Feautured Video

Obama not to offer formal apology to Pak

The White House has ruled out
President Barack Obama
offering “formal condolences”
to Pakistan over the killing of its
24 soldiers in a Nato strike, as
suggested by his top diplomat in
Islamabad in a desperate bid to
salvage deteriorating ties, a
media report said today.“The
White House has decided that
President Obama will not offer
formal condolences- at least for
now- to Pakistan for the deaths
of two dozen soldiers in Nato
airstrikes last week, overruling
State Department officials who
argued for such a show of
remorse to help salvage
America's relationship with
Pakistan,” 'The New York Times'
said, reflecting the mood
prevailing in the administration
on Pakistan right now.The
request for this came on
Monday, two days after the
Nato attack, from US envoy to
Pakistan Mr Cameron Munter,
who said that a formal video
message from President Obama
was needed to help prevent the
rapidly deteriorating relations
between the two countries
from cratering, administration
officials were quoted as saying
by the daily.“The Ambassador in
a video conference from
Islamabad, said that anger in
Pakistan had reached a fever
pitch, and that the USA needed
to move to defuse it as quickly
as possible,” the officials
said.The suggestion from the
top American diplomat in
Pakistan was opposed by the
Pentagon, which argued that
such a move would be
demoralising for their forces
and noted that the statement of
Secretary of State Mrs Hillary
Clinton in this regard was
enough. “Some administration
aides also worried that if Mr
Obama were to overrule the
military and apologise to
Pakistan, such a step could
become fodder for his
Republican opponents in the
presidential campaign,” several
officials, who declined to be
named because they were not
authorised to speak publicly,
told the daily.The White House
has said that Mr Obama will not
comment on it till the
investigations are over, the
paper reported.On Tuesday, the
US Central Command (CENTCOM)
ordered an investigation into
the incident in which officials of
both the Afghan and Pakistan
governments have been invited
to participate.

Slain Pakistani soldiers relatives want justice

Azra Bashir spoke by phone to
her son Usman, holed up in a
freezing border outpost on the
dangerous Afghanistan-Pakistan
border, only hours before NATO
airstrikes killed him and 23 other
Pakistani soldiers. The 23 year-
old captain told his mother not
to worry about him, and
reminded her to watch her
health.As Pakistan and the
United States argue about the
sequence of events that led to
the attacks, Bashir is struggling
with the pain of losing a child.
Her anger, and that of other
relatives mourning loved ones
killed by a nominal ally, helps
explain the uncompromising
stance Islamabad has struck
toward Washington since the
incident."I want to tell our
soldiers that they should avenge
the killing of Usman and other
soldiers like him," Bashir said in
an interview in her home in
Punjab province. As she spoke,
she kissed a framed photo of
her son, who also left behind a
wife and 2-month-old
daughter.Bashir's call for
revenge has been echoed in
daily protests held in Pakistan's
major cities, many of them
organized by Islamist and right-
wing parties who have long said
that America and NATO — not
the Taliban — are the prime
enemies of Pakistan.The border
incident has greatly
strengthened that narrative,
reducing the political space for
those who argue that
cooperation with Washington is
in the country's interest. The
army, which has received
billions of dollars in U.S. aid since
2001 in exchange for its
cooperation, however limited,
against militants, has fueled the
hard line by accusing NATO of a
"deliberate act of
aggression."The 24 deaths by
apparent American friendly fire
come on top of the 3,000
Pakistani security force
members who have been killed
over the last 10 years fighting
insurgents, mainly in the
northwest close to the Afghan
border.Many in the country,
including leading politicians, say
the war has been foisted upon
them by America. They say the
violence would end if Islamabad
severed its ties with
Washington."How long will we
sacrifice our youths, our soldiers
for others?" said Capt. Usman
Bashir's father, Bashir Ahmed.
"This is not our war. This is their
war."American and NATO
officials have expressed
sympathy over the deaths,
saying the incident was a
mistake and is being
investigated. The border area is
infested with militants, whom
NATO has long complained
receive safe haven on the
Pakistan side to launch attacks
in Afghanistan."What kind of
mistake is this that kills innocent
poor people?" asked Asfandyar
Khan, who lost his 22-year-old
son in the attacks. "We don't
want your investigation and
inquires. I want justice. I want
real action against those
responsible."He fought back
tears as he spoke, sitting feet
away from the freshly dug
grave holding his son, Najibullah
Khan.The grave in the family's
village of Kabuli Kili in
northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
was covered in wreaths of
flowers donated by military
officials. A green and white
Pakistani flag flew from a
bamboo pole nearby."You are
calling us friends," Khan said of
the United States. "Is this the
way you people treat friends? If
this is friendship, we have had
enough, and don't want such
friendship."Pakistan has
retaliated for the incident by
closing its Afghan border
crossings to NATO supplies, by
demanding the U.S. vacate an air
base used by American drones
attacking militants along the
frontier, and by boycotting an
international conference in
Germany aimed at stabilizing
Afghanistan.Washington is keen
to repair damage done to the
relationship. It wants to get the
supplies moving again, and also
sees Islamabad's links with
Afghan insurgent leaders on its
soil as a key asset in negotiating
a peace deal in Afghanistan
which will allow the U.S. to
withdraw its combat troops by
the scheduled 2014
deadline.Pakistan relies heavily
on American aid, and it too
wants to avoid a rupture in
ties.The U.S. and Pakistan have
long had a troubled relationship,
thanks to Pakistan's reluctance
to target Afghan Taliban
fighters and their allies using
Pakistani territory to attack
American troops in Afghanistan.
Islamabad is believed to see
those insurgents as useful
proxies in Afghanistan, once the
U.S. withdraws.The NATO attack
was the latest in a series of
crises to beset the relationship
this year.In January, an
American CIA contractor shot
two Pakistani men who he said
tried to rob him, sparking
outrage. The May 2 unilateral
raid that killed Osama bin Laden
was also portrayed as a gross
violation of Pakistan's
sovereignty, largely drowning
out questions over how the al-
Qaida chief was living
undetected in an army town for
five years.Most experts believe
the two countries will patch
things up this time, and that the
border closure will be
temporary, chiefly because
Washington and Islamabad still
need each other. But the
Pakistani reaction since the
strikes has betrayed the lack of
trust at the heart of the
relationship, and bodes ill for
meaningful Western
cooperation with Pakistan over
ending the Afghan war."The
time has come for 180 million
Pakistanis to choose between a
life of respect or ignominy," said
Shahbaz Sharif, the head of the
ruling party in Punjab after
visiting Bashir's family this
week. "American foreign aid is
drenched in the blood of
martyrs and we will have to
give it up and get back up on
our own feet," he was quoted
by local media reports as saying.

Pakistan beat Bangladesh by 5 wickets

Pakistan beat Bangladesh by 5
wickets after slipping a bit
chasing the 92 runs target given
to it by host BD which was all
out for 91 runs in 30.3
overs.The first of the three ODI
match series played out at Sher-
e-Bengal Stadium at Mirpur has
given added boost to Pakistan
which won the only T20 a few
days ago.Pakistan managed to
score the winning 93 runs in
25.4 overs after losing first four
wickets in quick succession by
44 runs- Imran Farhat (12 runs
in 23 balls) at 36; Muhammed
Hafeez (22 runs including 5
fours in 38 balls) at 42; Younis
Khan (2 runs in 8 ball) at 42 and
Sarfraz Ahmed (2 runs in 3 balls)
again at 44 runs. Umar Akmal,
the last Pakistani wicket to fall,
was bowled by Shakib Al Hasan
at 7 runs of 13 balls.Shahid
Afridi was not out at 24 runs
including 4 fours of 23 balls
while Misbah ul Haq's unbeaten
16 runs of 46 included one four
and i six.Shahid Afridi who took
5 wickets for 13 runs in 6.3
overs was declared the man of
the match. Earlier Bangladesh
was all out at paltry 91 in their
first one day international
match against Pakistan at Mirpur
stadium. All rounder Nasir
Hossain was the top scorer with
21 runs as Afridi grabbed
another five wickets haul for
Pakistan.Nothing went right for
Bangladesh after Mushfiqur
Rahim chose to bat. There was
little doubt that Hafeez would
take the first new ball, especially
with a left-hand batsman on
strike, and he had success
immediately. Tamim Iqbal,
having recovered from his knee
injury, moved too far across his
stumps and was trapped on the
back foot by a delivery that
darted into him from round the
wicket. Hafeez's wicket maiden
set the tone for the next
hour.Umar Gul had first use of
the other new ball, and though
there was little assistance from
the pitch for him, the
Bangladesh batsmen couldn't
get the ball off the square. They
had scored only 2 after 5.2
overs when Naeem Islam hit one
past Gul to the straight
boundary. He edged the next
ball to slip.Against spin,
Bangladesh were simply
stagnant. Hafeez tormented
Shahriar Nafees, who would
score only 2 off his first 23
deliveries. He found the left-
hand batsman's outside edge
three times - two fell short of
Younis Khan at first slip, and one
flew wide.Misbah made a double
bowling change, bringing on the
legspinner Afridi and the
offspinner Malik. It was Malik
who struck first, getting
Mushfiqur to edge an attempted
cut to the wicketkeeper Sarfaz
Ahmed. It was the extra bounce
that was the Bangladesh
captain's undoing. Afridi then
struck twice. In his second over,
the 13th of the innings, Afridi
used the extra bounce to have
Nafees caught at point while
trying to cut off the back foot.
Two balls later he bowled a
legbreak that spun sharply and
took the outside edge of
Mahmudullah's forward defence.
Bangladesh were 31 for 5 at a
point.Shakib Al Hasan and Nasir
Hossain began to repair the
substantial damage but they
had miles to go to get the job
done. They didn't. Their
partnership was worth 36 when
Hossain attempted to pull a
delivery from Cheema that
wasn't that short. He was
unbalanced as he made contact
and the top edge swirled
towards square leg, where
Sarfraz held it.After that
performance, Afridi says there's
still room for improvement in
his bowling. "The atmosphere is
great and we are enjoying our
cricket, last 3-4 years I'm
focusing on my bowling, am the
leading wicket-taker in last few
years for Pakistan. Am enjoying
myself."