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1. AZHAR AJAB wrote at 18.02.2009 - 18:40 hours
hi, i am AZHAR from tararkhel kashmir. I\'m very impressed by the personality of Sardar Shaukat Ali Kashmiri.He is very honest and good heart.
Homepage: not entered   Email: tahaa999[AT]yahoo.com

2. Monty wrote at 14.04.2008 - 22:16 hours
I'm very impressed to know the UKPNPs work how they are striving for united, independent, secular, democratic and prosperous Kashmir. I salute all who are doing the same job for their motherland. My support will be always with you.
And would like to convey my respect to Sardar Shaukat Ali Kashmiri, though I know about him a very little. Special thanks for Jamil. He is doing the great job to inform people over the world. Do keep it up… May God bless you and fulfill your wishes soon.

Warm wishes
Monty
Bangladesh
Homepage: not entered   Email: angur77[AT]yahoo.com

3. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 01.02.2008 - 12:40 hours
His Excellency
The President of the European Parliament,
Brussels.

His Excellency
The President of France ,
Paris.

His Excellency
The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom ,
London.

Her Excellency
Ms. Condaleeza Rice,
Secretary of State,
United States of America,
Washington D.C.

Professor Klaus Schwab,
World Economic Forum,
Geneva.

All through their respective Ambassodors, High Commissioners and representatives.


Excellency,

I am the Chief Justice of Pakistan presently detained in my residence since November 3, 2007 pursuant to some verbal, and unspecified, order passed by General Musharraf.
I have found it necessary to write to you, and others, because during his recent visits to Brussels , Paris , Davos and London General Musharraf has slandered me, and my colleagues, with impunity in press conferences and other addresses and meetings. In addition he has widely distributed, among those whom he has met, a slanderous document (hereinafter the Document) entitled: “PROFILE OF THE FORMER CHIEF JUSTICE OF PAKISTAN”. I might have let this go unresponded but the Document, unfortunately, is such an outrage that, with respect, it is surprising that a person claiming to be head of state should fall to such depths as to circulate such calumny against the Chief Justice of his own country.
In view of these circumstances I have no option but to join issue with General Musharraf and to put the record straight. Since he has voiced his views on several public occasions so as to reach out to the public at large, I also am constrained to address your excellencies in an Open Letter to rebut the allegations against me.
At the outset you may be wondering why I have used the words “claiming to be the head of state”. That is quite deliberate. General Musharraf’s constitutional term ended on November 15, 2007 . His claim to a further term thereafter is the subject of active controversy before the Supreme Court of Pakistan. It was while this claim was under adjudication before a Bench of eleven learned judges of the Supreme Court that the General arrested a majority of those judges in addition to me on November 3, 2007 . He thus himself subverted the judicial process which remains frozen at that point. Besides arresting the Chief Justice and judges (can there have been a greater outrage?) he also purported to suspend the Constitution and to purge the entire judiciary (even the High Courts) of all independent judges. Now only his hand-picked and compliant judges remain willing to “validate” whatever he demands. And all this is also contrary to an express and earlier order passed by the Supreme Court on November 3, 2007 .
Meantime I and my colleagues remain in illegal detention. With me are also detained my wife and three of my young children, all school-going and one a special child. Such are the conditions of our detention that we cannot even step out on to the lawn for the winter sun because that space is occupied by police pickets. Barbed wire barricades surround the residence and all phone lines are cut. Even the water connection to my residence has been periodically turned off. I am being persuaded to resign and to forego my office, which is what I am not prepared to do.
I request you to seek first hand information of the barricades and of my detention, as that of my children, from your Ambassador/High Commissioner/representative in Pakistan . You will get a report of such circumstances as have never prevailed even in medieval times. And these are conditions put in place, in the twenty-first century, by a Government that you support.
Needless to say that the Constitution of Pakistan contains no provision for its suspension, and certainly not by the Chief of Army Staff. Nor can it be amended except in accordance with Articles 238 and 239 which is by Parliament and not an executive or military order. As such all actions taken by General Musharraf on and after November 3 are illegal and ultra vires the Constitution. That is why it is no illusion when I describe myself as the Chief Justice even though I am physically and forcibly incapacitated by the state apparatus under the command of the General. I am confident that as a consequence of the brave and unrelenting struggle continued by the lawyers and the civil society, the Constitution will prevail.
However, in the meantime, General Musharraf has launched upon a vigourous initiative to defame and slander me. Failing to obtain my willing abdication he has become desperate. The eight-page Document is the latest in this feverish drive.
Before I take up the Document itself let me recall that the General first ousted me from the Supreme Court on March 9 last year while filing an indictment (in the form of a Reference under Article 209 of the Constitution) against me. According to the General the Reference had been prepared after a thorough investigation and comprehensively contained all the charges against me. I had challenged that Reference and my ouster before the Supreme Court. On July 20 a thirteen member Bench unanimously struck down the action of the General as illegal and unconstitutional. I was honourably reinstated.
The Reference was thus wholly shattered and all the charges contained therein trashed. These cannot now be regurgitated except in contempt of the Supreme Court. Any way, since the Document has been circulated by no less a person than him I am constrained to submit the following for your kind consideration in rebuttal thereof:
The Document is divided into several heads but the allegations contained in it can essentially be divided into two categories: those allegations that were contained in the Reference and those that were not.
Quite obviously, those that are a repeat from the Reference hold no water as these have already been held by the Supreme Court to not be worth the ink they were written in. In fact, the Supreme Court found that the evidence submitted against me by the Government was so obviously fabricated and incorrect, that the bench took the unprecedented step of fining the Government Rs. 100,000 (a relatively small amount in dollar terms, but an unheard of sum with respect to Court Sanction in Pakistan) for filing clearly false and malicious documents, as well as revoking the license to practice of the Advocate on Record for filing false documents. Indeed, faced with the prospect of having filed clearly falsified documents against me, the Government’s attorneys, including the Attorney General, took a most dishonorable but telling approach. Each one, in turn, stood before the Supreme Court and disowned the Government’s Reference, and stated they had not reviewed the evidence against me before filing it with Court. They then filed a formal request to the Court to withdraw the purported evidence, and tendered an unconditional apology for filing such a scandalous and false documents. So baseless and egregious were the claims made by General Musharraf that on July 20th, 2007, the full Supreme Court for the first time in Pakistan ’s history, ruled unanimously against a sitting military ruler and reinstated me honorably to my post.
Despite having faced these charges in open court, must I now be slandered with those same charges by General Musharraf in world capitals, while I remain a prisoner and unable to speak in my defense?

There are, of course, a second set of charges. These were not contained in the Reference and are now being bandied around by the General at every opportunity.
I forcefully and vigorously deny every single one of them. The truth of these “new” allegations can be judged from the fact that they all ostensibly date to the period before the reference was filed against me last March, yet none of them was listed in the already bogus charge sheet.
If there were any truth to these manufactured charges, the Government should have included them in the reference against me. God knows they threw in everything including the kitchen sink into that scurrilous 450 page document, only to have it thrown out by the entire Supreme Court after a 3 month open trial.
The charges against me are so transparently baseless that General Musharraf’s regime has banned the discussion of my situation and the charges in the broadcast media. This is because the ridiculous and flimsy nature of the charges is self-evident whenever an opportunity is provided to actually refute them.
Instead, the General only likes to recite his libel list from a rostrum or in gathering where there is no opportunity for anyone to respond. Incidentally, the General maligns me in the worst possible way at every opportunity. That is the basis for the Document he has distributed. But he has not just deposed me from the Judiciary. He has also fired more than half of the Superior Judiciary of Pakistan – nearly 50 judges in all -- together with me. They have also been arrested and detained.
What are the charges against them? Why should they be fired and arrested if I am the corrupt judge? Moreover even my attorneys Aitzaz Ahsan, Munir Malik, Tariq Mahmood and Ali Ahmed Kurd were also arrested on November 3. Malik alone has been released but only because both his kidneys collapsed as a result of prison torture
Finally, as to the Document, it also contains some further allegations described as “Post-Reference Conduct” that is attributed to me under various heads. This would mean only those allegedly ‘illegal’ actions claimed to have been taken by me after March 9, 2007 . These are under the heads given below and replied to as under:
“Participation in SJC (Supreme Judicial Council) Proceedings”:
(a) Retaining ‘political lawyers’: Aitzaz Ahsan and Zammurrad Khan:
It is alleged that I gave a political colour to my defence by engaging political lawyers Aitzaz Ahsan and Zamurrad Khan both Pakistan Peoples’ Party Members of the National Assembly. The answer is simple.
I sought to engage the best legal team in the country. Mr. Ahsan is of course an MNA (MP), but he is also the top lawyer in Pakistan . For that reference may be made simply to the ranking of Chambers and Partners Global. Such is his respect in Pakistan ’s legal landscape that he was elected President of the Supreme Court Bar Association of Pakistan by one of the widest margins in the Association’s history.
All high profile personalities have placed their trust in his talents. He has thus been the attorney for Prime Ministers Bhutto and Sharif, (even though he was an opponent of the latter) Presidential candidate (against Musharraf) Justice Wajihuddin, sports star and politician Imran Khan, former Speakers, Ministers, Governors, victims of political vendetta, and also the internationally acclaimed gang-rape victim Mukhtar Mai, to mention only a few.
Equally important, Barrister Ahsan is a man of integrity who is known to withstand all pressures and enticements. That is a crucial factor in enaging an attorney when one’s prosecutor is the sitting military ruler, with enourmous monetary and coercive resources at his disposal.
Mr. Zamurrad Khan is also a recognized professional lawyer, a former Secretary of the District Bar Rawalpindi, and was retained by Mr. Aitzaz Ahsan to assist him in the case. Mr. Khan has been a leading light of the Lawyers’ Movement for the restoration of the deposed judiciary and has bravely faced all threats and vilification.
Finally, surely I am entitled to my choice of lawyers and not that of the General.

(b) “Riding in Mr. Zafarullah Jamali (former Prime Minister)’s car”:
How much the Document tries to deceive is apparent from the allegation that I willingly rode in Mr. Jamali’s car for the first hearing of the case against me on March 13 (as if that alone is an offence). Actually the Government should have been ashamed of itself for creating the circumstances that forced me to take that ride.
Having been stripped of official transport on the 9th March (my vehicles were removed from my house by the use of fork lifters), I decided to walk the one-mile to the Supreme Court. Along the way I was molested and manhandled, my hair was pulled and neck craned in the full blaze of the media, by a posse of policemen under the supervision of the Inspector General of Police. (A judicial inquiry, while I was still deposed, established this fact). In order to escape the physical assault I took refuge with Mr. Jamali and went the rest of the journey on his car. Instead of taking action against the police officials for manhandling the Chief Justice it is complained that I was on the wrong!
(c) “Creating a political atmosphere”:
Never did I instigate or invite any “political atmosphere”. I never addressed the press or any political rally. I kept my lips sealed even under extreme provocation from the General and his ministers who were reviling me on a daily basis. I maintained a strict judicial silence. I petitioned the Supreme Court and won. That was my vindication.
“Country wide touring and Politicising the Issue”:
The Constitution guarantees to all citizens free movement throughout Pakistan . How can this then be a complaint?
By orders dated March 9 and 15 (both of which were found to be without lawful authority by the Court) I had been sent of “forced leave”. I could neither perform any judicial or administrative functions as the Chief Justice of Pakistan. I was prevented not only from sitting in court but also from access to my own chamber by the force of arms under orders of the General. (All my papers were removed, even private documents).
The only function as ‘a judge on forced leave’ that I could perform was to address and deliver lectures to various Bar Associations. I accepted their invitations. They are peppered all over Pakistan . I had to drive to these towns as all these are not linked by air. On the way the people of Pakistan did, indeed, turn out in their millions, often waiting from dawn to dusk or from dusk to dawn, to greet me. But I never addressed them even when they insisted that I do. I never spoke to the press. I sat quietly in my vehicle without uttering a word. All this is on the record as most journeys were covered by the media live and throughout.
I spoke only to deliver lectures on professional and constitutional issues to the Bar Associations. Transcripts of every single one of my addresses are available. Every single word uttered by me in those addresses conforms to the stature, conduct and non-political nature of the office of the Chief Justice. There was no politics in these whatsoever. I did not even mention my present status or the controversy or the proceedings before the Council or the Court, not even the Reference. Not even once.
All the persons named in the Document under this head are lawyers and were members of the reception committees in various towns and Bar Associations.
Political Leaders Calling on CJP residence:
It is alleged that I received political leaders while I was deposed. It is on the record of the Supreme Judicial Council itself that I was detained after being deposed on March 9. The only persons allowed to meet me were those cleared by the Government. One was a senior political leader. None else was allowed to see me, initially not even my lawyers. How can I be blamed for whomsoever comes to my residence?
Had I wanted to politicize the issue I would have gone to the Press or invited the media. I did not. I had recourse to the judicial process for my reinstatement and won. The General lost miserably in a fair and straight contest. That is my only fault.
“Conclusion”:
Hence the conclusion drawn by the General that charges had been proved against me ‘beyond doubt’ is absolutely contrary to the facts and wide off the mark. It is a self-serving justification of the eminently illegal action of firing and arresting judges of superior courts under the garb of an Emergency (read Martial Law) when the Constitution was ‘suspended’ and then ‘restored’ later with drastic and illegal ‘amendments’ grafted into it.
The Constitution cannot be amended except by the two Houses of Parliament and by a two-thirds majority in each House. That is the letter of the law. How can one man presume or arrogate to himself that power?
Unfortunately the General is grievously economical with the truth (I refrain from using the word ‘lies’) when he says that the charges against me were ‘investigated and verified beyond doubt’. As explained above, these had in fact been rubbished by the Full Court Bench of the Supreme Court of Pakistan against which judgment the government filed no application for review.

What the General has done has serious implications for Pakistan and the world. In squashing the judiciary for his own personal advantage and nothing else he has usurped the space of civil and civilized society. If civilized norms of justice will not be allowed to operate then that space will, inevitably, be occupied by those who believe in more brutal and instant justice: the extremists in the wings. Those are the very elements the world seems to be pitted against. Those are the very elements the actions of the General are making way for.
Some western governments are emphasizing the unfolding of the democratic process in Pakistan . That is welcome, if it will be fair. But, and in any case, can there be democracy if there is no independent judiciary?
Remember, independent judges and judicial processes preceded full franchise by several hundred years. Moreover, which judge in Pakistan today can be independent who has before his eyes the fate and example of his own Chief Justice: detained for three months along with his young children. What is the children’s crime, after all?
There can be no democracy without an independent judiciary, and there can be no independent judge in Pakistan until the action of November 3 is reversed. Whatever the will of some desperate men the struggle of the valiant lawyers and civil society of Pakistan will bear fruit. They are not giving up.
Let me also assure you that I would not have written this letter without the General’s unbecoming onslaught. That has compelled me to clarify although, as my past will testify, I am not given into entering into public, even private, disputes. But the allegations against me have been so wild, so wrong and so contrary to judicial record, that I have been left with no option but to put the record straight. After all, a prisoner must also have his say. And if the General’s hand-picked judges, some living next door to my prison home, have not had the courage to invoke the power of ‘habeas corpus’ these last three months, what other option do I have? Many leaders of the world and the media may choose to brush the situation under the carpet out of love of the General. But that will not be.
Nevertheless, let me also reassure you that I continue in my resolve not to preside any Bench which will be seized of matters pertaining to the personal interests of General Musharraf after the restoration of the Constitution and the judges, which, God willing, will be soon.
Finally, I leave you with the question: Is there a precedent in history, all history, of 60 judges, including three Chief Justices (of the Supreme Court and two of Pakistan ’s four High Courts), being dismissed, arrested and detained at the whim of one man? I have failed to discover any such even in medieval times under any emperor, king, or sultan, or even when a dictator has had full military sway over any country in more recent times. But this incredible outrage has happened in the 21st century at the hands of an extremist General out on a ‘charm offensive’ of western capitals and one whom the west supports.
I am grateful for your attention. I have no other purpose than to clear my name and to save the country (and perhaps others as well) from the calamity that stares us in the face. We can still rescue it from all kinds of extremism: praetorian and dogmatic. After all, the edifice of an independent judicial system alone stands on the middle ground between these two extremes. If the edifice is destroyed by the one, the ground may be taken over by the other. That is what is happening in Pakistan . Practitioners of rough and brutal justice will be welcomed in spaces from where the practitioners of more refined norms of justice and balance have been made to abdicate.
I have enormous faith that the Constitution and justice will soon prevail.
Yours truly,


Iftikhar Mohammad Choudhry,
Chief Justice of Pakistan ,
Presently:
imprisoned in the Chief Justice’s House,

Islamabad ( Pakistan)
Homepage: not entered   Email: visionkashmir[AT]yahoo.com

4. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 31.12.2007 - 16:16 hours
Dear mr Murtaza Azad
What is amazing for you for instance???
hope to hear from you soon
regards
Jamil Maqsood
Brussels
Homepage: not entered   Email: visionkashmir[AT]yahoo.com

5. m.murtaza azad wrote at 29.11.2007 - 07:10 hours
i see ur site,its great but a lot of thing is amazing 4 me.
Homepage: not entered   Email: dr.murtazaazad[AT]yahoo.com

6. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 16.09.2007 - 19:02 hours
United Nations Human Rights Council

6th Session (September 10-28, 2007)

Item III: Promotion and protection of human rights and international solidarity


INTERFAITH INTERNATIONAL

Intervention by Sardar Shaukat Ali Kashmiri

Hon’ble Chairperson:

Today, my heart goes out to the hundreds of oppressed people in different parts of the world suffering from armed conflict, terror and despotic rule. I congratulate this august body for placing on the Agenda for discussions the pressing need for international solidarity to end human rights violations and protect human rights of the hapless sufferers. It is reflective of the Human Rights Council commitment and determination to make itself an effective body in international discourse. Never has this need been felt more strongly before, especially to curb excesses of autocratic regimes that crush their own peoples to perpetuate themselves in power.


I come from the State of Jammu and Kashmir, two-thirds of which are ruled by India and the remaining one-third by Pakistan. The trials and tribulations faced by my fellow Kashmiris in the Indian –administered part of the State for now, close to two decades due to the armed insurgency, are well documented and known to the international community at large due to India’s democratic institutions and free media.

However, the international community is quite unaware of the far more serious violations of human rights in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir comprising the so-called Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan. The lack of a freedom of expression and a media controlled by Pakistan’s military-intelligence establishment ensures

that the suffering of these hapless people continues far away from media glare and international attention.

For the benefit of this august Council, allow me to reiterate some of the continuing and oft-repeated abuses of the rights of the people of Pakistan in general and “Azad” Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan in particular, which have been brought to the attention of the earlier Commission on Human Rights on many occasions but without effective action.

Orchestrated referendums and rigged elections are routine practices in military-ruled Pakistan. In the so-called “Azad” Kashmir, political parties and candidates who aspire for a sovereign, secular, democratic and independent Jammu & Kashmir have been barred from participating in elections. Only those who swear allegiance to the Constitution of Pakistan are permitted to contest in this ‘’controlled democracy’’.
Hundreds of political workers belonging to democratic, secular, nationalist parties and organizations such as Pakistan People’s Party, Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), United Kashmir People’s National Party (UKPNP) and Balawaristan National Front - to name but a few - continue to languish in prison on false charges of sedition. Many of their leaders have been forced into exile or killed.
The Pakistani military-intelligence establishment has converted “Azad” Kashmir and the Northern Areas into a sanctuary for international terrorists. While the situation in Waziristan is slowly coming into international consciousness, the plight of hundreds of Kashmiri youth who continue to be held hostage and exploited by the intelligence agencies of Pakistan to spread terror and violence across the Line of Control lies buried in the small print.
It is true that it is not only the Kashmiri people who are suffering under the jackboots of the military dictatorship in Pakistan. The blatant discrimination by the Punjabi-speaking ruling elite against the hapless people of Sindh and Baluchistan, the frequent and brutal attacks on
Christians and other religious minorities, the abject subjugation of women and the heinous crimes perpetrated against them in different parts of Pakistan have all been well documented by human rights organizations and the media.
Even the higher judiciary in Pakistan is not immune to attacks from this military leadership. The treatment meted out to the Chief Justice of Pakistan Supreme Court, Iftikhar Choudhry recently is a case in point. The ungainly spectacle of two former Prime Ministers of Pakistan having been forced into exile and not permitting one of them, Nawaz Sharif, to return to his homeland despite a Supreme Court ruling that it is his inalienable right, shows the extend to which the military dictatorship in Pakistan would go to keep itself in power, which it has illegally and unconstitutionally grabbed.
Hon’ble Chairperson, there is urgent need for international solidarity to ensure that the democratic aspirations of the Pakistani people, and those in ‘Azad’ Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan are not held hostage by a autocratic military dictatorship under its garb of support for the war on terrorism. In the run-up to the forthcoming elections in Pakistan, the international community would be failing in its duty if it does not demand and ensure free and fair elections where the people of Pakistan can exercise their franchise without fear.

Thank you.
Homepage: not entered   Email: jamilmaqsood[AT]yahoo.com

7. Sardar M. Maroof Khan Kashmiri wrote at 02.09.2007 - 16:02 hours

Good Work. Keep It Up.........
Homepage: http://www.voiceofkashmir.info   Email: voiceofkashmir[AT]yahoo.com,smmaroofkk74[AT]yahoo.com

8. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 19.08.2007 - 22:01 hours
Dear Fahim Azam Khan,
You are welcome and you can join the struggle for united,independent, secular democratic Kashmir under the banner of the Party. I would like to recommend you to kindly study party literature and related progressive material to under stadn the historical,materlialist differences of our society in teh contemporary world regional and international polity.

Best wishes.

Jamil Maqsood
Brussels
Homepage: not entered   Email: jamilmaqsood[AT]yahoo.com

9. DAR FAHIM AZAM KHAN wrote at 14.08.2007 - 23:58 hours
salam!!!!!! i m fahim azam student of telecom engineering here in rawalpindi pakistan interested to join this party and struggle for the united kashmir.being a kashmiri i want to attend all conferences of this party plz invite me.
Homepage: not entered   Email: figo4all[AT]hotmail.com

10. JamilMaqsood wrote at 11.08.2007 - 00:51 hours
The feeling of jubilation could, however, have been infinitely stronger if it were possible to dismiss the thought of Pakistan’s being an under-developed collectivity even at the age of 60. Pakistan is a rapidly developing country and should soon join the developed elite.
This claim is based on the rate of GDP growth, the burgeoning numbers of cell phones and automobiles in the country, the mushrooming of high-rise plazas and the presence of rich and powerful rulers. Perhaps Islamabad’s role in fighting terrorists by subduing large parts of the country’s population will also be cited as evidence of success in achieving development goals.
What we are discussing here is not Pakistan’s past, the subject is future. The issue is major obstacles to genuine development. Pakistan will remain an underdeveloped nation with an immature mindset in command so long as its peasants remain bonded to absentee landlords (or corporate barons), its women remain in the clutches of male feudal tormentors, and its working people are left to rot as galley-slaves of merciless exploiters
The plight of Pakistan’s working people is particularly pathetic because theoretically they are supposed to be freer agents than peasants and women. Since 1959, when the Ayub regime began the series of anti-labour policies, and right up to the Industrial Relations Ordinance of 2002, labour has been progressively stripped of the rights it had won after nearly two centuries of struggle.
Pakistan was an agricultural country to begin with. The share of agriculture to GDP may have fallen sharply but a majority of the population still depends on it. The state has largely been concerned with raising agricultural output and to some extent with marketing. The rights of the tillers were half-heartedly addressed vide three inadequate and insincerely implemented land reform packages. Despite the fact that the ILO Convention on farm workers’ right to form trade unions was ratified before independence, the state has not encouraged peasant mobilization.
Their right to inheritance is disputed, to say nothing of their broader right to economic independence. Across a large part of the country they are not allowed freedom of vote and many of those elected to local councils are not permitted to perform their functions. It can safely be asserted that a vast majority of women continue to be excluded from decision-making.

we are concerned here with three main indicators of under-development. These are: a lack of maturity in the collective’s thinking, a high level of poverty in the country, and the people’s exclusion from decision-making.
We began with rule by representatives elected on a narrow franchise and in a pre-Pakistan context. They were inherently incapable of respecting the aspirations of the people, of acting as a responsible outfit. Adult franchise came in 1951 and with it the tradition of avoiding elections or fudging them if they had to be held.
Either way the people’s sovereign rights came under the axe. A decade after the people had created Pakistan by their democratic choice; they were told they were incapable of democratic management of their affairs
besides computation of material progress, development must be measured by a country’s ability to take decisions, especially on critical issues, that prove to be wise, timely, and in public interest; by guarantees of a decent and fulsome standard of living for all citizens, especially the poorest and the weakest among them; and by the opportunities the people have of contributing to decisions affecting their lives, both individually and collectively.
Pakistan did not have an indigenous tradition of parliamentary democracy that was sought to be implanted here is more true about the traditional ruling elite, both of its civilian and military wings included, than about the masses
It is this ruling elite that has consistently been found wanting in ability to base decisions on public consensus, partly because of its incapacity to appreciate the dynamics of a democratic process and partly out of fear of losing not only its material possessions and privileges but also, and more importantly, its monopoly over power.
In almost all crises the state’s destiny was in the hands of small groups whose claims to represent the people could convince their members only or in the hands of individuals who could not even make such claims.
An enquiry into the people’s exclusion from decision-making is necessary because Pakistan’s future will not be any better than its past unless matters begin to be decided by the will of the people.
A common reason advanced by the country’s permanent establishment for curtailing and shutting off the process of reference to the people is that they lack formal education.
Nobody will deny the part education can play in helping a society manage its affairs. From measuring land and collection of taxes to building of roads and dams and generation of electricity, to running of hospitals and parliament’s secretariat you need adequately educated and trained professionals. But politics, especially democratic politics, is a matter of making choices on the basis of people’s needs so as to ensure the greatest good of the greatest number. No formal education is required for making such choices, as we shall presently see.

The elections of 1945-46 that clinched the argument in favor of Pakistan was extremely limited. All the voters had not had the benefit of formal education. Many among them – owners of property, tax-payers, ex-servicemen – were illiterate. Yet they were considered sufficiently qualified to join the most momentous consultative process in the history of British India.Instead, the people have been unable to participate in decision-making, thus condemning the state to be governed by an immature elite and condemning themselves to poverty, because the social structures established before independence were not conducive to democratic governance. And all governments have been guilty of failing to demolish the socio-economic barriers to the people’s empowerment, though a few of them did try to tinker with them. The largest groups of people barred from decision-making councils are: peasants (including their womenfolk), women (outside the agriculture sector), and working people (industrial and trade employees, workers in the informal sector, and self-employed hordes). Taken together they constitute an overwhelming majority of the people. They are not incapable of contributing positively to decision-making institutions and processes, but they have been prevented from doing so by socio-economic-cultural constraints. Where do these large chunks of population stand 60 years after independence?

The more consequential: failure to realize for nine years the most vital need for a constitution for the new state and the compulsions of a democratic, federal and equitable constitution till today; use of unfair means to escape democratic obligations and
frequent resort to force to suppress the aspirations of the federating units, especially of he majority population in East Bengal; deliberate and hypocritical exploitation of belief for narrow political interests; neglect of permanent neighbors for the sake of distant, temporary and fickle-minded patrons; reliance on profitless borrowing and disregard for national human capital; and, finally, an incredibly strong devotion to a praetorian polity. The most frightening aspect of reality today is our apparently firm resolve to prove that the mindset governing Pakistan’s actions and behavior betrays not only a state of under-development but also suicidal traits of a most dangerous variety
Pakistan tests positive on all three of the indicators of under-development.
President Musharraf is the fourth general to seize power in Pakistan's sixty-year history, but the country always returns to civilian rule in the end.
Pakistan is certainly becoming unstable. The government has effectively lost control in the tribal belt along the frontier with Afghanistan, which is increasingly dominated by pro-Taliban militants. The week-long siege of radical Islamists holed up in the Red Mosque in Islamabad, the capital, in mid-July culminated in the deaths of over a hundred militants and soldiers.
"We are very scared," Senator Anwar Baig of the opposition Pakistan People's Party told the Guardian last week. "If we don't mend our ways, it could spell the end of the country. The Islamists have sleeper cells in every city. We could have a civil war." And if the "Islamists" won that civil war, then people with a worldview not dissimilar to Osama Bin Laden's would control a country with 165 million people, an army of 600,000 men, and an estimated fifty nuclear weapons.


There is a good chance that this crisis could end in restoration of civilian democracy in Pakistan: that is how all three previous bouts of military rule ended., They stand a better chance of getting those things if democracy returns, even if previous intervals of democracy in Pakistan have usually ended in massive corruption and paralysis as the political class fought over the spoils. Musharraf is probably on the way out unless he declares martial law under the pretext of fighting the Islamists -- and it is not certain that the army would follow him if he did.


Homepage: not entered   Email: journalist.usk[AT]gmail.com

11. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 03.08.2007 - 15:17 hours
Dear All,
Dr Safdar Sarki a Sindhi political worker of US citizenship has been abducted by the secret agencies of Pakistan in 2004.His family doesn't know about his whareabout so far please write in his favour to different NGOs and Human righst organization.

Thanks
Jamil Maqsood
Brussels
Homepage: http://ukpnp.info   Email: visionkashmir[AT]yahoo.com

12. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 06.12.2006 - 15:32 hours
Resentment over displaced leadership resulted in the present disappointing status

Sardar Shaukat Kashmiri was born in 1958 in Trarkhel, a small village near Rawalakot in Pakistani Administered Kashmir. As an activist for Kashmir Nationalists Students Federation, based in Karachi, he promoted the strength of the Kashmiri students in Pakistan. In 1985 after obtaining his Bachelors in Law and Litigation( L.L.B) and MA in Islamic Studies from Karachi University, he was elected as the Deputy General Secretary of Jammu and Kashmir Peoples National Party. He is the founding chairman of United Kashmir Peoples National Party Formed in 1994; it is an ally of the IKA (International Kashmir Alliance).

During this period of political activism, his pro- human rights work for the populace of Pakistan Administered Kashmir and Gilgit Baltistan drew the wrath of the Pakistani government and was detained twice in 1994 and 1998 respectively. Due to the consequences of such stirring activity he was compelled to seek exile in Switzerland in 1999. The International Human Rights watchdog, Amnesty International had accorded him the title “Prisoner of Conscience'’. On his first visit to Indian administered Kashmir, he had the opportunity to interact with many leaders like Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, Moulana Abbas Ansari, Mehbooba Mufti, Shabir Shah, Abdul Rahim Rather, Sajjad Lone, Muhammad Yousuf Tarigami, and Bilal Lone amongst many other prominent religious and political luminaries of the region. The following interview is exclusively for the readers.

Q Kashmiri is not your mother tongue, yet Kashmiri is the title of your name?

Shaukat Kashmiri: When I was studying in Trarkhel, I only knew about my tribe since the environment didn’t invite much knowledge outside it. I did not have much knowledge or understanding about Kashmir or Pakistan. We were just taught that Hindustan is not a good country, and that Kashmir and Pakistan is our state. This was enforced in our minds due to the excessive media propaganda .Since there was no hospital or Doctor available for three hundred thousand population of our area, it was the paramount desire of my parents to train me to be a doctor and in this pursuit of better scientific education, and I went to Karachi. At school, when the teacher wanted to familiarise with us, I introduced myself and my native place as Azad Kashmir. The other fellow Kashmiris hailing from Azad Kashmir, who were in the class did not introduce themselves as Kashmiris or even mention their place of origin as Kashmir. After class I asked them the reason for why they did not introduce themselves the way I did? They replied that the reason would become apparent to me in the coming days and, as predicted I faced the consequences. I was called ‘Kashmiri’ in the school, and this tag was attached as a mark of insult and not one of honour or respect. As time went, it became obvious to me that Kashmiris were treated in Pakistan as third degree citizens who deserve no respect. I began to feel at fault for being a Kashmiri .These series of incidents gave me the title of Kashmiri to be a symbol of pride and helped me identify with the cause of the Kashmiri people.

Q. It is often said that Kashmir and Switzerland resemble closely on landscape terms. Having been a resident of the latter, could you please tell us the differences that you have observed during this visit?

Shaukat Kashmiri: It’s true there are great similarities between both Kashmir and Switzerland in terms of geographical landscape in that there are lakes, meadows and valleys in both the places. Switzerland also receives snowfall in every area. But Kashmir has four distinct seasons of spring, autumn, winter and summer adding a colourful touch .Like Kashmir, there is a repertoire of cultures, languages and people are living in peace and harmony, but unfortunately our Kashmir is stripped of the latter element of peace. There is development and prosperity, no racial discrimination and it is hard to see policing quite often on the streets, yet there the crime rate is very low. The most imperative fact that distinguishes Switzerland is that sovereignty of the country lies in the hands of people.

Q. Which Kashmiri leader has impressed you more?

Shaukat Kashmiri: I didn’t come here to be impressed by anyone. Nevertheless having been included in a list of victims for long, it is not my desire to be impressed any more. I have deep respect for every one whom I have met and every individual has his own standing and import which cannot be neglected in today’s circumstances. We cannot deny the hard truth that Kashmir as a nation has been misfortunate in the line of leadership. In the current situation, the Kashmiri mass requires the steering leadership of someone like Nelson Mandela, Che Guevara, Mao Tse Tung, and Mahatma Gandhi. Even if the complete political Diasporas can be amalgamated, it will not be competent for one Sher-e-Kashmir.

Q. What matters have you touched upon in your discussion during your meetings with them?

Shaukat Kashmiri: I have expressed to everyone that it is high time that we took note of the changing global political climate and to understand them, it is vital to comprehend the emerging vistas in the present day economies. Every Kashmiri is tasked with the duty to safeguard the interests of Kashmir in a united voice for its growth, despite any minor or major political differences. And I am glad to say that there was a consensus on this statement.

Q. IKA has repeatedly criticized Pakistan in many statements. Could you please let us know the reason behind?

Shaukat Kashmiri: Our goal is not to oppose Pakistan for the sake of opposition and never think to weaken Pakistan. But we do advocate that by proxy war, Pakistan shall achieve nothing nor it would be favourable for the Kashmiri nation. The entire Pakistani society has been impacted by this kind of politics, where democracy and democratic institutes are at stake from the threat of dictatorship. The ruling elite have callously victimized their own masses in the name of Kashmir issue. In the country, poor people are becoming poorer day by day, while rich are increasing their wealth everyday. It is our supreme desire that the socio-economic, democratic and constitutional rights of the people of Pakistan must be restored. We also aspire that there would be an end to the unholy alliance between the feudal lords and Mullahs and military bureaucracy. This is for the sovereignty of the people of Pakistan where they can feel that their nation was founded for the provision of social justice and not to fulfil the capitalist interests of the privileged class. We have always been supporting democratic movements in Pakistan. I was an active partaker in MRD’s movement against General Zia and we have also condemned the Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s death sentence as “judicial murder'’.

Q. There is an allegation from certain quarters that IKA is promoting Indian agenda in Kashmir. What is your take on this?

Shaukat Kashmiri: Since its inception, the International Kashmir Alliance (IKA) has accepted the Geneva declaration in which three points were included. Its agenda is pro people and to achieve transparency, accountability and to address the vulnerability of the Kashmiri people were the most important in the IKA objective. I would like to let you know that both India and Pakistan have set self-centric standards for Kashmiris .For instance, according to Pakistani standard a person of Azad Kashmir who is pro independent can share political platform with pro Pakistan people, but he would never dare to share the same with any pro India political party or person .Proponents of independence here do not hesitate to collaborate with Sardar Qayyum and Sikandar Hayat , but they would never think of discussing with the secular progressive forces in India. Hence both the States do not want different Kashmiri schools of thought to be united to raise their voice for the common cause. Both India and Pakistan have segregated Kashmiri people. The IKA stance is that every one who lives in Kashmir, despite political differences has a Kashmiri identity with all rights as a citizen of the state of Kashmir. We want to collect them at a common platform so that the objectives of national reconciliation could be achieved between them. We want to hinder blame game, but in the consequences of our struggle and exercise of our righteous demands, the interests of some quarters may be damaged and so they accuse us, and desire that we abandon our struggle.

Q. It doesn’t seem that despite access to different international forums IKA would have advocated human rights violations and aspirations of common Kashmiri people?

Shaukat Kashmiri: This credit can be given to the IKA leadership that they addressed grievances of common Kashmiris. We don’t believe in politics in the name of victimization of people and have highlighted this issue before international forums. During the last conference, we had bluntly stated that India has failed to accomplish its pledge to protect the life, honour and property of the Kashmiri people which was made with the Maharaja at the time of accession. The Indian security forces have failed to protect life of Kashmiri people. We have raised such issues without any prejudice, although it is not possible to present human rights violations individually.

Q. According to certain quarters, Western powers are using the Kashmir issue for their own interest .What do you have to say on this?

Shaukat Kashmiri: There is no country in this world which doesn’t safeguard her national interest. Each country in this world sets priority to its national interest in global issues. Whether it is support or opposition regarding Kashmir, they also keep their interests. For instance, the Peoples Republic of China wanted to maintain status quo while the United States wanted to resolve this issue according to the wishes and aspirations of Kashmiri people. In this matter we need to understand the role of global capital. In those countries the role of consumer capital is not that much strong. They have realized that if poverty will increase, the global issues concerning security and cooperation would be threatened and this intensive situation could hinder further expansion of capital. In this scenario, this is the global agenda that all problems must be resolved according to the wishes of the people of regions, where democracy, rule of justice, independent judiciary and justice must prevail. The present gestures taken by both India and Pakistan are in fact a glimpse of this wave in the international state of affairs It is a worldwide tendency to resolve regional conflicts, if any one would try to hinder it would be equivalent to digging one’s own grave.

Q. Would it not be possible for you to approach the International court of Justice?

Shaukat Kashmiri: A State can approach the International Court of Justice and not any individual Organization. But despite this situation we have been continuously heralding the international community about the prevailing situation in Kashmir. If international institutions deliver some statements or proceed towards concrete measures, it is based on the briefings we feed them. But again I would like to say we don’t like politics in the name of victimized people.

Q. Kashmiris are also divided out of the State why don’t you struggle to get them united?

Shaukat Kashmiri: Pro Kashmiri people abroad are in contact with us. We sit together to discuss on our national issues and hence the objective of IKA is to strengthen pro Kashmiri forces. IKA is struggling for unity and reconciliation among different Kashmiri school of thoughts.

Q In your opinion, where does the Kashmir issue stand in the present day?

Shaukat Kashmiri: We are observing extra ordinary change in Indo Pak relations. Both the Countries have modified their traditional attitude towards Kashmir. Though India has taken bold steps to open routes across LOC and encouraged people to people contacts, these changes are taking place regarding the changing geo political compulsion. In my personal opinion, the global environment is in the tide of Kashmiri people to settle the issue. At this moment the Kashmiri leadership should grab the impetus to get international recognition.

Q In your opinion, what could be a long standing and acceptable solution to the issue?

Shaukat Kashmiri: I have always believed in the nation of Jammu and Kashmir rather than as a state. Today our stance is simply that both India and Pakistan should give Kashmir its long overdue recognition as an independent country, although I am in favour of regional independence of different entities. According to our ideology we have presented the formula of United States of Kashmir 12 years ago. We had set the formula of six states and had presented this in a seminar in 1993 under the patronage of the European parliament. It is significant that the Mirwaiz also has proposed the solution of United States of Kashmir, which was unfortunately not endorsed by Islamabad.

This interview was taken by weekly Chattan at Srinagar and translated by Jamil Maqsood General Secretary United Kashmir Peoples National Party Belgium

[Jamil Maqsood
Brussels
Homepage: http://UKPNP.info   Email: visionkashmiryahoo.com

13. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 04.12.2006 - 15:57 hours
The Brief of European Parliament Rapporteur on Kashmir a fair analysis


People cry when they are inflicted wounds,state cry when their set agenda is not fulfilled and establishment is the only instrument which implement its policies by its proxies. The same we are seeing in the media now a days against a draft report on Kashmir which was prepared after details travel to the effected area of former princely state of Jammu Kashmir. The significance of this report is obviously panic to those who have been betraying the people since years. European parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs and Human rights is highly appreciable from democratic,secular and progressive polity of entire jammu Kashmir and above them all United Kashmir Peoples National Party (UKPNP) would have this privilege to welcome this report.We also believe that it was the constant intervention of the Party leadership on various international platforms including UN Sub Commission on Human Rights at Geneva and European parliament in Brussels. United Kashmir Peoples National Party (UKPNP). has two years interaction with different political groups in the European parliament and during these years many meetings, briefing with Members European parliament have been taking place between the Party and IKA leadership respectively. In 2003 party has published a Preliminary study report on Azad Kashmir and Gilgit Baltistan which was also distributed among MEPs and Belgian MPs in Belgium. I would like to highlight some of its main parts here to have a fair analysis and honest judgment in this regard.
paragraph A. Whereas the territory which constituted the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir is currently administered in separate parts by the Republic of India, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and Peoples Republic of China,and has a total population of 13.4 million.
B. Whereas much of Jammu and Kashmir,in particular Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK), suffers from extreme poverty and neglect, with enormous deficiencies in basic literacy and numeracy, access to health care,lack of democratic structures and major deficiencies in the rule of law and justice, and whereas the whole of Jammu and Kashmir suffers from exceptional economic declines.
Analysis: This is very true that there is no infrastructure in Azad Kashmir, there is judiciary but it is not independent as it should be. There is no economic activity in the area. Lack of industrialization and lack of productive activities are major causes of unemployment in the area. During recent years hundred of educated youth,skilled workers and highly educated have migrated from the area to different European countries United States and North America.
Paragraph C. In this paragraph question of water resources is a factor underlying the dispute between Pakistan and India over Jammu and Kashmir and is central to any definitive resolution.
Paragraph H. Describe the devastation of deadly earthquake of 8Th October-2005 and it comprehensively describe the situation in different fields of life and who it was responded.
Introduction: 1- Stresses that both India and Pakistan are important EU partners, notes that the EU has not been invited to take on a mediating role in the Kashmir dispute.Nevertheless thinks that the EU may have something to offer based on past experience of conflict resolution in a multi-ethnic, multinational, multi-faith context, therefore offers the present resolution and any meeting that may come out of it as part of a shared experience from which the EU can also learn.
2. Notes that both countries are now members of the nuclear club, draws attention to the fact that India is the world's largest democracy and has a functioning democracy at local level, whereas Pakistan still has to show that it is respecting democratic principles in a great many areas.
3. Notes that the impact of the earthquake on the Pakistani Kashmiris has gravely exacerbated the already exceptionally aparse basic needs provision and has dramatically impaired institutions and capacity building potential.
4. Underlines the common heritage shared by India and Pakistan, exemplified in the ancient culture of Jammu and Kashmir, recognizes the values the pluralism, multiculturalism,and multi faith nature and traditions of the peoples of Jammu and Kashmir.
5. Urges the Government of Pakistan and India to resolve the crucial riparian issues affecting the head waters and the use of the rivers flowing through Jammu and Kashmir( the Indus , Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi,Beas and Sutlej rivers) as swiftly as possible, nevertheless, urges that the agricultural, fishing, livestock and human water requirements of the local people remain a key priority.
Page 5 of the report describe the Impact of earthquake of 8 October 2005.
Page 6: Political Situation: the aspirations of the people

paragraph: 17 of the page 6 describe that regrets,however,that Pakistan has consistently failed to fulfill its obligations to introduce meaningful and representative democratic structures in AJK, Notes in particular that continuing absence of Kahsmiri representation in the Pakistan national Assembly, the fact that AJK is governed through the Ministry of Kashmir Affairs in Islamabad, that Pakistan officials dominate that Kashmir council and that the chief secretary, the Inspector General of Police, the Accountant General and the Finance Secretary are all from Pakistan, abhors the provision in the act 1974 interim constitution which forbids any political activity that is not in accordance with the doctrine of Jammu and Kashmir as part declaration of loyalty to that effect, is concerned that the Gilgit baltistan region enjoys no form of democratic representation whatsoever,
it is right time for Kashmiri intelligentsia, political activists,civil society to re examine their collective wisdom to appreciate this rapporteur which is comprehensively covering all areas of entire Jammu and Kashmir state. Apparently there is nothing wrong in it to criticize, but the only problem for some certain quarters who can't tolerate any debate and discussion about the parts of Kashmir under Pakistan. we hope that people would do comment on this rapporteur after reading it. I can say that lot of people just condemning that report without going through its contents.

Jamil Maqsood
General Secretary
United Kashmir Peoples National Party Belgium.
Cell:+32-484-062-952
Fax: +32-2-5140705
Homepage: http://ukpnp.info   Email: visionkashmir[AT]yahoo.com

14. khan wrote at 12.11.2006 - 03:41 hours
Yesterday I have read one that hundreds of people got free from the private torture cell of Mulana Ilyas Qadiri.In Pakistan, there are many private jails where people have kept in solitary confinement. Every body knows that in Pakistan there is alliance between Mullah, Feudal lords and military. Pakistani agencies behind this and this type of private jail actually exposed Pakistani rulers and country lawlessness should condemn every where, these shameful activities of Pakistani mullahs and their allies are very common and I wonder how police exposed this torture cell of ISI
Homepage: not entered   Email: khan[AT]yahoo.com

15. Khan wrote at 12.11.2006 - 03:06 hours
Sick people always tried to hide their id and wrote against other. I’m one of the faithful workers of UKPNP and Chairman. Rest assured this type of activities and propaganda ditch those who have some kind of hidden agenda. I’m with my chairman and remain loyal with him. Asylum seeker of ukpnp bewares about ISI agents’ strategy and tactic
Homepage: not entered   Email: khan[AT]yahoo.com

16. Nasir Aziz Khan wrote at 12.11.2006 - 02:53 hours
Every person has right to see the things and make opinion regarding his on character and Faith.Hazrat Ali said Oh my God give me merci from those who obliged from me. Now a day some nefarious characters have baseless assertion that they are faithful with their motherland but unfortunately still confused between their needs and desire. One hand when they felt little bit comfort and have some kind of gain from a system of the respective countries and now trying to oblige ruler of Pakistan and its intelligence agencies. Sardar Shaukat Ali Kashmir in his struggle from his student life ups now served his poor nation and try his best to support them. History of human being is full of betrayed and conspiracies .I’m very happy that enemies of UKPNP and Shaukat Ali Kashmiri are very active against him because this is the phrase of Chairman Mio that if your enemy is crying and blaming against you then you think that you have rightly hit your enemy but if he is not saying any thing against you then you reconsider and check where you are wrong.
Nasir Aziz

Homepage: not entered   Email: nasir_azizkhan[AT]yahoo.com

17. Jamil Maqsood wrote at 12.11.2006 - 02:22 hours
We the true,honest and sincere worker of UKPNP with our great revolutionary leader Shaukat Kashmiri.These jeoules tidy people lived in this world for burn in fire of jelousy.I just segguest them,munificance and keep it in your book.Shaukat Kashmiri is great and we love him.
Homepage: not entered   Email: visionkashmir[AT]yahoo.com

18. Shaukat Malik wrote at 12.11.2006 - 02:12 hours
I'm very impressed by the personality of Sardar Shaukat Ali Kashmiri.He is very honest and good heart. He is a helping leader for all irrespective of creed, colour and political or religious faith.UKPNP is the only party in the region, striving for independent and prosperous Kashmir. I have read some mail which are very abusive against Sardar Shaukat and UKPNP.These are the people who have small ornamental nail for nose and be impervious to all sense of shame for their parents. I’m very frustrated to read this type of mail on UKPNP guest book normally I never wrote any my comments on any guest book. I think these are the shed people, they have not any morality and I think they are all nimak haram
Shauka Malik from Islamabad
Homepage: not entered   Email: salikashmir[AT]yahoo.com

19. SAJID wrote at 11.11.2006 - 15:08 hours
hi, i am an it professional from kashmir. i visit your web site. Its need to upgrade it.
Homepage: http://www.kashmirsoft.net   Email: kashmirsoft[AT]yahoo.com

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