Seven killed, 11 injured in Myanmar bombing

BANGKOK: Seven people were killed and 11 injured when a bomb exploded in southeastern Myanmar, official media reported on Friday, blaming ethnic Karen separatists for the attack.

The bomb went off late on Wednesday during New Year celebrations in Phapon, a town in Kayin State, which is predominantly Karen and is about 190 km northeast of Myanmar's biggest city, Yangon.

‘It is learnt that the time bomb was planted by KNU (Karen National Union) terrorist insurgent group,’ state-controlled newspapers said.

The reports did not give details or evidence to show the KNU was responsible. Small blasts in public places, including markets and Buddhist temples, are fairly common in Myanmar and the ruling military government often blames KNU guerrillas.

The KNU is one of the biggest of the ethnic groups that have been fighting against the government for greater autonomy since independence from Britain in 1948.

The current junta has reached ceasefire agreements with 17 ethnic groups and at least six splinter groups of the KNU since it came to power in 1988. However, peace talks with the mainstream KNU have so far failed.

Accountability Court issues notice to Jahangir Badar

LAHORE: The Accountability Court of Lahore on Friday issued notices to three NRO beneficiaries for December 23, 2009.

Notices were served after the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) filed a petition with the Accountability Court against 32 beneficiaries.

According to NAB sources, initially the notices have been served to PPP Secretary General Jahangir Badar, former Acquisition Controller Amjad Hussain Sundle and Customs Officer Qazi Afzal.

NAB sources further revealed that notices to the remaining 29 beneficiaries included in the list were under process.

Ahmad Mukhtar and Nusrat Bhutto are also amongst the 32 to whom the notices are to be served, sources said.

The NAB has opened cases of the 44 NRO beneficiaries from Punjab province. — DawnNews

Half of Karzai’s Cabinet to stay: officials


KABUL: Two officials in the Afghan government say President Hamid Karzai will keep half of his current Cabinet in place as he begins his second five-year term, AP reports.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the list will not be sent to the Afghan parliament until Saturday. They told The Associated Press on Friday that the president wants 12 of his 25 ministers to remain in their jobs for now. The officials say the key ministers of defense, interior, foreign affairs, finance and agriculture are on the list of Karzai’s Cabinet picks.

Karzai’s decision to keep these key ministers in their posts is expected to be welcome news for members of the international community. The Afghan parliament must confirm the Cabinet nominees.

Ajmal Kasab retracts confession, claims torture


MUMBAI: The man accused of being the lone surviving gunman from last year's Mumbai attacks retracted his statement in court on Friday, saying he was tortured by the police to sign a confessional statement.

Pakistani citizen Mohammad Ajmal Kasab had been charged with 86 separate offences including murder and waging war against India in the November attacks when militants killed 166 people in a shooting spree across the financial hub.

‘He (Kasab) has told the court that he was arrested a few days ... before the attacks and kept in jail,’ public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam told Reuters by telephone. Kasab is among 38 charged by India in the attacks. If found guilty, he could face the death penalty.

The attacks raised tensions between India and Pakistan. New Delhi says Islamabad has not done enough to bring the Pakistani-based masterminds of the attack to justice.

Nikam said the retraction would have no bearing as the prosecution has sufficient proof against Kasab.

‘We have clinching evidence against him,’ Nikam said.

Kasab, smiling while speaking inside a packed courtroom, said he never met Pakistani militant leaders who planned the attacks against India.

The 21-year-old said he had come to Mumbai to work in films and was not involved in the shootings.

The trial, which has gripped the country for months, has seen several twists and turns, with two defence attorneys also dismissed for unprofessional conduct.

Last week, a Pakistani court indicted seven Pakistani suspects in connection with the attacks.

SC cancels Army Welfare Trust’s land lease

ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry on Friday cancelled the lease of the Army Welfare Trust stating that the allotment of land in the name of Army Welfare Trust was illegal.

Soon after the lease’s cancellation by the chief justice, the Army Welfare Trust was asked to transfer the land back to the City District Government of Karachi (CDGK) within three months.

The chief justice said former president Pervez Musharraf had no right to award the lease to the Army Welfare Trust.

According to the Supreme Court, Army Welfare Trust and Macro Habib signed an agreement to transfer five acres of the Children Football Ground near Lines Area in Karachi on lease during 2002.

India pulls out 30,000 troops from Kashmir

NEW DELHI: India has pulled out 30,000 troops from Kashmir following a fall in militant attacks in the Himalayan region bordering Pakistan, the Indian army announced Friday.

An army spokesman said the ground forces were withdrawn from Kashmir’s southern Rajouri and Poonch sectors two months ago.

The pullout was one of the biggest since 1999, when India and Pakistan fought a six-week undeclared war in the Himalayan peaks in which some 1,000 soldiers on both sides died.

The Indian troops’ presence in the revolt-hit Kashmir region has been a major irritant for many among its Muslim-majority population.

The soldiers who were withdrawn had been responsible for internal security in the scenic region where militants have been waging a battle against New Delhi’s rule for two decades, the army spokesman said.

‘We have moved out two divisions of infantry formations who were on internal security duties in Rajouri and Poonch and approximately the number of soldiers pulled out is 30,000 men,’ spokesman Colonel Om Singh said in New Delhi.

The spokesman said the number of soldiers deployed along the Line of Control — the de facto border that divides the territory into India- and Pakistan-administered Kashmir— had not been reduced.

‘They cannot be moved from there because that is a permanent deployment,’ he said, declining to disclose the number of troops holding ground along the 746-kilometre control line.

Experts and independent sources estimate the number of Indian troops along the Line of Control at around 120,000. The total number of Indian forces in Kashmir is unknown but it is believed to number in the hundreds of thousands.

The government has been promising since June to reduce the military presence as part of a bid to reduce tensions in the region, where fighting has claimed tens of thousands of lives. —AFP

Militants destroy college in Bara Tehsil

KHYBER: Unidentified militants have blown up the Government Technical College in Dogra area of Bara Tehsil on Friday.

According to official sources, militants planted two powerful bombs, which exploded one after another destroying the college completely. However, no casualty had been reported so far.

Security forces surrounded the area after the blast and launched a search operation in the region.

Three killed in suspected US drone strike


MIRAMSHAH: Three suspected militants were killed Friday in the third US drone missile strike on Pakistan's tribal district of North Waziristan in two days, security officials said.

The strike hit a village in the Dattakhel region close to North Waziristan's main town Miramshah - the same northwestern area where two strikes hours apart on Thursday killed at least 14 militants and destroyed their hideouts.

Islamabad is under growing US pressure to dismantle Islamist extremist networks along its lawless and porous border with Afghanistan.

'The US drone missiles hit a house in the mountains. We have reports of three militants killed and five injured. The house was completely destroyed,' said an intelligence service official based in Miramshah.

A security official in the northwestern city of Peshawar confirmed the drone attack. Officials refused to be named because of the sensitivity of the US strikes in Pakistan, which have inflamed anti-American sentiment.

It was not clear which groups were targeted, with North Waziristan rife with Taliban militants, al Qaeda fighters and members of the Haqqani network, a powerful group known for staging attacks on foreign troops in Afghanistan.

Rs120 mln from Allied Bank heist recovered: CCPO


KARACHI: Less than a week after the biggest bank heist in Karachi, the police have recovered a large portion of the money that was stolen from the Allied Bank on I.I. Chundrigar Road.

The CCPO of Karachi, Waseem Ahmed, has said that 120 million rupees have been recovered from the three main suspects in Sunday’s bank heist in Karachi.

Earlier, police had arrested three major suspects in the case. Two of the accused who have been detained belong to the Khyber Agency, while a third suspect was arrested from the Gulistan-e-Johar area of Karachi.

The CCPO said that in all exits out of Karachi were blocked to prevent the robbers from fleeing the city.

Waseem Ahmed urged banks across the city to upgrade their security systems as soon as possible.

He added that the prime suspect of the robbery, a man going by the alias Shahid, has also been apprehended. The CCPO informed reporters that the suspect’s real name is Hamid.

Some sources believe that the robbery was the result of an inside job and that the alarm systems inside the bank were sabotaged. Investigators are also reviewing new footage that has emerged.

Mosque suicide blast kills 11 in Lower Dir


PESHAWAR: A suicide bomber rammed a car into a mosque during Friday prayers, killing 11 people in the town of Timergara in the Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP), police said.

The explosion struck a mosque next to local police headquarters in Lower Dir district, the focus of a spring military offensive to oust militants advancing closer towards the capital Islamabad.

Muhammad Idrees Khan, deputy inspector general of police in Lower Dir, told AFP that the blast hit a mosque next to local police headquarters.

‘Now it has been confirmed that it was a suicide attack. The bomber was riding a car and he rammed his car into the outer gate of the mosque,’ he said.

Local television showed images of a huge plume of smoke rising from a small town in the mountains, while charred cars smoldered beside the blast site.

‘We have received three more dead bodies taking the death toll to 11. There are 29 injured people with us, some of them in a critical condition,’ said Doctor Wakeel Mohammad Khan, head of main hospital in Lower Dir.

‘The local residents told me that some more dead bodies are laying in the houses — we have declared an emergency in the hospital.’

The injured included children, he added, but officials were unable to say how many police were killed or wounded in the attack.

More than 2,700 people have been killed in attacks in Pakistan since July 2007, with the past three months seeing a surge in suicide bombings targeting civilian and security targets by militants avenging the army onslaught.—AFP

PM suspends secretary of interior

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani has suspended the secretary ministry of interior along with additional DG FIA immigration and two FIA inpectors for barring Defence Minister Ahmed Mukhtar from leaving for China last night.

The prime minister took the decsion after a meeting with President Asif Zardari.

Later a notification was issued about the suspension of these officials and an inquiry was ordered into the incident.

Both the president and the prime minister took serious notice of the incident when at Benazir Bhutto Airport FIA staff told the officials of Defence Minister Ahmed Mukhtar that his name is on the Exit Control List and he cannot leave for China.

Credible sources told DawnNews that it was also decided that no sitting minister would resign on the prevailing situation. A minister who suggested resignations was snubbed by the top leadership.

It was decided that a formal strategy would be adopted on Saturday in a CEC meeting of the PPP with President Zardari in the Chair. -DawnNews

Govt to be facilitated in foreign cases: NAB


ISLAMABAD: The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) says it will act as a facilitator if the government initiates President Zardari’s cases in Switzerland, Spain and United Kingdom.

Chairman NAB Naveed Ahsan has sent letters to all regional offices with instructions to submit applications to revive all the cases to 4th Oct 2007 position and restoration of all the cases will not take much time, a NAB official told DawnNews.

He maintained that regarding President Asif Ali Zardari’s cases in Switzerland, Spain and United Kingdom, including the famous Surrey Mansion, NAB will act as a facilitator to the government.

The official was of the view that the prime minister, Federal Cabinet or the Establishment Division will make any correspondence with foreign governments to restart the pending cases.

However, Talking to DawnNews, Foreign Office Spokesman Abdul Basit said that the Foreign Office has no concern with the matter as investigations or persuasion of the cases abroad is up to the government.

Regarding the services of MB Abbasi, Hussain Haqqani and Wajid Shams-ul-Hassan who are working in Iran, USA and UK respectively, the spokesman said that the government is the sole authority for appointing envoys because they are political appointees and any future decision in this regard would be up to the government.—DawnNews

Pakistan's female umpire breaks new ground in UK


KARACHI: Former cricketer Shah Parveen Kausar became the first woman from Pakistan to umpire a competitive game in England.

Kausar stood as a field umpire in the in the Saddleworth and District Cricket League game between Shaw and Friamere Second XI at Holebottom Clough.

‘Shah did very well. She was very competent in everything she did and I think she enjoyed herself,’ experienced league official Peter Lilley and Shah's partner in the game said while talking to Oldham Evening Chronicle.

‘She didn’t just stand at square leg, she did a full job.

‘The players were a bit surprised, but they were very courteous towards her and there was no bad language — not even directed at me which was unusual!’

The 50-year-old Kausar has umpired both men’s and women’s games in Pakistan. She is expected to umpire a full season in England next year.

‘Thanks to Kausar’s achievements, more women will be encouraged to increase their involvement with Cricket,’ a Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) statement said Wednesday.

‘Kausar’s achievements are especially noteworthy as she is making great strides in an area previously dominated by men and is a great advertisement for equality in Pakistani sports. Furthermore, Kausar’s achievement will help provide encouragement to other women to break similar ground in cricket,’ the statement said.

NRO beneficiaries on Exit Control List


ISLAMABAD: The interior ministry, in compliance with the NAB’s directives, has issued arrest warrants against 252 beneficiaries of the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO). The names of the 252 have been placed on the Exit Control List.

The bank accounts of many of the beneficiaries have been frozen and their properties seized.

Militants open fire at police in Mathra area of Peshawar

PESHAWAR: Frontier Police on Thursday arrested two militants from Mathra area after an exchange of fire with militants, according to a DawnNews report.

Police said one of the arrested militant got injured during shooting and was taken to Lady Reading Hospital for treatment while the other is in their custody.

According to details, Mathra police was on routine movement in the area when some militants opened fire at them.

In retaliation, the police also opened fire and two of the militants were arrested while three others ran away.

Police have started initial investigation and a search operation has been launched in the area.

Two security officials killed in Bara explosion

PESHAWAR: At least two security officials have been killed and several injured in a remote-controlled explosion, targeting a security forces convoy in Bara Tehsil on Thursday.

According to FC sources, security forces also retaliated after the attack and killed three militants during an exchange of fire.

Official sources said that the security forces convoy was doing a search operation in the area when the incident happened.

Meanwhile, security forces have surrounded the whole area and have shifted the injured to Combined Military Hospital in Peshawar.

Gilani asks UN to reconsider decision

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has asked the United Nations to reconsider its recent decision to reduce its international staff in Pakistan.

Gilani was talking to the UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy on Humanitarian Assistance and Special Advisor to the UN Secretary General on Friends of Democratic Pakistan, Jean-Maurice Ripert, who called on the prime minister at the PM House.

Gilani said that the government of Pakistan was taking all possible measures to ensure security of the UN premises and personnel in the country.

The UN envoy clarified that relocation of some of the UN’s international staff from Pakistan was a temporary measure and the UN will not leave Pakistan alone at this critical juncture.

He also assured the Prime Minister that Pakistani staff working in the UN offices will not be laid off and the relocated staff will return to Pakistan as soon as situation improves.

PPP MNA Sherry Rahman also attended the meeting.

Zardari ready to face all kinds of challenges

ISLAMABAD: In reaction to the decision on the National Reconciliation Ordinance, President Zardari said he is ready to face all kinds of challenges, as he wants to save Pakistan from turning into another Afghanistan.

Speaking to a delegation of journalists from the Hyderabad Press Club at the presidency in Islamabad, Zardari said he is ready to face all the challenges in the same way as Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and Benazir Bhutto faced them.

He said the controversial statement made by Kamal Azfar during the NRO case hearings was uncalled for.

While being reluctant to take questions about the current situation in the country, Zardari said he has been making efforts to change attitudes in the country.

However, the president gave no indication about his future course of action and also stated that he had avoided the NRO at the Supreme Court so that contradiction among the parties could be avoided.

SC issues show cause notice to Rehman Malik


ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court here Thursday issued show cause notice to Interior Minister Rehman Malik for December 24 for interfering in the judicial direction of the Court for probing Rs22 billion loss reported by Pakistan Steel Mills.

The three-member bench comprising Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, Justice Ch. Ejaz Ahmed and Justice Khilji Arif Hussain, also directed Director Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) Mir Amir to carry out his investigation and submit a report on the next date of hearing.

The bench expressed its displeasure over the Interior Minister’s setting up a joint investigation team and said that executive had nothing to do with judicial proceedings.

The bench dissolved the investigation team formed by the concerned minister immediately.

The bench also expressed its dismay over removal of DG FIA Tariq Khosa.

Chief Justice remarked that new things surfaced whenever the court holds proceedings.

The Supreme Court is currently hearing a suo motu notice taken on a Rs22 billion loss incurred by Pakistan Steel Mills.

PPP ready to face court cases: Kaira

ISLAMABAD: Minister for Information and Broadcasting Qamar Zaman Kaira Thursday said that the leadership of Pakistan Peoples Party is ready to face the fake and politically-motivated cases in the court of law.

Talking to a private TV channel, he said the PPP never fled from facing the cases. Like many other leaders, President Asif Ali Zardari was only facing allegations and he (Zardari) has already spent 11 years in various prisons.

A formal reaction to the NRO verdict would be given after going through the detailed judgment, he added.

He appreciated the learned judges for declaring the controversial NRO as ultra vires saying that the Supreme Court has endorsed the government’s point of view.

He said the NRO had already been rejected by the federal government and parliament. Federal government had also decided not to defend the ordinance in Supreme Court. —APP

‘Miracle’ as guests survive Bannu suicide bomb: police

PESHAWAR: A teenage suicide bomber blew himself up at a gathering in Bannu district on Thursday, but guests escaped unhurt in the attack in a Taliban-troubled region, police said.

Senior police official Mohammad Ayub told AFP it was a ‘miracle’ that no one was wounded or killed in the bombing in Essakkhel village, which lies near militant strongholds of North and South Waziristan.

‘A young boy aged 13 or 14 blew himself up in the middle of guests who were visiting the house of a local political leader to congratulate him on performing the hajj,’ Ayub said.

‘It was just a miracle that nobody was hurt in the attack,’ he said.

The boy was killed by his suicide vest, but police said it was possible that not all the explosives detonated, while a hand grenade the bomber was carrying was also defused at the scene.

Suicide bombings are frequently carried out by young teenagers, who the military allege are brainwashed by militants. —AFP

Twelve killed in multiple US drone strikes


MIRANSHAH: Ten suspected militants were killed Thursday in the second US missile strike in a day targeting insurgents in Pakistan's tribal North Waziristan district, security officials said.

‘Five US drones fired at least seven missiles, targeting several houses in the Ambarshaga area in North Waziristan and killing more than 10 militants,’ a senior security official in the area told AFP.

Another security official confirmed the strike and said the death toll may rise.

Earlier Thursday two militants were killed in a similar strike on a house near Miranshah, the main town in the North Waziristan. -AFP

Muharram to begin on Saturday

ISLAMABAD: The moon of Muharram-ul-Haram was not sighted across the country on Thursday, therefore the first of Muharram will fall on Saturday, 19th December, the Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee announced.

The meeting of the Central Ruet-Hilal Committee was held in the Ministry of Religious Affairs building.

Due to the illness of Mufti Muneeb-ur-Rehman, the chairman of the committee, Mufti Muhammad Rafique Hasni chaired the meeting.

Acting chairman of the committee Mufti Muhammad Rafique Hasni informed the media that the moon for Muharram-ul-Haram was not sighted.

Representatives of the Met office and about 14 Ulema from different schools of thought from across the country also attended the meeting.—APP

Ulema, Mushaikh declare suicide attacks un-Islamic


ISLAMABAD: Ulema and Mushaikh belonging to different schools of thought on Thursday unanimously declared suicide attacks in the country un-Islamic and forbidden in Islam.

A large number of Ulema and Mushaikh who attend the 'Ulema Mushaikh Conference' arranged by the Ministry of Religious Affair at National Librarydenounced the killing of innocent people in the name of religion.
They, in particular spoke against suicide attacks. Interior Minister Rehman Malik and Minister for Religious Affairs Allama Hamid Saeed Kazmi and Ulema Mushaikh from across the country participated in the conference.

The interior minister also briefed the Ulema and Mushaikh about the security situation as well as measures taken by the government for curbing the menace of terrorism.

The Ulema said that it is clearly stated in the Holy Quran that killing of innocent people is un-Islamic and it could not be justified in any way.

They said 'The shariah introduced by Hazrat Muhammad (SAW), is complete and adequate for us and we do not need any thing more.'

Speaking on the occasion, Minister for Religions Affairs Allama Hamid Saeed Kazmi said that the conference was arranged with an aim to devise a strategy against terrorism.

He said those who launched attacks upon mosques and educational institutions could never be called Muslims. He said Islam does not allow anyone to kill innocent people or attack mosques.

'While those laying down their lives in the fight against terrorism are martyrs as they are fighting to save the motherland,' he said.

The minister said no one in the country could declare suicide attacks as correct. He urged people to join hands with the government against terrorists.

He added that all the demands of the ulema and Mushaikh have been included in the resolution adopted by the conference.

Hamid Kazmi said before launching the military operation in Waziristan all options were used to solve the issue through peaceful way.

'The whole nation witnessed that the government wanted to solve the issue through dialogue and it only opted to use power when the militants started challenging the writ of the government,' he said.

He said there would be no dialogue with the militants unless they surrender. He urged the nation to display unity and work for the progress and prosperity of the country.

He said Islam is a religion of peace, harmony and tolerance and dose not allow to spread hatred.

Prominent religious scholar, Syed Charaghuddin Shah said that Ulema believe that the people who are committing terrorists actives have no link with Islam.

He said the conspiracies of enemies to de-stabilize Pakistan would never succeed.

Naib Ameer Ahl-e-Hadith Zabir Muhammad Zaheer said that the enemies of Islam would not succeed to achieve their evil motives. He said that those wanting to de-stabilize the country would themselves be destroyed.

Speaking on the occasion a representative of Hamid Musvi said that the terrorists who are killing innocent people are the enemies of humanity and Islam.

He also quoted the Holy Quran and proved that killing of innocent people was not allowed in Islam. -APP

Defence Minister stopped at Islamabad airport

ISLAMABAD: Defence Minister Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar has been stopped at Islamabad International Airport, sources said.

The Defence Minister was on his way to China with his wife and secretary when he was stopped by airport officials.

Mukhtar has been put on the Exit Control List following the annulment of the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) by the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

The Defence Minister was named among the beneficiaries of the NRO, in which top politicians and bureaucrats were given amnesty from corruption allegations and cases.

Yousuf, Raqeeb predict return of international cricket to Pakistan


HOBART: Pakistan captain Mohammad Yousuf and team manager Abdul Raqeeb predicted on Thursday international cricket will most probably be played in their country again within a year.

Raqeeb, speaking to reporters here after the side’s arrival at the completion of the New Zealand tour, was asked when international cricket would return to the country dogged by security concerns.

‘Things are improving in the country [Pakistan] and hopefully, most probably within the next year or so the teams will start coming to Pakistan,’ Raqeeb told reporters at the team’s news conference.

Raqeeb added the situation in Pakistan was such that the national side can’t play a home series.

‘But at least the cricket is on. Isn’t it? That’s the main thing, domestic cricket we are playing and that’s a good thing,’ he said. ‘Whether we are playing at home or abroad, at least, we are playing cricket.’

Yousuf then added to the manager’s response, saying: ‘If people want to play, why not come [to Pakistan]?’

‘It’s a good answer, I think,’ Raqeeb said.

Yousuf said: ‘Whenever you come [to Pakistan] you will be welcome.’

The International Cricket Council (ICC) this week said security remained the biggest problem facing world cricket. ICC President David Morgan said the attack on Sri Lankan team’s bus in Lahore in March had ‘changed the landscape’.

That attack, which also saw shots fired at a coach carrying the umpires and the match referee, led to the suspension of international cricket in Pakistan.

Since then the ongoing concerns about the safety of Pakistan as a venue for international sport, led the ICC to redistribute its scheduled 14 matches at the 2011 World Cup among Asian co-hosts India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

Meanwhile, Yousuf was confident of Pakistan’s bowling attack putting them into winning positions in the upcoming three-Test series against Australia.

He highlighted his team’s bowling as the main strength.

‘Our bowlers are capable of taking 20 wickets but we need to improve our batting and fielding,’ Yousuf stressed. ‘I think we’ve got good spinners, the best spinners in the world, and fast bowling also.’

Leg-spinner Danish Kaneria, who took seven wickets in the side’s last Test against New Zealand, will lead Pakistan’s spinning department while paceman Mohammad Sami’s recall to the Test side for the Australian tour will bolster the fast bowling ranks.

Sami was requested to help ease the burden on the team’s fast bowlers in what is expected to be a demanding tour. He will supplement an attack featuring Umar Gul, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Aamir and Abdur Rauf.

Raqeeb said Sami, 28, had been playing well in domestic cricket. ‘That’s why the selectors have decided to send him,’ Raqeeb said.

‘Not only is he performing well, he is an experienced one. He has played a lot of Test cricket and we know it’s a mental game also, it’s not only talent that counts; it’s experience also and he is a very experienced bowler.

‘That’s why the selectors along with the captain decided to call him up.’

The Australian tour is a chance for Sami to revive his career. The right-armer played the last of his 33 Tests against India at Bangalore in December 2007 before he was sidelined for poor form.
—Agencies

US House approves Iran nuclear sanctions

WASHINGTON: The US House of Representatives on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved sanctions legislation aimed at forcing Iran to freeze its nuclear program by depriving the Islamic republic of gasoline.

The measure would empower US President Barack Obama to effectively block firms that supply Iran with refined petroleum products, or the ability to import or produce them at home, from doing business in the United States.

‘The prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran is the most serious and urgent strategic challenge faced by the United States, and we must use all of the diplomatic means at our disposal – including tougher sanctions – to prevent that from becoming a reality,’ said Democratic Representative Howard Berman.

The House passed the bill, which has yet to clear the Senate, by a 412-12 margin with four voting ‘present.’

A top US senator said recently that the body will not act on Iran sanctions in 2009.

Because of a lack of domestic refining capacity, oil-rich Iran is dependent on gasoline imports to meet about 40 per cent of domestic consumption.

Iran gets most of those imports from the Swiss firm Vitol, the Swiss/Dutch firm Trafigura, France’s Total, the Swiss firm Glencore and British Petroleum, as well as the Indian firm Reliance.

Berman, the measure’s lead author and chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said US lawmakers had to act because Iran had rejected Obama’s attempts at engagement with ‘contempt.’

Democratic Representative Stephen Lynch criticized the bill, comparing it to the US embargo on Cuba and warning it would cause Iranians to ‘rally around the flag’ against the United States and ‘undermine’ pro-democracy protestors.

‘This will unify the Iranian people against us,’ agreed Republican Representative Ron Paul, another foe of the measure.

But Representative Eric Cantor, the number two House Republican, called the legislation ‘one of our best chances to convince Iran that it is firmly in its interest to abandon its nuclear ambitions.’

The measure calls for the US president to slap sanctions on individuals or entities that provide Iran goods, services, technology or information that helps Tehran boost its domestic production of refined petroleum products.

It also proposes sanctions on companies that help Iran import gasoline, including companies that fund the shipments, shipping firms, or their underwriters.

And it calls for sanctions on individuals or entities that invest at least 20 million dollars in Iran’s energy sector, toughening a 1996 sanctions law.

The legislation includes fairly sweeping presidential powers to exempt a person or firm from sanctions, including the ability to spare citizens or residents of countries belonging to a US anti-proliferation initiative.

Iran says its nuclear program is for civilian energy purposes and denies Western charges that it seeks an atomic arsenal and could have one in a few years.

‘This holiday season we must be careful not to give Iran what is at the top of its wish list and what it needs most to achieve its nuclear ambitions: The gift of time,’ said Mark Wallace, president of the United Against Nuclear Iran advocacy group.

The bill would also require six-month reports on any person aiding Iran to produce or obtain refined petroleum products.

Republican Representative Mark Kirk, who has been running for Obama’s old Senate seat, said the sanctions, if properly enforced, could end the nuclear standoff ‘without a shot being fired.’

The White House meanwhile Tuesday defended Obama’s open hand policy towards Iran after Hillary Clinton said nearly a year of offering dialogue to the Islamic state had achieved little progress.

‘I think that represents real and genuine progress that the president believes will pay dividends in the coming weeks,’ said spokesman Robert Gibbs, pointing to statements of the permanent five members of the United Nations Security Council and Germany condemning Iran’s nuclear program, including Russia and China. —AFp

‘Proof linking Jundallah to Pakistani intelligence given’

ISLAMABAD: A senior Iranian official said Iran has presented evidence to Islamabad that shows links between Pakistani intelligence services and the Jundallah militant group based in the Sistan-Balochistan province.

In an interview with the Fars news agency on Tuesday, the director of the Sistan-Balochistan provincial justice department, Ebrahim Hamidi said the documents were based on confessions obtained from Abdolmalek Rigi's brother Abdolhamid, who is currently in prison in Iran.

Iran alleges that Abdolmalek Rigi, who heads Jundallah, is based in Pakistan. He has organised several deadly attacks inside Iranian territory over the past few years, Iranian officials say.

Hamidi urged Pakistan to capture and extradite Abdolmalek Rigi so he can be tried on charges of ordering terrorist attacks.

He said Tehran would provide Islamabad more evidence if necessary. — DawnNews

Sri Lanka’s Muralitharan out of India one-dayers


NEW DELHI: Sri Lanka’s world bowling record holder Muttiah Muralitharan will miss the rest of the one-day series in India due to a finger injury, a team official said on Wednesday.

Muralitharan, 37, sat out Tuesday’s first one-dayer in Rajkot in which the tourists almost chased down India’s 414-7 before being restricted to 411-8 in the high-scoring thriller, AFP reported.

The off-spinner will return home later on Wednesday and will not take part in the remaining four games, team manager Brendon Kuruppu told reporters.

‘We have decided to rest Murali from the one-day series to allow him to recover fully and be available for future tournaments,’ Kuruppu said.

‘Murali injured his ring and middle fingers on his right hand during the Mumbai Test earlier this month and is going back home.’

Muralitharan, whose 792 Test and 512 one-day wickets are world records, will be replaced by two off-spinners, Muthumudalige Pushpakumara and Suraj Randiv, for the rest of the series.

The duo will join the squad ahead of Friday’s second match in Nagpur, Kuruppu said.

Sri Lanka lost the Test series against India 2-0 and both teams won a Twenty20 international each ahead of the one-dayers.

Sri Lanka are due to play a tri-series with India and Bangladesh in Dhaka from January 4-13.

Roadside bomb kills five Afghan police

HERAT: A roadside bomb hit a convoy of Afghan police, killing five officers including a district police chief in Afghanistan’s western Herat province, a provincial official said on Wednesday.

Violence has reached its worst level this year in Afghanistan, the bloodiest period since US-led forces overthrew the Taliban government from power in 2001, Reuters reports.

Poorly-equipped and ill-trained Afghan police have borne the brunt of violence, suffering far more casualties than Western or Afghan army troops.

To reverse the Taliban’s advances, US President Barack Obama this month pledged to send an extra force of some 30,000 American troops to Afghanistan, before starting to pull them in July 2011.

The blast against the police occured in Robat Sangin, a remote district of Herat near the border with Turkmenistan, the district’s chief, Ghulam Farouq said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but roadside bomb attacks on police are a routine tactic of Taliban militants.

On Monday, 15 policemen were killed in two different parts of Afghanistan in separate attacks. In one of those cases, three policemen turned against their colleagues, killing seven while they slept.

Washington and its Nato allies who together have nearly 110,000 troops in Afghanistan, say their focus in coming years will be strengthening the capacity of the Afghan forces.

North Korea to temporarily ban foreigners: reports

SEOUL: North Korea plans to temporarily ban foreigners from entering the country, a move that could herald a visit by leader Kim Jong-Il to neighbouring China, a report said Wednesday.

South Korea’s Chosun Ilbo newspaper, citing North Korean sources in China, said the ban would last from December 20 until early February, AFP reported.

It was unclear from the report if all foreign travellers would be barred, or only those who cross the Chinese border by land.

The afternoon newspaper Munhwa Ilbo quoted a Seoul intelligence source as saying Pyongyang’s embassy in Beijing has stopped issuing visas for foreigners.

‘North Korean figures in Beijing tell people who apply for visas, ‘See you next year,’ in a sign that North Korea has virtually blocked the entry of foreigners to the country,’ the source was quoted as saying.

Calls by AFP to the embassy went unanswered.

One source told Chosun that customs offices along the border normally close briefly for holidays around the new year but the duration of the ban was unusual.

Chosun said some experts believe the North is taking extra security measures before a cross-border visit by Kim, who is known to prefer train travel to flying.

Other analysts speculate the aim is to allow unrest sparked by the country’s shock currency revaluation to die down.

On Tuesday North Korea’s security minister Ju Sang-Song began a visit to China. Chosun said Ju might be seeking Beijing’s help to stop North Koreans angry over the currency change from fleeing en masse.

Seoul’s unification ministry said it could not confirm the extended border closure. It said customs offices are usually closed around the new year holidays because trade decreases.

‘We need to wait and see whether there will be the customary and temporary restriction on foreigners, or a longer-than-usual ban for some other reasons,’ said spokeswoman Lee Jong-Joo.

The South’s National Intelligence Service refused to comment.

Kim has visited China four times, most recently in January 2006 when he travelled by rail. Chinese President Hu Jintao in October invited him to pay another visit ‘at a convenient time.’

The currency revaluation introduced on November 30 has reportedly sparked widespread anger, because authorities initially restricted the total sum in banknotes that could be changed for new notes.

Chosun said Tuesday Pyongyang had taken steps to placate people over the 100-to-one revaluation following a riot by market traders that reportedly led to 12 executions.

It said that among other measures authorities raised the amount each person can exchange in cash from 100,000 won (30 to 40 dollars at the old black market exchange rate) to 500,000.

The revaluation pushed up prices sharply, reports said. Seoul-based welfare group Good Friends said Pyongyang ordered open-air markets closed for three days from Monday due to the price hikes.

Analysts said the hardline communist regime is trying to clamp down on a nascent free-market economy to reassert its control.

The North’s parliament has approved several new laws on the economy, the official news agency said Wednesday. A commodity consumption law, it said, sets ‘legal requirements that should be observed in the consumption of commodities.’

Iran successfully test-fires improved Sejil 2 missile

TEHRAN: Iran has successfully test-fired a long-range, improved Sejil 2 missile, state television reported on Wednesday, an announcement likely to add to tension with the West, Reuters reports.

Al Alam, Iran’s Arabic-language satellite television, said the Sejil missile had a longer range than the Shahab missile, which Iranian officials in the past have said can reach targets 2,000 km away.

That would put Israel and US bases in the Gulf within reach.

The missile test coincides with increased tension over Iran’s nuclear programme, which the West fears is aimed at making bombs. Iran denies the charge.

Neither Israel nor the United States have ruled out military action if diplomacy fails to resolve the row. Iran has vowed to retaliate for any attack.

US outlines conditions for aid to Pakistan

WASHINGTON: The Obama administration sought to reassure US lawmakers this week it would demand ‘maximum accountability’ from Pakistan for $7.5 billion in aid and that it had safeguards to ensure funds did not reach extremists.

In a report sent by the State Department to congressional committees late on Monday, the administration outlined its priorities for the aid, including water, agriculture and electricity projects, and laid out a strategy to prevent corruption and misuse of the money.

‘The Secretary (of State) will suspend any government to government assistance to any implementing agency if there is credible evidence of misuse of funds by such agency,’ said the report, obtained by Reuters.

The report was mandated by Congress after the $7.5 billion, five-year aid plan passed into law in October. So far, appropriations committees have agreed on nearly $1.5 billion for the first year.

In a shift from previous practice, much of the aid will be channeled via national and provincial governments in Pakistan as well as domestic groups, instead of the usual US-based humanitarian organizations and contractors.

‘Throughout this period there will be a decrease in reliance on US-based partners for education, health and other field programs that can be managed responsibly by Pakistani institutions,’ said the report.

‘To provide maximum accountability and oversight, a bilateral agreement between the US and Pakistan must be in place detailing the conditions for disbursement of funds and detailed monitoring and reporting requirements, before any government to government assistance is provided,’ it said.

Challenges outlined by the State Dept

The report conceded ‘real and significant’ challenges in implementing the plan, including public sector corruption, poor security and ‘extremist’ elements as well as deep suspicion of US intentions and long-term commitment to Pakistan.

Nearly half of the funds — $3.5 billion — would focus on infrastructure programs that would demonstrate Washington’s long-term commitment to Pakistan and help build mutual trust between the two nations, said the report.

There needs to be urgent investment in canals and irrigation services, and another focus will be on improving cold storage facilities, it added.

Another large chunk — about $2 billion — would be allocated to humanitarian and social programs such as education and health, ‘extending the writ of government in areas vulnerable to extremism.’

The final $2 billion is for building up Pakistani government institutions at the national, provincial and local level, it added.

One fear of lawmakers and others is that the increased US aid will reach the hands of militants, but the report promised strict guidelines would be in place to ensure that aid was not awarded to ‘terrorist organizations.’

Potential recipients would be checked against lists of suspected extremists kept by the US Treasury, and the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement would apply ‘thorough vetting’ procedures.

‘On the ground verification procedures are being implemented to ensure that US government humanitarian and other forms of assistance do not benefit extremist groups.’

Several lawmakers have expressed strong doubts over the capacity of the US government to implement the additional funding but the report said there were plans to increase the number of US staff in Pakistan. It did not give figures. —Reuters

French victims of Pakistan blast accuse Sarkozy ally

PARIS: Families of French naval engineers killed in a Pakistani bomb attack said Wednesday that they had lodged a complaint accusing former prime minister Edouard Balladur’s presidential campaign of corruption.

If prosecutors agree to take up the case it could embarrass France’s current president, Nicolas Sarkozy, who was one of the most prominent supporters of Balladur’s failed 1995 presidential bid.

Relatives of the 11 French engineers killed in a May 2002 bomb attack on a bus in Karachi suspect that Pakistani agents carried out the attack in revenge after France cancelled their illegal commissions on an arms deal.

‘We’re just asking for the truth about the murder of our loved ones. It’s been almost eight years that we’ve been treated like fools,’ Magali Drouot, the daughter of one of the slain technicians, told AFP.

‘We’re talking about the revelation of a secret financing network that implicates several ministers at that time, including the prime minister,’ alleged the families’ lawyer, Olivier Morice.

A report commissioned by France’s state naval construction firm, leaked in June, alleged that Balladur’s political committee was to have received a cut on corrupt commissions on the sale of French submarines to Pakistan.

In 1995, newly elected president Jacques Chirac cancelled the pay-offs, which he believed had funded his rival’s campaign, angering Pakistani officers awaiting a share of the graft, the secret report said.

‘The complainants have been treated in an unacceptable manner, while the highest representatives of the French state know perfectly well that we’re looking at a significant matter of state,’ Morice said.

In 1995, Sarkozy was Balladur’s budget minister and government spokesman.

When Balladur broke a promise to support Chirac and mounted a rival presidential bid, Sarkozy became the prime minister’s campaign spokesman.

Sarkozy succeeded Chirac in 2007 and earlier this year dismissed talk of secret kickbacks to the campaign as a ‘fairy tale.’

On Monday, six of the 11 bereaved families lodged a complaint with the Paris state prosecutor alleging that Balladur’s ‘Association for Reform,’ three offshore companies and an arms exporter were guilty of corruption.

The state naval construction firm DCN, now known as DCNS, has also been accused of perverting the course of justice, Morice said.

Morice said he had asked prosecutors to investigate why the company failed to give the 2002 Nautilus Report — its internal probe into the bomb attack — to anti-terrorist magistrates until it was leaked this year.

The families believe ‘they were deceived by the French state and several top ranking French and Pakistani political leaders and that their loved ones were exposed and killed due to a sordid political funding scandal.’

It is now for French prosecutors to decide whether to take up the case.

In all, 14 people were killed on May 8, 2002, when a suicide bomber attacked a bus carrying French naval engineers from their Karachi hotel to where they were working on the submarines sold to Pakistan in the suspect deal.

At first, officials in both countries blamed radicals at war with the West for carrying out the attack, but French counter-terrorism officers have begun privately to accuse Pakistani spies of ordering it.

Mullen discusses war strategy with Pak leaders


ISLAMABAD: Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, met Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and army chief General Ashfaq Kayani to discuss the new US Afghan war strategy, which Washington says hinges on Pakistan’s own battle against extremists.

Mullen had earlier held a separate meeting with COAS General Kayani on Wednesday morning, a senior military official told AFP.

Pakistan has launched multiple offensives against insurgents this year, but Washington is pushing them to go after the Al-Qaeda leadership, the Afghan Taliban, and other groups seeking sanctuary in the Pakistan-Afghan border area.

The military sent 30,000 troops into Taliban stronghold South Waziristan in October, and is now pursuing insurgents believed to have fled to the other six districts that make up the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata).

Islamabad is primarily targeting the Pakistani Taliban, behind most of a wave of attacks that have killed more than 2,700 people since July 2007.

Top US officials, however, want Pakistan to also concentrate on dismantling militant groups with their eye over the border.

The Haqqani network, a powerful Afghan group with bases in North Waziristan, has links to Al-Qaeda and is known for attacks in Afghanistan, but so far has not been the target of a major offensive by Pakistan’s military.

Another deeply controversial issue is the alleged presence of Afghan Taliban including supreme Taliban leader Mullah Omar in Pakistan’s south-western city of Quetta – accusations Islamabad repeatedly denies.

Visiting Afghanistan earlier this week, Mullen expressed concern about ‘growing’ collusion between Afghan Taliban and Al-Qaeda and other extremist groups sheltering in nuclear-armed Pakistan.

Mullen arrived in Pakistan Tuesday and met General Tariq Majid, ceremonial head of the armed forces, with US President Barack Obama’s plan for turning around the unpopular Afghan war topping the agenda.

Obama’s plan – of deploying an extra 30,000 troops in Afghanistan and a July 2011 deadline for withdrawal of US forces – has been criticised in Pakistan, as officials and analysts fear a troop surge in Afghanistan will send militants into Pakistan, while a drawdown date will embolden Islamist insurgents on both sides of the border.

Morgan predicts day-night Tests ‘within two years’


LONDON: International Cricket Council (ICC) president David Morgan said on Wednesday he would be ‘surprised if we don’t see day/night Test cricket within the next two years.’

While attendances for Test match cricket in England remain strong, crowds for five-day cricket in other leading nations have been in decline for several years.

As part of plans to boost Test match crowds around the world, the ICC has been looking at staging five-day games in a day/night format — something that currently happens only for one-dayers and Twenty20 internationals.

The ICC is also looking into creating a World Test Championship although Morgan, speaking at a meeting of the Indian Journalists’ Association at the Oval here on Wednesday, shied away from the term and stressed the need for Tests to have ‘context.’

Morgan, a former chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), said: ‘I’d be surprised if we don’t see day/night Test cricket within the next two years, surprised and disappointed.

‘In terms of each Test match having a context beyond bilateral series, real progress could be made soon,’ he added, saying there might be a ‘climax’ although he didn’t say how this would be achieved.

‘We want to ensure Test match cricket is as popular around world as it is in this country (England). The ECB have little trouble in selling out the first four days of a Test.’

Day/night matches were pioneered in Australia in the late 1970s during the ‘rebel’ World Series Cricket contests bankrolled by media businessman Kerry Packer when ‘Super Tests,’ with players wearing coloured clothing and using a white, rather than a traditional red, ball.

‘If you look at a country like Australia with big stadia and very hot conditions, Australia is made for day/night Test cricket,’ Morgan, who explained ICC wanted Tests played in as ‘close to white as possible,’ said.

‘Eighteen months ago, I wouldn’t have been overly enthusiastic, thinking of the tradition and the records,’ the Welshman added.

‘But the way Test match cricket has changed over 130-odd years, I see (day-nighters) as a very good reason for bringing the crowds out.

‘At ICC, we regard Test cricket as the pinnacle of the game. It’s the form of the game cricketers seek to play.

‘It is interesting Test cricket has endured and I am sure it is going to continue to thrive. The ICC has recognised that in some countries Test match cricket is not that popular in terms of people paying at the gate.

‘It needs to be a competitive event and it needs pitches that provide a good balance between bat and ball,’ added Morgan following some recent ‘run-fests’ on batsman-friendly surfaces that many critics claim have harmed Test cricket.

‘All 10 full member boards aree switched on to improving Test match cricket and attendances at Test matches.

‘That includes the ECB because if Test match cricket were to wither around the world, it would cause a problem here.

‘Day/night cricket is less important in England and Wales because the grounds, which are relatively small sell-out. It’s more important in countries with large stadia and hot conditions.’

India’s rise to number one in the world Test rankings has appeared to prompt a change of heart among administrators at the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), cricket’s most financially powerful national governing body.

They had been planning to change their scheduled three-Test home series against South Africa in February into a five-match one-day campaign.

But now plans are being mooted for a two-Test series, with three one-dayers, although traditionalists argue a Test contest between such strong nations ought to feature at least three matches.

‘I do believe the efforts of the BCCI to re-arrange the programme so that there might be a two-Test series, this is an interesting shift by the BCCI,’Morgan said.

Supreme Court declares NRO null and void


ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has declared the controversial National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) null and void in a short order.

In a landmark decision, the apex court unanimously decided that the ordinance was unconstitutional.

All old cases that had been dismissed under the NRO stand revived and can now be reopened as per the court orders.

The court said that all orders that were passed and all acquittals under the NRO were illegal and never existed.

The apex court in its order also said that all convictions that were held prior to the enactment of the NRO stand revived as well.

Letters made to Swiss courts requesting the withdrawal of cases were also declared unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court asked the government to take action against the former attorney general for making these requests.

Presidential Spokesperson Farhatullah Babar called the verdict 'shocking' but said that the government will respect the courts decision.

.

Babar, however, pointed out that the president and the provincial governors enjoyed immunity from legal proceedings under the constitution.

Federal Cabinet approves austerity plan

ISLAMABAD: The Federal Cabinet Wednesday approved austerity measures under which the government expects to save billions of rupees per annum.

One of the key proposals of the austerity plan requires the president and the prime minister to reduce visits by 40 per cent.

A committee would be constituted within a couple of days which will formulate short, medium and long term strategies with timelines to ensure effective implementation of the plan, said Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin.

He was addressing a joint press briefing with Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Qamar Zaman Kaira about the decisions of the Federal Cabinet held with Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani in the chair.

Shaukat Tarin said that cabinet members appreciated the austerity plan and hoped that these measures would supplement government efforts towards good governance.—APP

Fiscal space needed to meet NFC commitments: Tarin


ISLAMABAD: The federal government will have to create fiscal space to meet its National Finance Commission commitments, according to Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin.

According to Mr Tarin, reducing ministries, good governance and transparency in government functioning were crucial for measures to reduce government expenditure.


Addressing a press conference here on Monday, he said that the government had increased the provinces’ share in the divisible pool by Rs174 billion and another Rs43 billion on net hydel profit, gas development surcharge and sales tax on services.

According to him, the government will need an additional Rs217 billion for the undertaking. A direction had been set and it needed to be implemented in letter and spirit, Mr Tarin said.

The foremost task, he said, was to increase tax-to-GDP ratio from 8.9 per cent to 13.9 per cent and in the long run between 15 and 20 per cent.

‘This is a major challenge and will have to be achieved.’ ‘We have … enlarged the size of the cake instead of envelope.’

The federal government, he said, should curb major expenses, including the fleet of luxury vehicles.

‘Health and education are provincial subjects and such ministries at the federation level should be shut down,’ he said.

Leakages in federal government institutions should be plugged, Mr Tarin said, adding that the cabinet would soon take up the austerity committee’s recommendations.

Similarly, the committee on good governance will firm up its recommendations in two weeks. ‘In view of its importance, we will have to take quick actions.’

The committee’s proposals are based on a Gallup survey carried out by the government to determine public expectations about government austerity.

Provinces, he said, should start building capacity to utilise enhanced funds. ‘It is now up to the provinces (to) focus on health, education, poverty and infrastructure.’ The federal government, he said, would have to increase sales tax and GST collection. According to figures presented by him, the government was losing between Rs2.25 billion and Rs2.5

billion in public sector organisations like Pakistan Railways, PIA and Steel Mills.


Mr Tarin said taxation system alone accounted for losses amounting to Rs350-Rs500 billion, adding that leakages in the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) were as high as Rs500 billion.

The federal government, he said, was providing a subsidy of Rs55 billion to distribution companies. ‘Revenue losses can be plugged through good governance and transparency.’


He urged the provinces to enforce tax on agricultural income, sales tax on services and capital gains tax on real estate. ‘Tax on agricultural income will be in the range of 23 per cent of GDP.’

On the issue of VAT enforcement, Mr Tarin said that it would make sales tax system more efficient because collection of VAT on goods will be the responsibility of the federation while provinces would levy VAT on services.

‘Three provinces do not have the capacity to enforce VAT and … the federal government has offered to help them.’

In order to move towards providing financial autonomy of provinces, the finance minister said, the federation had reduced collection charges from 5 per cent to 1 per cent.