Archive for December 15, 2008

بغداد، بش کو جوتے پڑگئے، یہ ہماری طرف سے الوداعی بوسہ ہے، حملہ آور عراقی صحافی

‏پیر‏، 15‏ دسمبر‏، 2008

بغداد(جنگ نیوز)اتوار کو بغداد میں عراقی وزیر اعظم نورالمالکی کے دفتر میں اس وقت صورتحال انتہائی مضحکہ خیز ہوگئی جب نیوزکانفرنس سے صدر بش کے خطاب کے دوران ایک صحافی نے صدربش کو مارنے کے لئے دو جوتے پھینکے تاہم صدر بش نے جھک کر اپنے آپ کو بچایا۔غیر ملکی خبر رساں ایجنسی کے مطابق اتوارکو عراق کے الوداعی دورے پر آئے صدر بش نے وزیر اعظم نورالمالکی کے ہمراہ بغداد میں واقع ان کے دفتر میں سیکیورٹی معاہدے پر دستخط کئے جس کے بعد دونوں رہنماوٴں نے پریس کانفرنس سے خطاب کیا ۔پریس کانفرنس کے دوران تیسری قطار میں بیٹھیالبغدادیہ ٹی وی چینل کے عراقی صحافی منتظر الذیدی نے اٹھ کر سخت الفاظ میں صدر بش کو مخاطب کرکے کہا ”کتے..!یہ الوداعی بوسہ ہے“،اس کے بعد صحافی نے اپنا ایک جوتا تیزی سے صدر بش کی جانب پھینکا ،صدر بش نے مہارت سے نیچے کی طرف جھکتے ہوئے اپنے آپ کو بچایا جبکہ پھینکا جانے والا دوسرا جوتا صدر بش کے پس منظر میں لہراتے ہوئے امریکی پرچم سے ٹکراگیا جس کے بعد سیکیورٹی اہلکاراس صحافی کو گھسیٹ کر باہر لے گئے۔بعد ازاں کچھ عراقی صحافیوں نے اپنی نشستوں سے اٹھ کر صدر بش سے معذرت کی ۔صدر بش نے اس موقع پر ظرافت کا مظاہرہ کرتے ہوئے صحافیوں سے کہا کہ اگر آپ اس حوالے سے کچھ پوچھیں گے تو میں اتنا ہی کہوں گا کہ جوتا 10نمبر کا تھاتاہم مجھے اس واقعے سے پریشانی ہوئی نہ ہی ذرہ برابر خوف آیا۔صدر بش نے کہا کہ انہیں سمجھ نہیں آئی کہ اس شخص نے ایسا کیوں کیا۔ 

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Bush’s Iraq-Afghan farewell tour marred by dissent

By JENNIFER LOVEN, AP White House Correspondent22 mins ago

KABUL, Afghanistan – President George W. Bush wrapped up a whirlwind trip to two war zones Monday that in many ways was a victory lap without a clear victory. A signature event occurred when an Iraqi reporter hurled two shoes at Bush, declaring: “This is from the widows, the orphans and those who were killed in Iraq.”

The president visited the Iraqi capital just 37 days before he hands the war off to his successor, Barack Obama, who has pledged to end it. The president wanted to highlight a drop in violence and to celebrate a recent U.S.-Iraq security agreement, which calls for U.S. troops to withdraw from Iraq by the end of 2011.

“The war is not over,” Bush said, but “it is decisively on its way to being won.”

Bush then traveled to Afghanistan where he spoke to U.S. soldiers and Marines at a hangar on the tarmac at Bagram Air Base. The rally for over a thousand military personnel took place in the dark, cold pre-dawn hours. Bush was greeted by loud cheers from the troops.

“Afghanistan is a dramatically different country than it was eight years ago,” he said. “We are making hopeful gains.”

But the president’s message on progress in the region was having trouble competing with the videotaped image of the angry Iraqi who hurled his shoes at Bush in a near-miss, shouting in Arabic, “This is your farewell kiss, you dog!” The reporter was later identified as Muntadar al-Zeidi, a correspondent for Al-Baghdadia television, an Iraqi-owned station based in Cairo, Egypt.

In Iraqi culture, throwing shoes at someone is a sign of contempt. Iraqis whacked a statue of Saddam with their shoes after U.S. Marines toppled it to the ground following the 2003 invasion.

Reaction in Iraq was swift but mixed, with some condemning the act and others applauding it. Television news stations throughout Iraq repeatedly showed footage of the incident, and newspapers carried headline stories.

In Baghdad’s Shiite slum of Sadr City, supporters of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr called for protests against President Bush and demanded the release of the reporter, who was jailed after throwing his shoes. Thousands took to the streets Monday, chanting, “Bush, Bush, listen well: Two shoes on your head.”

The Iraqi government condemned the act and demanded an on-air apology from Al-Baghdadia television, the Iraqi-owned station that employs Muntadar al-Zeidi. The reporter was taken into custody and reportedly was being held for questioning by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s guards and is being tested for alcohol and drugs.

“It harmed the reputation of Iraqi journalists and Iraqi journalism in general,” according to a statement released by the government.

Other Arab journalists and commentators, fed up with U.S. policy in the Middle East and Bush’s decision to invade Iraq in 2003 to topple Saddam, echoed al-Zeidi’s sentiments Monday. Abdel-Bari Atwan, editor of the influential London-based newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi, wrote on the newspaper’s Web site that the incident was “a proper goodbye for a war criminal.”

After word spread of the shoe attack, Afghan reporters had gathered at the presidential palace in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, before a news conference by Bush andAfghan President Hamid Karzai. Some of the reporters — a collegial bunch that sees one another several times a week — egged on one of their colleagues, jokingly trying to pressure the television reporter into taking off his shoe and hurling it once the U.S. president arrived. He did not.

Karzai’s deputy spokesman, Saimak Herwai, told Afghan reporters that they had to address Bush as “His Excellency,” an honorary title not typically used with U.S. presidents. The request was followed by some, not by others.

Bush then took a helicopter ride to Kabul to meet with Karzai.

After their meeting, Bush said he told Karzai: “You can count on the United States. Just like you’ve been able to count on this administration, you’ll be able to count on the next administration as well.”

The mixed reactions to Bush in both countries emphasized the uncertain situations Bush is leaving behind in the region.

In Iraq, nearly 150,000 U.S. troops remain in Iraq, protecting the fragile democracy. More than 4,209 members of the U.S. military have died and $576 billion has been spent since the war began five years and nine months ago. The Bush administration and even White House critics credit last year’s military buildup with the security gains in Iraq. Last month, attacks fell to the lowest monthly level since the war began in 2003.

In Afghanistan, there are about 31,000 U.S. troops and commanders have called for up to 20,000 more. The fight is especially difficult in southern Afghanistan, a stronghold of the Taliban where violence has risen sharply this year.

It was Bush’s last trip to the war zones before Obama takes office Jan. 20. Obama, a Democrat, has promised he will bring all U.S. combat troops back home from Iraq a little over a year into his term, as long as commanders agree a withdrawal would not endanger American personnel or Iraq’s security. Obama has said the drawdown in Iraq would allow him to shift troops and bolster the U.S. presence in Afghanistan.

It’s unclear what will happen in Iraq when the U.S. troops leave. While violence has slowed in Iraq, attacks continue, especially in the north.

Bush was traveling back to Washington in the early hours Monday.

After the shoe-throwing incident, White House press secretary Dana Perino suffered an eye injury when she was hit in the face with a microphone during the melee.

Bush, who has grown used to protests of his Iraq policy, brushed off the incident. He said, “So what if a guy threw his shoe at me?”

Associated Press writer Qassim Abdul Zahra in Baghdad contributed to this report.

  

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عراق میں پریس کاانفرنس کے دوران بہادر صحافی نے امریکی صدر بش کو جوتے مارے۔۔۔۔۔

President Bush ducks as the shoes are thrown

A surprise visit by US President George Bush to Iraq has been overshadowed by an incident in which two shoes were thrown at him during a news conference.

An Iraqi journalist was wrestled to the floor by security guards after he called Mr Bush “a dog” and threw his footwear, just missing the president.

The US president has now continued to Afghanistan to inspect troops there.

He arrived before dawn at Bagram air force base, and is due to hold talks with President Hamid Karzai.

Earlier in Baghdad, Mr Bush and Iraqi PM Nouri Maliki signed the new security agreement between their countries.

The pact calls for US troops to leave Iraq in 2011 – eight years after the 2003 invasion that has in part defined the Bush presidency.

 

 If you want the facts, it’s a size 10 shoe that he threw 
US President George W Bush

Speaking just over five weeks before he hands over power to Barack Obama, Mr Bush also said the war in Iraq was not over and more work remained to be done.

His previously unannounced visit came a day after Defence Secretary Robert Gates told US troops the Iraq mission was in its “endgame”.

‘Size 10′

In the middle of the news conference with Mr Maliki, Iraqi television journalist Muntadar al-Zaidi stood up and shouted “this is a goodbye kiss from the Iraqi people, dog,” before hurling a shoe at Mr Bush which narrowly missed him.

Showing the soles of shoes to someone is a sign of contempt in Arab culture.

 

Muntadar al-Zaidi throws a shoe at George Bush (14 December 2008)

Muntadar al-Zaidi was quickly wrestled to the ground and hauled away

With his second shoe, which the president also managed to dodge, Mr Zaidi said: “This is for the widows and orphans and all those killed in Iraq.”

Mr Zaidi, a correspondent for Cairo-based al-Baghdadiya TV, was then wrestled to the ground by security personnel and hauled away.

“If you want the facts, it’s a size 10 shoe that he threw,” Mr Bush joked afterwards.

Al-Baghdadiya’s bureau chief told the Associated Press that he had no idea what prompted Mr Zaidi to attack President Bush, although reports say he was once kidnapped by a militia and beaten up.

“I am trying to reach Muntadar since the incident, but in vain,” said Fityan Mohammed. “His phone is switched off.”

Correspondents said the attack was symbolic. Iraqis threw shoes and used them to beat Saddam Hussein’s statue after his overthrow.

‘American security’

Mr Bush’s first stop upon arriving in Baghdad was the Iraqi presidential palace in the heavily-fortified Green Zone, where he held talks with President Jalal Talabani.

 

PREVIOUS BUSH VISITS TO IRAQ
Nov 2003: Serves Thanksgiving dinner to troops in Baghdad
June 2006: Meets new Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki
Sept 2007: Visits Anbar province – former stronghold of Saddam Hussein

“The work hasn’t been easy but it’s been necessary for American security, Iraqi hope and world peace,” Mr Bush said during his talks with Mr Talabani.

The Iraqi president called Mr Bush “a great friend for the Iraqi people, who helped us liberate our country”.

The BBC’s Humphrey Hawksley, in Baghdad, says the key issue at present is exactly how American troops will withdraw within the next three years and what sort of Iraq they will leave behind.

 

President Bush said events have been necessary for US security and world peace

The US media has just published details of a US government report saying that post invasion reconstruction of Iraq was crippled by bureaucratic turf wars and an ignorance of the basic elements of Iraqi society.

The report is circulating among US officials in draft form, says the New York Times.

It reveals details of a reconstruction effort that cost more than $100bn (£67bn) and only succeeded in restoring what was destroyed in the invasion and the widespread looting that followed it, the newspaper said.

Troop promises

 

George Bush says being pelted with shoes could be one of the ‘weirdest’ moments of his presidency

Mr Bush’s visit, unannounced in advance and conducted under tight security, follows the approval last month of a security pact between Washington and Baghdad that calls for US troops to be withdrawn from Iraq by the end of 2011.US troops are first to withdraw from Iraqi cities, including Baghdad, by June next year.

Defence Secretary Gates said on Saturday that “the process of the drawdown” had begun.

“We are, I believe, in terms of the American commitment, in the endgame here in Iraq,” he told US troops at an airbase near Baghdad.

Mr Gates has been picked to stay on as defence secretary by President-elect Barack Obama.

 

US troops near Mosul

The end in sight for US troops in Iraq?

President Bush leaves the White House in less than six weeks. He said in a recent interview with ABC News that the biggest regret of his presidency was the false intelligence that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.

Finding these was one of the key justifications for the invasion. None were ever found.

Mr Obama has promised to bring home US combat troops from Iraq in a little over a year from when he takes office in January.

More than 4,200 US troops and tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians and security personnel have been killed since the invasion in 2003.

There are currently about 149,000 US soldiers in Iraq, down from last year’s peak of 170,000 after extra troops were poured in to deal with a worsening security situation.

As Mr Bush arrived in Baghdad, Gen David Petraeus, the head of the US Central Command, which includes Iraq, said attacks in the country had dropped from 180 a day in June 2007 to 10 a day now.

In a sign of modest security gains in Iraq, Mr Bush was welcomed with a formal arrival ceremony – a flourish that was not part of his previous three visits.

He arrived in the country on Air Force One, which landed at Baghdad International Airport in the afternoon, after a secretive Saturday night departure from Washington on an 11-hour flight. 

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Zardari: ‘I Am a Victim Here’میں خود دہشت گردی کا شکار ہواہوں۔

 

Zardari: ‘I Am a Victim Here’میں خود دہشت گردی کا شکار ہواہوں۔

Pakistan’s president speaks out on Mumbai, terrorism and the ISI.

Lally Weymouth. NEWSWEEK. From the magazine issue dated Dec 22, 2008

President Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan is in the hot seat. Under pressure from the international community, he ordered police last week to crack down on Jamaat-ul-Dawa, a charity thought to be the public front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistani terrorist group that India blames for the Thanksgiving attacks in Mumbai. President Zardari spoke with NEWSWEEK’s Lally Weymouth just before the Jamaat arrests. Excerpts:

Weymouth: It has been reported that Pakistan  s Inter-Services Intelligence [ISI] agency had links with Lashkar-e-Taiba [LeT] and that it shared intelligence with LeT on Kashmir. Do you believe that to be true? 
Zardari: We are talking about an age-old situation. This is something [that happened] in the old days when dictators used to run the country. Maybe before 9/11, that may have been a position. [But] since then, things have changed to a great extent.

It is said that Lashkar is operating with the help of ISI now, not in the past. 
There is no supportive interaction with our intelligence [agencies] and the LeT. Lashkar-e-Taiba happens to be a banned organization in Pakistan.

I remember how you and [your late wife] Benazir Bhutto felt about the ISI  and blamed it for causing many of your problems after she left her post as prime minister. 
Yes, we’ve always maintained a certain position that the intelligence agencies [should] have nothing to do with politics. Since I have been in government, we’ve had a stated position that ISI has no political role anymore.

The problem is that long before you came to office, Lashkar-e-Taiba was used in Kashmir by the Pakistani Army to fight India. 
That may have been the situation then, but things have changed. Lashkar-e-Taiba has been banned. Of course, these nonstate actors keep re-emerging in different forms. Whenever there is actionable intelligence, we move in before anyone else does.

I thought Secretary [of State Condoleezza] Rice demanded that you do something about the Mumbai bombing. Did she ask you to arrest some people? 
She is a friend and she knows Pakistan is a responsible state, and the Americans and the British know how much my government has done for this operation … against the terrorists since we’ve been in government.

What do you think about the Mumbai attack? 
I think it is horrific.

Reportedly, all of the terrorists were trained in Pakistan. 
I don’t have any specific information to that effect because the Indians have given us very little information. I have offered to the Indians that we will do a joint investigation into this Mumbai incident and if it leads anywhere, we will take action.

If the terrorists  were trained in Pakistan, don  t you have to do something? 
Definitely. Not for them, it’s for myself … The Indians must understand that the government [of Pakistan] and the people of Pakistan are net losers of the situation. We had put in a lot of effort … to make good relations with India.

Allegedly, Rice asked you to arrest a former ISI chief, Gen. Hamid Gul. There have been stories that Gul is tied up with the Taliban and Al Qaeda. I remember Benazir talking about how bad Gul was. 
Hamid Gul is an actor who is definitely not in our good books. Hamid Gul is somebody who was never appreciated by our government. She [Rice] did not go into specifics, if I may share that with you …

He has not been accused in the Mumbai incident … I think he is more of a political ideologue of terror rather than a physical supporter.

What do you need in order to move faster? Do you need real-time intelligence? 
Of course. For instance, a lot of people are [saying] that they knew about this attack. I’ve heard that the Russians told the Indians, but I wish the Russians had also shared it with us.

The Indians are asking you to send them people to bring to justice, right? 
[We] don’t have that kind of relationship yet. America and Pakistan have hardly gotten to the position where we can interact and exchange information.

So you will not send anyone to India? 
No, that is a decision to be made by the Parliament and not by the president.

Do you control Pakistan or does the Army control Pakistan? 
Democracy controls Pakistan … All the players today understand that democracy is the only way.

So if you say there will be no first strike against India  as you did  will the Army listen to you? 
Of course. It goes without saying.

Do you think India has a problem with its own Muslims? Were Indian Muslims involved [in the Mumbai attacks]? 
I am not pointing fingers as I want to improve my relations with India … I want to be a friend of India and a friend of the world and [a foe of terrorism] because I am a victim myself.

There is always room for improvement on every side. There is room for the world to help me with the present situation in Pakistan, where poverty is a friend of the terrorists. I need to become economically better so I can employ these youths that [the terrorists] are employing.

U.S. intelligence reportedly has evidence of ISI  s involvement in the [July] bombing of the Indian Embassy in Kabul. Is it true? 
No, we have not had that intimation from the Americans. I totally deny that. We had nothing to do with the Kabul bombing. Again, these are nonstate actors.

Are you going to take any concrete steps to crack down on the Lashkar-e-Taiba? 
Things have been done. One step is we have started combing the whole region for all nonstate actors and we have made certain arrests.

Do you think you can shut the LeT down? 
We will not allow anybody to have the capability to perform such acts.

Or to train on Pakistani soil? 
Nobody will be allowed to use Pakistan soil for any form of aggression toward any friend or foe.

Secretary Rice said that nonstate actors on your soil are still your responsibility. 
Yes, definitely. I do not shrug away from that position. Anybody from my soil is my responsibility.

Over and over before, Pakistani leaders said they would do something about Lashkar and they never did. 
That is not us.

URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/174277

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چترال دشنبے ہایی وے مکمل کرلیا جایے گا،جس سے پاکستان اور مشرق وسطیٰ کے درمیان تجارت کو فروغ ملے گا

A new Chitral-Dushanbe highway would be completed which would play an important role چترال دشنبے ہایی وے مکمل کرلیا جایے گا،جس سے پاکستان اور مشرق وسطیٰ کے درمیان تجارت کو فروغ ملے گا

The News | Sunday, December 14, 2008

By by Syed Bukhar Shah 

PESHAWAR: Condemning terrorists’ attacks in Mumbai, federal minister for communication, Dr Arbab Alamgir Khan, has said Pakistan would follow its own law to take action against those responsible for the attacks instead of taking dictation from others.

“Pakistan is a sovereign country and it is capable of defending its sovereignty and independence,” he told newsmen during his visit to the press club on Saturday. 

Pakistan, he said, was itself victim of terrorism and it was still facing the spectre terror on its soil that’s why we offered all kinds of support to India in investigating the Mumbai attacks.

Commenting on the law and order situation in the country, particularly Frontier province, the federal minister said the worsening law and order had become a biggest challenge for the government. “We accept the challenge and will definitely overcome the worsening law and order situation,” he said. 

He said it was responsibility of the government to protect lives and properties of its citizens and it would use all available sources to root it out. Similarly, he said, the provincial government was also facing difficult situation, but it was fighting it well. He said the government was determined to improve situation and fight terrorism.

He said the government was using all peaceful options to bring peace to the violence-hit areas, but the elements involved in terror activities opted for bloodshed, which is unacceptable to the government. He said the government could not abandon development projects due to unfavourable law and order situation.
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Arbab Alamgir said they had planned to construct a number of roads, particularly trade routes, to explore new markets in the Central Asia. He said a new Chitral-Dushanbe highway would be completed which would play an important role in promoting trade between Pakistan and the Central Asian States. He said Peshawar Northern bypass, linking Charsadda Road, Warsak Road and Nasir Bagh localities to Takhta Beg would also be completed soon. He said this 12-kilometre bypass would cost an amount of Rs12 billion and the Asian Development Bank would provide Rs8 billion for the project.
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Similarly, he said, Kohat road would also be connected to Takhta Beg in to divert heavy traffic, particularly containers, to the Indus Highway. He said both the projects — NBP and Kohat Road-Takhta Beg link road — would lessen traffic burden on inter-city roads in the provincial metropolis. He said the under-construction Nowshera-Peshawar road would be completed on priority basis and the under-construction Lowari Rail Tunnel would be made operational by 2010.

He said the Lowari Tunnel would be inaugurated on January 15, but it would take seven more months to be completely operational. “The government had also planned construction of Malakand tunnel for which talks with a Korean delegation would be held on December 17,” he added and said the new tunnel would also bring remote areas closer to the big markets.

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TTHC demands concession on air ticketsتنظیم تحفطِ حقوقِ چترال (ٹی ٹی ایچ سی) کی جانب سے فضایی ٹکٹ میں رعایت کا مطالبہ

 

TTHC demands concession on air ticketsتنظیم تحفطِ حقوقِ چترال (ٹی ٹی ایچ سی) کی جانب سے فضایی ٹکٹ میں رعایت کا مطالبہ

PESHAWAR: Tanzeem-e-Tahaffuz-e-Haqooq-e-Chitral (TTHC) convener and former member of National Assembly (MNA) from Chitral district of NWFP Abdul Akbar on Saturday demanded 50 per cent concession in the Pakistan International Airline (PIA)’s tickets for the people of Chitral. 


Addressing a press conference at Peshawar Press Club, TTHC convener said due to closer of Lowari Top, the people of Chitral have been stranded and have no alternative ground route to go to other parts of the country. 

In the current situation, he said, it has become risky for them to use Afghanistan route to Peshawar and other parts of the country. 

He said that the district people can not afford air ticket and demanded of the government to give 50 per cent concession on PIA tickets to the district people and also increase the number of flights from and to Chitral. 

He also demanded of the government to give subsidy on PIA tickets as a relief to the people of Chitral till the opening of Lowari Top. – Daily Times -staff report

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‘Step up efforts to develop Chitral’چترال کی ترقی کے لیےجدوجہد

‘Step up efforts to develop Chitral’چترال کی ترقی کے لیےجدوجہد

Associated Press of Pakistan

CHITRAL: District Nazim Chitral Haji Maghfirat Shah stressed upon all stakeholders comprising heads of line departments, representatives of civil societies and public sector for integrated approach and joint efforts for tangible and sustainable development of Chitral. 

He was addressing a round table meeting cum women coordination forum held here in a local hotel organized by Tehsil Municipal Administration in collaboration with Regional Women Empowerment Project (RWEP). Speaking on the occasion, District Nazim said that although so many NGOs working here for uplifting life standard of women folk and development of the entire district but it need more polishing and mutual coordination for sustainable development and integrated approach so as to avoid repetition and bring positive changes in their lives. 

He said that Women Development Forum must be established to boost their existing skill by different ways like giving them more training, linking their products to national and international market, sale points and sophisticating their existing skill and handicrafts. 

He said that existing scenario needed more opportunities to stand them on their own feet so as to minimized their dependency on male by earning their livelihood with their own ways and source locally without disturbing our culture. 

He appreciated mosaic training and its products that local women of Chitral have prepared very attractive and best decoration pieces from small stones and pieces of marble first time in Chitral. 

He emphasized on all civil societies working for women uplifting to provide them all possible opportunities at their doorsteps and confidence of ownership of any project working for their development to attract their interest. 

District Nazim said that after opening of the Lawari tunnel we will face more challenges by arrival of expert, sound and strong people from down districts and we should be prepared mentally to compete with others. He said that district government always support you and never create any hurdles in the ways of any non-government organisation working for women development and empowerment. All the government agencies, civil societies will support you massively but you must work with mutual coordination for solid, tangible and visible development to bring changes in life standard of women folk. 

Addressing the forum Tehsil Nazim Chitral Saraj Ahamd Khan expressed his concern over that, after sharing experiences of different non-government organisations and said that it seems that there is no integrated approach and mutual coordination among them.

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