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Academic Development Program (ADP) IDSP-Pakistan
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These articles are published by Academic Development Program of IDSP-Pakistan through using different sources.The opinions reflected by the various contributers and articles do not necessarily reflect the views of IDSP- Pakistan.

Imran meets Munter in ISI Chief's Presense:

January 12, 2012
News Desk
Monday, November 21, 2011

LONDON: Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) chairman Imran Khan was recently introduced to Cameron Munter, American Ambassador to Pakistan, in the presence of General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the ISI chief, according to sources, The Sunday Times reported. Imran Khan is said to have gained the backing of the country’s powerful security establishment, which has grown tired of the corruption pervading the two traditional political groupings, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), led by President Asif Ali Zardari, and the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), led by Nawaz Sharif, a former prime minister.

Although they do not publicly admit to favouring any party, it is an open secret that the military leadership, and the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), are backing Imran Khan’s campaign, said The Sunday Times report.

A senior official confirmed that he had the support of the army, but said his rise would cause more political damage to Sharif, the opposition leader and an outspoken military critic, than to the ruling PPP.

Others view Imran Khan as a third force to break the dominance of Pakistan’s two largest parties. “Perhaps they think he will bring about cleaner and better-quality politics and put fresh life into the country,” said Talat Masood, a retired general. “The military are perturbed by the economy because that affects defence spending.”

Imran Khan is reluctant to criticise the military establishment publicly, but he emphasises that he will not be a puppet of the generals. “Obviously you have to work with them but it doesn’t mean you have to work under them,” he told The Times.

Nawaz Sharif’s PML claimed last week that “hidden hands” were propping Imran Khan up and threatened to trigger early elections by provoking mass resignations from the parliament. The perils of upsetting the army were made clear this week when Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s Ambassador to Washington, was forced to offer his resignation after the leak of a memo allegedly sent by the civilian government in May to American officials, asking for help to prevent a coup. Many analysts believe Haqqani, who is unpopular with the military, was made a scapegoat.

Reports that several generals had snubbed a state banquet before tense meetings with Zardari added to speculation that the PPP has fallen from favour with the military. Despite his popularity, many Pakistanis remain unconvinced that Imran Khan has the political experience to win an election. Several newspapers have also questioned his ability to lead the country, with some describing his policies as naive.

“I think it’s more a vote of no confidence (in the government) than of confidence in Khan,” said General Mahmud Ali Durrani, a former national security adviser.Imran Khan himself attributes his rising fortunes to the public’s frustration with their dishonest leaders. “In recent years, never have the people of Pakistan faced such corruption, lawlessness, lack of governance — it’s total chaos,” he said in an interview last week.

“In the beginning people could not connect corruption at the highest levels with poverty and their own situation. Today people have connected it. People realise that unemployment, poverty, inflation are all because of the corruption of the ruling elite.”

The PTI chief has pledged that if he wins power, he will make all politicians declare their assets and start paying taxes. “The reason why Pakistan is bankrupt today is because we have the lowest ratio of tax to gross domestic product and we have the highest amount of corruption,” he said.

A combination of his charisma and the public’s frustration with both mainstream parties drew a crowd estimated at up to 200,000 to a rally in Lahore last month, one of the largest Pakistan has seen.

Describing the event as a “mini-revolution” and the start of a political “tsunami”, Imran Khan said he was confident that the crowds would be even larger at his next rally in Karachi. “People are looking for change,” he said.
 

Cells That Read Minds

January 12, 2012
Leigh Wells

MONKEY SEE When a monkey watches a researcher bring an object—an ice cream cone, for example— to his mouth, the same brain neurons fire as when the monkey brings a peanut to its own mouth. In the early 1990's, Italian researchers discovered this phenomenon and named the cells "mirror neurons." More Photos >

Published: January 10, 2006

On a hot summer day 15 years ago in Parma, Italy, a monkey sat in a special labor...


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A gentle reminder...

December 7, 2011
By Kamran Shafi

Courtesy of the "The Express Tribune with the International Tribune"

The writer is a columnist, a former major of the Pakistan Army and served as press secretary to Benazir Bhutto

Amid all this talk of how our sovereignty has been compromised by Memogate, another Memo, this priceless one signed by none other than the Founder of the Pakistan Army who first taught the Generals a lesson they never forgot: how to mount coups d’etat and take over the gov...


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Let the beauty we love be what we do, there are a hundred ways to kneel and kiss the ground.

November 22, 2011

Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

 
Let the beauty we love be what we do, there are a hundred ways to kneel and kiss the ground.
 
Thus Jalaluddin Rumi, the 13th century Persian poet, who has been the object of popular veneration and, overriding sectarian, ideological and national divisions, a long lasting source of inspiration for Muslims around the world. With his knowledge of the inner spiritual recesses of Islam and skillful use of language, he is u...

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"Should the Civilian Government or Military define the National Interest"

November 19, 2011

     By Najam Sethi


An article in a British paper last month by Mansoor Ijaz, a Pakistani-American businessman with political connections in Washington, has taken a toll of the civil...


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Beautiful Analysis of Imran khan's Lahore rally

November 19, 2011
   Welcome, Imran  
By Kamran Shafi
Published: November 3, 2011
Courtesy to: The Express Tribune





The writer is a columnist, a former major of the Pakistan Army, and served as press secretary to Benazir Bhutto

Let us not quibble about how many people turned out for Tehreek-e-Insaf’s (PTI) jalsa at Lahore; let us just say that it was one of the big gatherings at Minto Park. Let us also not light upon the fact that the performance of ...


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Pakistan's Security Thinking By Professor Ijaz Khan

November 19, 2011

The writer is chairman of the Department of International Relations, University of Peshawar

Security is a concept that changes with the times, responding to systemic changes in human governance, priorities, technology, economy as well as sociology. The most important question is what you want to secure. A related question is defining the ‘what’ in the above question. Pakistan appears to be unable to respond t...


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Our Expectations of the Muslim Woman

March 22, 2011
A lecture by: Dr. Ali Shariati, 1933 - 1977
Prior to beginning my lecture, I would like to propose some practical suggestions. Just speaking about women's rights, women's personality and Islam's view of women is very different from realising the actual value which Islam gives to human beings, and to women in particular. Most often, we are satisfied by pointing out that Islam gives great value to science or establishes progressive rights for women. Unfortunately we never actually use or benefi...

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Telling the untold story:- Zubeida Mustafa

January 27, 2011

Courtesy to "www.dawn.com"

PEARL S. Buck, the American author who rose to fame because of her graphic and insightful novels on pre-revolutionary China, once remarked, “If you want to understand today, you have to search yesterday.” But can you understand yesterday if what you learn about it is warped and one-sided?

That is inevitable when information of the past comes in the form of history written with a colonial construction. It portrays events through the prism of the powerful clas...


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ANALYSIS: The powerful and overpowered of the PPP —Farhat Taj

January 22, 2011

By--Farhat Taj

The PPP is losing space to the religious fanatics and silencing with its own hands all the sane and principled voices within the ranks of the party. Shortsighted and insensitive people are running the show in the party

Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) has arguably been the most popular federalist party of Pakistan. The party has been binding Pakistanis across the ethnic and religious divide with the federation of Pakistan. It has secular credentials and has been backin...


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