Farrukh Habib, after weeks in custody, parts ways with Pakistani ex-PM Khan

Farrukh Habib, after weeks in custody, parts ways with Pakistani ex-PM Khan
Farrukh Habib during a press conference in Lahore, Pakistan on October 16, 2023. (Photo courtesy: GNN)
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Updated 16 October 2023
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Farrukh Habib, after weeks in custody, parts ways with Pakistani ex-PM Khan

Farrukh Habib, after weeks in custody, parts ways with Pakistani ex-PM Khan
  • The key Khan associate had been on the run since May but was arrested last month
  • In a press conference, Habib denounced Khan and PTI for opting for “path of violence”

ISLAMABAD: Farrukh Habib, one of the closest aides of former Prime Minister Imran Khan, said on Monday he was leaving his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, accusing its leader of opting for a “path of violence” and sowing hatred among the public for the armed forces.

Habib is among a long line of Khan allies that have defected amid a widening crackdown on his PTI party since May 9, when his supporters damaged government and military properties in nationwide street protests that Khan and top leaders of his party are accused of masterminding. Earlier this month, another two key Khan associates, Sadaqat Ali Abbasi and Usman Dar, who had been under arrest for weeks, suddenly appeared in TV interviews and renounced ties with the PTI.

Habib had also been on the run since May but was arrested late last month in Gwadar in southwestern Pakistan. His whereabouts had been unknown until he appeared in a press conference on Monday to announce he was parting ways with Khan, who is currently serving a three-year jail term in a corruption case. Habib said he was joining the Istehkam-i-Pakistan Party (IPP), formed in July by estranged associates of Khan. The outfit is widely believed to be a ‘king’s party’ that is being primed as a viable alternative to the PTI, arguably the most popular political party in the country.

“Our [PTI] struggle, which should have been a democratic one, we deviated from that struggle and took the country towards violence,” Habib said, speaking about the events of May 9.

Khan and the PTI should have waited for elections and led a peaceful struggle against the government of then prime minister Shehbaz Sharif instead of taking “the path of violence,” the now estranged PTI leader said.

Referring to Khan, Habib accused the PTI chief of telling his supporters to take to the streets, block roads, and engage in violence. 

“Because of that violence, a message was consistently given through which the minds of innocent people, as a result of cult following, were hijacked,” Habib said. “And they were told that Pakistan's institutions [army] are working against them and that they are not letting them take part in politics. The seeds of hatred were consistently sown.”

“Instead of the ballot, you were telling them to opt for the bullet," Habib said, addressing Khan. “Instead of the ballot, you were telling them to attack their own institutions.”

Habib described Khan as a “promoter of violence,” and said he had joined the PTI for very different reasons.

“I joined the Imran Khan that spoke about … a new Pakistan and who told us about social justice and the State of Medinah. People were not instigated in the State of Medinah to stand up against their state and fight against them.”

It is widely believed that PTI leaders who have quit the party have been made to do so by the all-powerful military, which denies interfering in politics.

“Another day, another drama of an abducted person coming on TV only to quit PTI & say a few words against IK,” PTI’s social media lead Jibran Ilyas wrote on X.

“Anyone who knows him [Habib] would know how he must have been forced to say & do this.”

Khan says corruption cases against him are fabricated and politically motivated and that his associates are being forced out of the PTI under duress from the government and the military in a manoeuvre to dismantle his party before elections scheduled early next year.

He has been embroiled in a tussle with the military since he was removed from power last year in a parliamentary vote which he says was orchestrated by the country's top generals. The military denies this.


One paramilitary soldier killed, another injured in southwest Pakistan

One paramilitary soldier killed, another injured in southwest Pakistan
Updated 15 sec ago
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One paramilitary soldier killed, another injured in southwest Pakistan

One paramilitary soldier killed, another injured in southwest Pakistan
  • The incident was caused by an IED blast when a Frontier Corps vehicle was escorting a water tanker
  • No group has claimed responsibility, though Baloch separatists have targeted soldiers in the past

QUETTA: A paramilitary soldier was killed and another injured in an explosion caused by an improvised explosive device (IED) on Saturday in the restive southwestern province of Balochistan, which has been prone to insurgent violence for decades.
The blast targeted a Frontier Corps (FC) vehicle escorting a water tanker in the Akhtarabad neighborhood near the western bypass area of Quetta, the provincial capital, according to police.
Balochistan, sharing a porous border with Iran and Afghanistan, has witnessed a decades-long insurgency with separatists accusing successive governments of unfairly exploiting the mineral-rich region’s resources, a claim denied by the state.
While Baloch separatist armed groups typically operate independently, recent reports suggest increasing cooperation between these groups and the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
“A Frontier Corps vehicle was passing through Akhtarabad when there was an IED blast in the western bypass area,” Rashid Ali, Station House Officer of Shalkot Police, told Arab News. “One FC soldier was killed while another received minor injuries.”
No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack, though Pakistani security forces have been the main target of separatists and other militant groups in the province. These armed factions have also launched attacks against Chinese nationals working on energy and infrastructure development projects.
“The FC vehicle was damaged in the blast and the injured soldier was shifted to a hospital for treatment,” the police official said, adding: “Law enforcement agencies have cordoned off the area and are gathering evidence from the crime scene.”
Meer Zia Ullah Langau, Balochistan’s Minister for Home and Tribal Affairs, condemned the attack and directed authorities to bolster security arrangements in the area.
In recent months, Baloch separatist groups have intensified their attacks against security forces and ethnic Punjabi residents who often travel to the province for daily wages.
On June 21, the outlawed Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) abducted seven Punjabi tourists, and last week, the group announced plans to “punish” them after the government refused to negotiate for the release of incarcerated BLA fighters.


Pakistan asks authorities to revise revenue strategy to reduce country’s debt

Pakistan asks authorities to revise revenue strategy to reduce country’s debt
Updated 13 July 2024
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Pakistan asks authorities to revise revenue strategy to reduce country’s debt

Pakistan asks authorities to revise revenue strategy to reduce country’s debt
  • The statement came hours after Pakistan reached a staff-level agreement with International Monetary Fund for a new $7 billion loan deal
  • Islamabad agreed in exchange to conduct further unpopular reforms, including widening the South Asian nation’s chronically low tax base

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday asked Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) officials to re-evaluate and revise their strategy to enhance revenue collection to rid Pakistan of a massive public debt of $242 billion, Sharif’s office said.
The statement came hours after Pakistan reached a staff-level agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a new $7 billion loan deal. Islamabad agreed in exchange to conduct further unpopular reforms, including widening the South Asian nation’s chronically low tax base.
Pakistan last year came to the brink of default as the economy shriveled amid political chaos, catastrophic 2022 floods and decades of mismanagement. The nation was saved by last-minute loans from friendly countries as well as support from the IMF, but its finances remain in dire straits with high inflation and staggering public debts.
Presiding over a meeting of officials at the FBR headquarters, Sharif called the revenue watchdog the “backbone” of the country’s economy and urged that sectors which were not paying taxes must be brought into the tax net.
“The prime minister issued the directives to immediately release Rs2 billion to develop the Web Based One Customs (WeBOC) System on modern lines,” Sharif’s office said in a statement.
He said the process of FBR’s digitization had begun and it would be completed in the most “comprehensive and coordinated manner,” promising full support to the revenue collection body in acquiring the latest technology.
Officials informed the participants that 4.9 million taxable persons had been identified in the country by using modern technology, according to the statement. PM Sharif directed increasing the tax base and bringing these persons into the tax net immediately.
During the 2024-25 fiscal year beginning on July 1, Sharif’s government aims to raise nearly $46 billion in taxes, a 40 percent increase from the previous year. It has used more unusual methods, including blocking 210,000 mobile connections, to compel people to file their tax returns. Islamabad also aims to reduce its fiscal deficit by 1.5 percent to 5.9 percent in the coming year.
But Pakistan’s public debt of $242 billion remains a huge problem for the South Asian country and servicing it may swallow up half of the country’s income in 2024, according to the IMF.


Malala calls for Pakistan to stop deporting undocumented Afghans

Malala calls for Pakistan to stop deporting undocumented Afghans
Updated 13 July 2024
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Malala calls for Pakistan to stop deporting undocumented Afghans

Malala calls for Pakistan to stop deporting undocumented Afghans
  • More than 600,000 Afghans have fled Pakistan since Islamabad last year ordered undocumented migrants to leave or face arrest
  • Human rights monitors have warned that some sent to Afghanistan faced persecution by the Taliban, who came into power in 2021

LONDON: Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai called for Pakistan to stop deporting undocumented Afghans, saying she was especially concerned about the “dark future” awaiting women and girls sent back.
“It is deeply concerning that Pakistan is forcing Afghan refugees based in Pakistan back into Afghanistan, and I’m deeply concerned about the women and girls,” the activist, who was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 2014, told AFP in an interview on Friday.
Despite extending leave for Afghan refugees with permits to stay in Pakistan for another year, Islamabad this week said it would remove illegal migrants.
More than 600,000 Afghans have fled Pakistan since Islamabad last year ordered undocumented migrants to leave or face arrest.
Human rights monitors have warned that some sent to Afghanistan faced persecution by the Taliban, who came into power in 2021 and have imposed an austere form of Islam, barring girls from higher education and excluding women and girls from areas of public life.
“A lot of these girls in Pakistan were studying, they were in school, these women were doing work,” said Malala, 27, who grew up in Pakistan’s Swat valley.
She had to move to the UK after she was shot, aged just 15, for resisting the Pakistan Taliban’s then-ban on girls’ education in her hometown.
“I hope that Pakistan reverses its policy and that they protect girls and women especially because of the dark future that they would be witnessing in Afghanistan,” she added.
Speaking to AFP on her birthday, recognized by the UN as Malala Day, the activist launched into the challenges facing the only country in the world where girls over 12 are barred from school.
“I cannot believe that I’m witnessing a time when girls have been banned from their education for more than three years,” she said, adding that while the situation was “shocking,” she “admired the resilience of the Afghan activists.”
The Malala Fund is campaigning for the UN to formally broaden their definition of crimes against humanity to include “gender apartheid” — a phrase the UN has used to describe the situation in Afghanistan.
Earlier this month, the UN and Taliban sat down for talks in Doha for the first time since the latter came to power but without women in attendance.
Malala said the Doha talks made a “compromise on the future of women and girls,” calling for a “principled engagement” with the Taliban.
“World leaders need to realize that when they sit down with the Taliban... and they’re excluding women and girls, they are actually doing a Taliban a favor,” she said.
“I want to call out those countries as well — that includes Canada and France — who have a feminist foreign policy” to “condemn” conversations like the Doha talks, she added.
Malala also called for an “urgent” ceasefire in the war in Gaza.
“It is horrifying how many schools have been bombed in Gaza, even more recently the four schools,” she added, referring to four schools that were hit by Israeli air strikes this week.
According to the education ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip, 85 percent of educational facilities in the territory are out of service because of the war.
“It is deeply concerning because we know that children do not have a future when they’re living under a war, when their schools and homes are destroyed,” said Malala.
The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, which coordinates nearly all aid to Gaza, said it used more than half its budget before the war to fund education.
However, it is facing funding woes after several countries including the United States and Britain suspended aid following Israeli accusations that its workers were involved in Hamas’s attack against Israel on October 7.
Some countries like Australia and Germany have however resumed funding when evidence could not be found to support Israel’s claims.
“When it comes to humanitarian support, all countries should be making no compromise. They should make sure that all the immediate and urgent needs of people are provided, and UNRWA is an example of that,” Malala said of countries resuming funding for the group.
“I do hope that all countries are providing aid and support because it’s about those innocent people and civilians who need to be protected.”


Ex-PM Khan, wife arrested on new charges after acquittal in ‘illegal’ marriage case

Ex-PM Khan, wife arrested on new charges after acquittal in ‘illegal’ marriage case
Updated 13 July 2024
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Ex-PM Khan, wife arrested on new charges after acquittal in ‘illegal’ marriage case

Ex-PM Khan, wife arrested on new charges after acquittal in ‘illegal’ marriage case
  • Khan, wife Bushra were sentenced to seven years in prison in February by court that ruled their 2018 marriage broke Islamic law
  • Authorities brought new cases related to May 9 violence, illegal sale of state gifts against them while they were being released

ISLAMABAD: Former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his wife Bushra Khan were arrested by the Pakistani authorities in new cases on Saturday shortly after a district and sessions court accepted their appeals against a ruling that they had violated the country’s marriage law and ordered their immediate release.
Khan and his wife were sentenced to seven years in prison and fined in February by a court that ruled their 2018 marriage broke the law. Bushra was accused of not completing the waiting period mandated by Islam, called “Iddat,” after divorcing her previous husband and marrying Khan.
Khan has been in jail after being convicted in four cases since last August. Two of the cases have since been suspended and he was acquitted in a third, so the Iddat case was the only one keeping him in prison.
However, hours after the local court’s verdict in his favor, the former prime minister and his wife were arrested in new cases, preventing the possibility of them walking out of the jail.
“Mr Khan has been arrested in 3 more cases,” his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party announced in a brief statement. “An Anti-Terrorism Court in Lahore approved the request to arrest Imran Khan in May 9 case.”
The new cases relate to violent protests that followed Khan’s brief detention on corruption charges last year in May, with people carrying PTI flags vandalizing government buildings and military properties in different parts of the country.
The former premier was viewed as prime suspect in the case, with the authorities suggesting that the rioting was planned beforehand by the top PTI leaders.
The PTI described the new cases as “another gimmick” to prolong Khan’s imprionment, saying all charges against him in May 9 cases were based on testimony by police officials.
It also announced that the ex-PM’s wife was detained in “another bogus case” related to the illegal sale of state gifts by the country’s anti-graft body, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB).
“NAB should be ashamed of themselves for completely destroying their credibility, and for carrying out illegal activities,” the PTI said in a social media post.
Earlier in the day, Additional Session Judge Afzal Majoka dismissed charges against the couple in Iddat case, ordering his release.
In a short order of the court seen by Arab News, the judge said the Superintendent Central Prison Adiala, where Khan and Bushra are jailed, was “required and authorized” to release them “if they are not required in any other case.”
“Appeals filed by the appellants Imran Ahmad Khan Niazi and Bushra Imran Khan have been accepted and appellants have been acquitted of the charge,” the order said.
Khan’s convictions had ruled the 71-year-old out of the February general elections as convicted felons cannot run for public office under Pakistani law. Arguably Pakistan’s most popular politician, Khan says all cases against him are motivated to keep him out of politics.
The criminal complaint against Khan and Bushra’s marriage was brought by her ex-husband, Khawar Maneka, to whom she was married for about 30 years.
Khan has often called Bushra his spiritual leader. She is known for her devotion to Sufism, a mystical form of Islam.
Born Bushra Riaz Watto, she changed her name to Khan after her marriage. Her husband and followers commonly refer to her as Bushra Bibi or Bushra Begum, titles that denote respect in the Urdu language.
Khan’s two previous marriages — to Jemima Goldsmith, daughter of tycoon James Goldsmith, and television journalist Reham Nayyar Khan — ended in divorce.


PM urges efforts to make new $7 billion loan deal Pakistan’s last IMF bailout

PM urges efforts to make new $7 billion loan deal Pakistan’s last IMF bailout
Updated 13 July 2024
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PM urges efforts to make new $7 billion loan deal Pakistan’s last IMF bailout

PM urges efforts to make new $7 billion loan deal Pakistan’s last IMF bailout
  • The new loan, spanning over 37 months, is subject to approval by the IMF executive board
  • It came on condition of reforms including hiking household bills and expanding the tax net

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday urged officials to make speedy and tireless efforts to make a newly secured $7 billion loan deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Pakistan’s last bailout from the global lender.
The prime minister’s statement came during a meeting of fiscal authorities of the country he presided over in the federal capital of Islamabad.
The meeting came hours after Pakistan reached a staff-level agreement with the IMF for a new $7 billion loan, which is subject to IMF board’s approval.
Sharif congratulated Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb and other officials for their hard work in the recent budget that helped materialize the deal.
“Now is the time that we have to act and act speedily and work tirelessly, only then it would be last IMF program,” he said in televised comments.
“Taxing common people who pay tax, if you will impose further tax on them, [then] it’s a premium for those who don’t pay tax and it’s a penalty for those who are honest taxpayers.”
The deal came weeks after Sharif’s government presented its first budget, aiming to collect Rs13 trillion ($44 billion) in taxes, a 40 percent increase from the last fiscal year.
The government has said that it would ensure an increase in the number of taxpayers in the country from the existing 5 million people who paid taxes.
During the meeting, Sharif asked the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) chairman to collect even the “last penny.”
“Whatever you need in the public interest, national interest to collect the last penny, which is our due right, I will spend any amount of money to get those gadgetries which are required for this purpose,” he offered.
Islamabad wrangled for months with IMF officials to unlock the new loan announced on Friday, which will be paid out over 37 months.
It came on condition of far-reaching reforms including hiking household bills to remedy a permanently crisis-stricken energy sector and uplifting pitiful tax takings.
More unusual methods have seen the tax authority block 210,000 SIM cards of mobile users who have not filed tax returns in a bid to widen the revenue bracket.
Under the deal “revenue collections will be supported by simpler and fairer direct and indirect taxation including by bringing net income from the retail, export, and agriculture sectors properly into the tax system,” IMF Pakistan mission chief, Nathan Porter, said in a statement.
Islamabad also aims to reduce its fiscal deficit by 1.5 percent to 5.9 percent in the coming year, heeding another key IMF demand.
The IMF said the loan and its conditions should allow Pakistan to “cement macroeconomic stability and create conditions for stronger, more inclusive and resilient growth.”
But Pakistan’s public debt remains huge at $242 billion and servicing it will still swallow up half of the government’s income this fiscal year, according to the lender.