Friday 28 August 2020

Former Pakistan general Asim Bajwa, who is PM aide and CPEC chief faces corruption heat

Former Pakistan general Asim Bajwa, who is PM aide and CPEC chief faces corruption heat

Report alleges Bajwa family’s ‘suspicious’ financial dealings run into millions of dollars. A Pakistani govt website was hacked, calling for accountability.

SNEHESH ALEX PHILIP 28 August, 2020 4:32 pm IST

New Delhi: A corruption scandal involving Lt Gen. Asim Saleem Bajwa (retd), chairman of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and special assistant to Prime Minister Imran Khan, is gathering a storm in his country.

On Friday, the website of the Pakistan Remittance Initiative was hacked, and a picture of Bajwa and his family was put up, calling for accountability. This came a day after a Pakistani media report had elaborated the “suspicious” financial dealings of Bajwa’s family, worth millions of dollars.

“The growth of the Bajwa family’s business empire in the United States and later in Pakistan directly matches the rise in power of retired general Asim Saleem Bajwa, who is now chairman of the country’s massive China-financed infrastructure project and a special assistant to the prime minister,” the report, penned by journalist Ahmed Noorani and published on Fact Focus, stated.

Bajwa is a former director general of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the media wing of the Pakistani military, and was appointed as special assistant to PM Khan on information in April this year.

Following the publication of the report, Asim Bajwa denied the allegations on Twitter, saying: “A malicious propaganda story published on an unknown site, against me and my family, is strongly rebutted.”

Advertisement: 0:14

VDO.AI

Bajwa’s declared assets versus report’s claims

In his declaration of assets and liabilities signed in June as special assistant to the PM, Bajwa declared an investment of $18,468 (Pakistani rupees 31 lakh) in his wife’s name. He also declared that he and his wife have no immovable property held outside Pakistan, or any business capital outside Pakistan.

However, the report traces the Bajwa family’s business dealings as far back as 2002, saying that was the year his younger brothers opened their first Papa John’s pizza outlet. This was the year Bajwa went to work for Gen. Pervez Musharraf, as a lieutenant colonel on the military dictator’s staff.

“Nadeem Bajwa, 53, who started as a delivery driver for the pizza restaurant franchise, his brothers and Asim Bajwa’s wife and sons now own a business empire which set up 99 companies in four countries, including a pizza franchise with 133 restaurants worth an estimated $39.9 million,” the report states.

“Out of total 99 companies, 66 are main companies, 33 companies are branch companies of some of the main companies, while five companies are dead now,” it alleged, adding that the businesses of the Bajwa family have been put under the umbrella called Bajco Group.

Bajwa’s sons joined Bajco Group companies in 2015, and also started establishing new companies independent of the Bajco Group in Pakistan and in the US after he became director general of ISPR and commander of the country’s Southern Command.

The report also alleged that Lt Gen. Bajwa’s wife Farrukh Zeba was a shareholder in all the foreign businesses from the very beginning. She is currently associated with or is a shareholder in 85 companies, including 82 abroad (71 in the US, seven in the UAE and four in Canada).

The report added that records from US state governments and other records related to the companies showed that some of them also have investments in the real estate sector and own some 13 commercial properties in the United States, including two shopping centres.

“Estimated current net worth of businesses and properties of these companies jointly owned by Farrukh Zeba stands at $52.7 million,” the report said.


Also read: Pakistanis know a lot about Dawood Ibrahim. The don lives in White House, drives a black taxi

You are reading this because you value good, intelligent and objective journalism. We thank you for your time and your trust.

You also know that the news media is facing an unprecedented crisis. It is likely that you are also hearing of the brutal layoffs and pay-cuts hitting the industry. There are many reasons why the media’s economics is broken. But a big one is that good people are not yet paying enough for good journalism.

We have a newsroom filled with talented young reporters. We also have the country’s most robust editing and fact-checking team, finest news photographers and video professionals. We are building India’s most ambitious and energetic news platform. And have just turned three.

At ThePrint, we invest in quality journalists. We pay them fairly. As you may have noticed, we do not flinch from spending whatever it takes to make sure our reporters reach where the story is.

This comes with a sizable cost. For us to continue bringing quality journalism, we need readers like you to pay for it.

If you think we deserve your support, do join us in this endeavour to strengthen fair, free, courageous and questioning journalism. Please click on the link below. Your support will define ThePrint’s future.

https://theprint.in/world/former-pakistan-general-asim-bajwa-who-is-pm-aide-and-cpec-chief-faces-corruption-heat/491047/

 

Monday 24 August 2020

"Why don't we take a new path on the Kashmir issue, liberate it. Mahmood khan Achakzai.

"Why don't we take a new path on the Kashmir issue, liberate it. Mahmood khan Achakzai.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWvin0jKcg4&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR115yHiPC1VEC3c8A5_tDtz_9DmFYgW4YclDBhLplDrNYdNpxzbN7-n4ic

My Voice: Shaukat Kashmiri examines creation of Pakistan and 'Great Game' in South Asia, part 2

My Voice: Shaukat Kashmiri examines creation of Pakistan and 'Great Game' in South Asia, part 2

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dXhWgKVfWO0&feature=youtu.be

Saturday 22 August 2020

My new book is available on Amazon: Legal status of Jammu and Kashmir: Realisation of bitter facts

My new book is available on Amazon:
Legal status of Jammu and Kashmir: Realisation of bitter facts

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Legal-status-Jammu-Kashmir-Realisation/dp/1728355648/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=legal+status+of+Jammu+and+Kashmir&qid=1598107108&sr=8-1

Dreadful situation of basic political, social, cultural and democratic rights of the people living in the territory of AJK.

Dreadful situation of basic political, social, cultural and democratic rights of the people living in the territory of AJK.

Javed Kashmiri

 

Dear Raja Farooq Haider Khan

Prime Minister Azad Government of the State of Jammu Kashmir Muzaffarabad, Azad Jammu and Kashmir

Re: Basic human rights denied; freedom of expression, freedom of peaceful assembly met with violence; arbitrary arrest and detention of Tanveer Ahmed

Dear Mr. Prime Minister

I am writing to seek your attention to an inhuman incident occurred in AJK, the territory you are heading as Prime Minister. I am very much concerned with dreadful situation of basic political, social, cultural and democratic rights of the people living in the territory of AJK. Since yesterday (August 21), a video is viral on social media, where non local civilians (Pakistani nationals), secret agencies of Pakistan and AJK police is humiliating, beating and insulting a well-known journalist, researcher and human rights activist Mr. Tanveer Ahmed at Dadyal, Azad Kashmir.

I, the undersigned, urge you that do not let extra-terrestrials and foreigners run the affairs of territory you head as the Prime Minister. It is your fundamental responsibility to protect the political, social, cultural and democratic rights of the citizens of AJK till the final decision of this divided and occupied Himalayan Country. Hoisting Indian or Pakistani flags in any part of State of Jammu Kashmir means exactly the same as the history of Union Jack being hoisted during British colonialism. AND protesting against such actions is a fundamental right recognized by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, International Covenant on Cultural Rights and other protocols that provide foundations for rights and obligations in the modern day world. The people of AJK have a legitimate right to protest peacefully. Denying the people this right is a serious violation of their basic human rights and infringes the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR 1948) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR 1966).


We stress that such brutality should not go unaddressed. Such use of violence should come to an end immediately. People in AJK have a legitimate right to peaceful protest as rest of fellow humans around the globe. Denial of such right clearly indicates that who runs the affairs of AJK both politically and administratively. We urge you to protect the life, honor and dignity of the citizens of Jammu Kashmir living in AJK.


As a matter of fact we are knocking your door to release Tanveer Ahmed unconditionally and immediately, apologize from him, order to arrest the criminal goons who humiliated and assure the citizens that their dignity, honor, life and property be protected under your administration.
I thank you Mr. Prime Minister
Sincerely Yours
A concerned human

https://www.facebook.com/javed.kashmiri.9?__tn__=%2CdC-R-R&eid=ARAx5dMX4IlYHN8pACiVgPMnd0eVGFk4rLKHoYSkcwYWEfeEzDACVxTesEJ8XmxwDmlXzVP0-Ak89uMb&hc_ref=ARR7ib1fdtlCbOW2uIFEb_4OX0VeTXcF7HJSl0gGJQBCukrF0szpbCmZUzj4D6Kha6w&fref=nf

 

Tuesday 18 August 2020

My Voice: Junaid Qureshi examines role of APHC, part 6.

 My Voice: Junaid Qureshi examines role of APHC, part 6

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T21P73B398&feature=youtu.be

Sunday 16 August 2020

My Voice: Shaukat Kashmiri examines creation of Pakistan and 'Great Game' in South Asia.

My Voice: Shaukat Kashmiri examines creation of Pakistan and 'Great Game' in South Asia.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkFb7uyeYzw&feature=youtu.be

Thursday 13 August 2020

My Voice: Dr Misfer Hasan analysed the UN Resolutions on Kashmir and obligations of Pakistan.

My Voice: Dr Misfer Hasan analysed the UN Resolutions on Kashmir and obligations of Pakistan.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovJ5tZbd3hM&feature=youtu.be

Monday 10 August 2020

My Voice: Where is Muslim Umma? Why Pakistan is doing Jihad against Saudi Arabia?

My Voice: Where is Muslim Umma? Why Pakistan is doing Jihad against Saudi Arabia?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJqvN2CzqTo&feature=youtu.be

Wednesday 5 August 2020

India’s Kashmir Conundrum: Before and After the Abrogation of Article 370

India’s Kashmir Conundrum: Before and After the Abrogation of Article 370

 

On August 5, 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Indian government sought to arrest a thirty-year insurgency with an unprecedented change to the country’s constitution to revoke autonomy provisions for the state of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), split it off from the territory of Ladakh, and downgrade both from statehood to union territories. Since then, a significant crackdown on political and civic freedoms in the Kashmir Valley has drawn substantial international scrutiny.

 

The sudden unilateral change in Kashmir’s status may be one of the most consequential developments in the region since the 1989 outbreak of insurgency or the 1998 nuclear tests by India and Pakistan, warranting some systematic analysis of what brought India to this point and the region’s likely future.

 

Stability in Kashmir is central to stability in the entire South Asian region. Just six months before New Delhi’s decision to abrogate Article 370 of the constitution, a suicide bombing attack on Indian security forces in South Kashmir sparked a dangerous interstate crisis and rapid escalation between nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan that alarmed many policymakers. It reminded regional and international observers why President Bill Clinton, in 2000, cited this fault line as “the most dangerous place in the world,” several years after his CIA director identified it as the most likely flashpoint for use of weapons of mass destruction. Reignition of unrest in the Kashmir Valley could have catastrophic consequences, but the sources of potential ignition have fallen out of sight over the past decade even as Kashmir has exhibited a worrying steady uptick in popular discontentment, mass resistance, and violence.

Summary

  • Since 2013, mass resistance and armed insurgency have returned and grown in India’s Kashmir Valley, partly in response to the government’s failed strategy.
  •  
  • Resistance has involved mass participation in “quasi-violence” that involves semi-organized pressure by unarmed civilians to provoke, frustrate, and impose costs on the state. • New data on quasi-violence in the Kashmir Valley reveal substantial growth since 2013, at times even outpacing armed insurgency.

 

  • New Delhi’s strategy fixated on kinetically degrading militant organizations to improve security, which fed local militant recruitment and depressed faith in democratic institutions.

 

  • The government’s dramatic revocation of autonomy provisions for Jammu and Kashmir in 2019 minimized international penalties and preempted significant violent responses. Whether it replicates past political engineering or pursues revolutionary demographic engineering, the state is likely to face a resurgence of violent and quasi-violent resistance.

 

  • US influence is limited, but US policymakers could encourage dialogue with all stakeholders and alert New Delhi to the challenges that Indian choices will pose for cooperation if it is indefinitely bogged down in Kashmir.

 

To read the full report on the USIP website, click here.

 

 

https://www.stimson.org/2020/indias-kashmir-conundrum/?utm_source=Stimson+Center&utm_campaign=c3f2487dec-Prog%2FSouth+Asia%2FKashmir+Program+Update&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_15c3e20f70-c3f2487dec-46285445&mc_cid=c3f2487dec&mc_eid=30d36798c5

 

My Voice: Amjad Yousaf analyse roles of India and Pakistan in the context of 5 August 2019 action.

My Voice: Amjad Yousaf analyse roles of India and Pakistan in the context of 5 August 2019 action.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBV4X1eIKNY&feature=youtu.be

Monday 3 August 2020

My Voice: Role of APHC, analysed by Junaid Qureshi, part 4

My Voice: Role of APHC, analysed by Junaid Qureshi, part 4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjT8MfRRhzo