for a nationwide strike on Friday.

Violence broke out in Pakistan's other provinces and one person was killed in the eastern city of Lahore, police said.

In the northwestern city of Peshawar two offices of pro-Musharraf political parties were torched, a witness said.

Protesters in the southwestern province of Baluchistan set fire to a railway station, several banks, government vehicles and offices of a pro-Musharraf party, police said.

In the city of Multan in Punjab province, a crowd damaged seven banks and torched eight petrol stations. Protesters took to the streets of Muzaffarabad in Pakistani Kashmir.

In the Swat valley, where the army has been fighting pro-Taliban militants, a blast at an election meeting of the pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League (Q) party killed six people including a party candidate in the polls, police said.