ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan on
Friday triggered a new war of words between the Pakistan Muslim
League-Nawaz and the Pakistan Peoples Party by saying that rejection by
the ruling party of conditions set by the latter to support the
government had prompted it to get close to the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf.
Speaking at a press conference, the minister said the
PPP wanted withdrawal of a case against model Ayyan Ali, who had been
caught attempting to smuggle Rs50 million out of the country, and help
in securing bail for former president Asif Ali Zardari’s aide Dr Asim
Hussain, who is facing charges of terror financing and corruption.
Without
disclosing the name of a PPP leader who he claimed had proposed the
‘confidence-building measures’ (CBMs), Chaudhry Nisar said he had been
told that Dr Hussain’s case was with the National Accountability Bureau
(NAB), but it was pointed out that the prosecutor general had been
appointed during the present government’s term.
He asked
the PPP leadership to reveal the nature of its link with Ms Ali and
said the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) had evidence of money going
from the same bank account for purchase of air tickets for her and PPP
chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari.
In Karachi, Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly Syed Khurshid Shah reacted strongly over the minister’s remarks.
Talking
to reporters, he said that Chaudhry Nisar’s words reflected a “mental
sickness” and called upon the prime minister to take notice of the
statement of his key man in the cabinet to prove his impartiality in the
growing tense relations between the government and the opposition.
“The
irony is that whenever there is a terrorist incident, you would never
find Chaudhry Nisar around as he goes missing somewhere. But when it
comes to levelling allegations and sabotaging the political atmosphere
you would find him leading from the front. I think the prime minister
should take notice of his remarks. This is so unfortunate.”
The
interior minister also talked about the $60 million frozen by Swiss
banks and released after a letter written to the European country’s
authorities by the then attorney general, wondering where the money had
gone. He raised the issue of ownership of the Surrey mansion in the
United Kingdom, three palaces in Dubai and a precious diamond necklace.
Without naming senior PPP leader Aitzaz Ahsan, he also talked about the issuance of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) quota.
Chaudhry
Nisar held the opposition leaders in both houses of parliament
responsible for the acrimony between the PML-N and PPP. “I have never
said how a meter reader has prospered so much,” he said in the the most
blistering attack against Leader of the Opposition in the National
Assembly Syed Khurshid Shah.
He said an opposition
leader was supposed to be against the government, but the one in the
National Assembly had chosen him as a target, calling that this was
because of his statements about the country’s security, remarks against
India and point-blank refusal to become a “part or tool of corruption”.
National Action Plan
Chaudhry Nisar said work on four points of the National
Action Plan (NAP) against terrorism had been progressing at a fast pace
from the very beginning. He said 10 of the plan’s points related to the
provinces and the rest were in the domain of the ministries of finance,
defence, religious affairs and states and frontier regions.
He said the graph of terrorism had gone down to below one-fourth and terrorists were on the run.
The
minister said about 20,000 intelligence-based operations had been
carried out during the past two years and thousands of terrorist attacks
had been pre-empted.
He said 2,000 terrorist attacks took place across the country in 2009-10, while this year the number was below 200.
Saarc meeting
He said his recent retort to the visiting Indian Home
Minister Rajnath Singh who had levelled allegations against Pakistan had
been hailed by almost all the opposition parties, but “one party had
remained silent “. He said the Indian minister could have responded to
his remarks again but he chose not to do so. He left, skipping the lunch
and the last session of the South Asian Association for Regional
Cooperation’s interior ministers’ conference.
Mr Singh,
however, spoke in his country’s upper house of parliament, the Rajya
Sabha, where he said that Pakistan was not ready to learn a lesson, he
said.
Chaudhry Nisar said Mr Singh had not explained the
nature of the lesson India wanted to teach Pakistan, but if it wanted
Pakistan to accept its hegemony and continued brutalities against the
innocent Kashmiris, it was unacceptable.
Rejecting
claims that every Indian prime minister had talked about peace, he
recalled that a premier of the country had attacked Pakistan in 1965,
another had broken it up in 1971 and the incumbent took credit for
Pakistan’s dismemberment.
He said the decision to set
aside United Nations resolutions and forcibly occupy a bulk of Kashmir
had also been taken by an Indian prime minister in 1948.
“You are the one who launch attacks, hurl threats and close the doors for talks,” he said.
Chaudhry
Nisar said the solution to the problems lay in talks and he had offered
dialogue to India even during the Saarc meeting.
He said the Indian minister had stated that he did not want to see his Pakistani counterpart.
He
justified protest by Kashmiris the day Mr Singh arrived here, saying
that it was a civilised protest against Indian oppression in India-held
Kashmir, staged in a democratic country where nobody’s face had been
blackened.
He said he was not the host of the lunch
during the Saarc conference that he had to skip because of an important
meeting at the Prime Minister House. He said he was the host of the
dinner that evening, which he had attended.
US national
About a blacklisted United States national, Matthew Barrett,
Chaudhry Nisar said he had been informed by the Prime Minister’s
Special of Foreign Affairs Tariq Fatemi that the visa had been issued to
him because of a computer mistake.
He said he had been
asking for three days for the visa application form and had received the
reply on Thursday. The applicant had not replied to many questions and
other mistakes in the form had also been overlooked by a senior officer,
showing gross irregularity in issuing the visa.
The
minister said the report of a joint investigation team (JIT) suggested
that there was no evidence available to prove that he was a spy but he
had been deported five years back on the charge of involvement in
dubious activities.
In the light of the JIT report, Mr Barrett would be deported, he said.
He
said he had sought a report from the Federal Investigation Agency
within a week, proposing measures to stop recurrence of immigration
clearance of any blacklisted individual.
Chaudhry Nisar
said 31.2 million computerised national identity cards had been verified
in 40 days. He said 30,000 intruders registered in the family trees of
others had been detected. He said 58,000 calls had been made by
citizens, leading to blocking of 5,000 CNICs.
He disclosed that over a dozen foreign nationals had surrendered their fake Pakistani identity cards.
Answering
a question, he said there are no groups within the PML-N, but there
were some people trying to poison the party’s leadership against him and
they were being watched by him.
He also said that some
important arrests had been made two days ago in connection with the
recent bomb attack in Quetta. He said the Balochistan government had
sent fingerprints for identification, but they were of a victim from
Pishin.
Our Staff Reporter in Karachi adds: Opposition
leader Khurshid Shah reacted strongly over the minister’s remarks,
calling his words reflection of a “mental sickness” and demanding that
the prime minister take notice of the statement of his key man in the
cabinet to prove his impartiality in the recent growing tense relations
between the government and the opposition.
“These are reflective of a sick mind,” the PPP leader said while talking to reporters.
“The
irony is that whenever there is a terrorist incident, you would never
find Chaudhry Nisar as he goes missing somewhere. But when it comes to
levelling false allegations and sabotaging the political atmosphere you
would find him leading from the front. I think the prime minister should
take notice of his remarks. This is so unfortunate.”
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