Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Tribute to Benazir Bhutto by her daughter Bakhtawar Bhutto -


Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari weeps as she celebrates the victory of her father in The Parliament House in Islamabad last September

LISTEN TO SONG: www.apnalarkana.com/tribute.html

Like any child who has lost a parent, it was only natural that Benazir Bhutto's eldest daughter would wish to express her grief for her murdered mother. Less obvious, perhaps, was that the tribute would come in the form of a mournful rap song.



Now the song, written and performed by 18-year-old Bakhtawar is being broadcast regularly on Pakistan's state-run television, part of a flood of tributes paid to the former prime minister a year after her assassination.



"You have beauty and intelligence, everything you did have relevance," sings Bakhtawar, with a borrowed Brooklyn accent, over looping beats. "Shot in the back of your ear, so young in 54th year, murdered with three kids left behind, a hopeless nation without you, you are in all their hearts."



The teenager, a student at Edinburgh University, then repeats a chorus line, from which the song takes it name: "I would take the pain away."
The song, which has also been posted on YouTube, features a five-minute video of photographs and clips of the murdered former premier, including footage from the election rally at the Liaquat Bagh park in Rawalpindi which she had addressed just moments before an assassin launched a lethal gun and bomb attack on 27 December, 2007.


Bakhtawar is a keen music fan and was apparently encouraged to sing by her mother. Shortly before her mother's death, the teenager asked a journalist friend in the US to introduce to the Grammy Award-winning rapper and music producer Puff Daddy.



While Bakhtawar's dirgelike rap is unlikely to secure her a Grammy of her own, the seemingly heartfelt tribute might win her some fans. Sherry Rehman, currently Pakistan's Information Minister and for many years a close aide to Ms Bhutto, said of the song: "It is the tribute of a grieving daughter to her iconic and loving mother."



Bakhtawar is one of three children of Ms Bhutto and Asif Ali Zardari, who inherited the leadership of her Pakistan People's Party in the aftermath of hie wife's death and was subsequently elected president of the country. Their 20-year-old son, Bilawal, who was jointly named co-chair of the party, is a student at Oxford University, while their other daughter, Aseefa, 15, is also studying abroad.



When Ms Bhutto returned to Pakistan from exile in October 2007, Mr Zardari remained in Dubai. In her final book, book 'Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy and the West', that was published after her death, Ms Bhutto wrote of the decision: "We understood the dangers and the risks of my return, and we wanted to make sure that no matter what happened, our daughters and our son, Bilawal, would have one of us to take care of them."


Monday, December 29, 2008

Surgeons who removed the Heaviest kidney stone


Surgeon Dr. Malik Hussain Jalbani is an Associate Professor of Urology and supervisor of fellowship training at Nepro-urology Department of Chandka Medical College Hospital Larkana Sindh. Surgeon Dr. Ghulam shabir Imran Akbar Arbani is a hardworker fellowship resident in urology at the Department of Nephro-Urology Chandka Medical College Hospital Larkana Sindh Pakistan.

Monday, December 8, 2008

SBP to establish satellite office in Larkana, Shamshad tells LCCI

Friday, November 28, 2008By our correspondentLARKANA: Governor State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) Dr Shamshad Akhtar addressed members of the Larkana Chambers of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) at the Circuit House, Larkana, on Thursday.

Officers of various banks and senior citizens were also present on the occasion. She told the audience that the State Bank had proposed allocation of Rs 212 billion to finance the countryĆ­s agriculture so that production objectives could be achieved. She pointed out that borrowing in Sindh remained low as compared to other provinces.

While saying that Larkana was an important city, she announced that the SBP would establish its satellite office here for providing better services and opportunities to trade and agriculture sectors. Dr Shamshad Akhtar said the SBP was running 16 offices in the country under the direction of three governing members for restructuring the non-performing loans and remove deficiencies to improve services and quality of large, medium and small banks, including the Islami Bank and micro finance banking.

She said micro-financing could be a good partner in attempts for poverty alleviation programme through credit schemes. She said the banks had been directed to issue credit to industries, traders, growers, small groups and to common man in Larkana, as this area was fertile and produces wheat, rice, guava and vegetables. She told the audience that the SBP had drawn friendly bank policies for all segments of the society. She pointed out that the economy of Pakistan was not balanced, the rate of inflation was high and the government was making efforts to overcome these problems.

Shamshad said the agriculture chambers of commerce should hold dialogue with farmers and growers of Larkana to apprise them of the latest developments. She said despite inflation in the country and economic imbalance, the IMF had sanctioned and released credit to support and build our forex reserves. She directed the banking sector to issue maximum credit to borrowers and facilitate them under economic reforms. She said some existing banks are already healthy and are offering viable business opportunities to run and operate businesses. Earlier, the President of the LCCI, M Suleman Sheikh, and president-elect Masood Ahmad Sheikh read out welcome address and offered gifts of Sindhi Ajrak to the SBP governor.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Q&A: the murder of Benazir Bhutto

How did Benazir Bhutto die?
The Government initially said that Ms Bhutto died from a massive head injury sustained when the force of the bomb blast threw the lever of the sunroof against her head as she was trying to duck back into her vehicle.
However, this theory has been debunked since photographs and amateur video footage clearly showed Ms Bhutto disappearing into her vehicle after the shots and before the blast. Family members and aides who washed her body have also said that they clearly saw a bullet wound on her head. Witnesses of the attack also say they saw Ms Bhutto being shot. Doctors who treated Ms Bhutto in her final hours say authorities have ordered them to remain silent and to destroy records of her treatment. Officials from her Pakistan People's Party accuse the government of trying to cover up evidence pointing either to its involvement in the assassination or to the failure of its security arrangements.

Was the Pakistani Government involved?
It denies playing any role in Ms Bhutto's assassination. But many of her family members and PPP officials say they believe that conservative elements of the security services, especially the Inter-Services Intelligence agency, were involved in some way. They point to senior ISI officers who they believe embraced radical Islam while coordinating US support for the Afghan Mujahideen against the Soviet army in Afghanistan. Those same officers maintain close links to Islamist militants and regarded Ms Bhutto as too secular and close to the West. Among those often named are Hamid Gul, a retired general who served as head of the ISI in Ms Bhutto’s first term as Prime Minister. He has dismissed the allegations as "bunkum."

Whom did Ms Bhutto herself suspect?
Before she returned from eight years of self-exile two months ago, Bhutto wrote to Musharraf naming several individuals who should be investigated if anything happened to her. PPP officials say they included Mr Gul (the former ISI chief), Ijaz Shah (the head of the civilian Intelligence Bureau), Pervez Elahi (the former Punjab Chief Minister), Arbab Ghulam Rahimand ( the former Sindh chief minister) and Hassan Afzal, former Deputy Chairman of the National Accountability Bureau (NAB). In October, Ms Bhutto also revealed that her lawyer had received a letter, signed by a "friend of al-Qaeda" which threatened to slaughter her like a goat. However, she said she had more fear from unidentified members of a power structure that she described as allies of the “forces of militancy”.

Q&A: the murder of Benazir Bhutto


What happened during the attack?

The Government says that it was carried out by a gunman working in conjunction with a suicide bomber, whose head was found at the site. Photographs taken by a member of the crowd clearly show a clean-shaven young man in dark glasses, a white shirt and a dark waist coat, shooting a pistol at Ms Bhutto from next to her vehicle. One picture shows another man with a white shawl over his head standing behind the gunman and a Pakistani television station has identified the second man as the bomber. Amateur video footage shows the gunman firing at least three shots and an explosion engulfing the vehicle seconds later.

However, there is still no clear evidence to show if the shooter was also the bomber, if there was a second person who detonated himself, or if the explosion was triggered by remote control. The government has shown images of what it says is the bomber's reconcstructed head, but it is still not clear if the gunman's body has been found. Much evidence was destroyed when authorities washed the blast site with high pressure hoses on the same night that Ms Bhutto died.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

DCO Larkana transferred!

The Sindh government has transferred the District Police Officer (DCO), Larkana, Aziz Uqaly; and posted the Additional Secretary, Local Government, Jafar Abbasi; as DCO for the home town of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto. The transfer was ordered on the directive of President Asif Ali Zardari who directed the Sindh government to remove the DCO as he received many complaints against him. The officials claimed that Uqaly was posted on the demand of Faryal Talpur MNA, Naudero, Larkana. However, the party leaders and legislators from Larkana complained to the president about the delaying in development work in Benazir Bhutto district and blamed the DCO for the delay.

President directs MPs to focus on Larkana uplift

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

ISLAMABAD: PPP parliamentarians belonging to Larkana district have complained to President Asif Ali Zardari against the attitude of the federal as well as provincial ministers towards the people of Larkana, the hometown of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto.A group of parliamentarians, provincial ministers and notables from the Larkana division informed the president of their complaints in a meeting with him here at the Aiwan-e-Sadr.

They discussed with the president the problems being faced by the people of the area.The president assured the delegation that the government would look into their problems and try to address these issues. According to sources, the president directed the federal and provincial ministers to hold open Katcheries in Larkana at the mausoleum of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto fortnightly and resolve the issues on priority basis.

The sources said the president also directed Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah not to neglect the people of Larkana in the future and keep in touch with MNAs and MPAs of the hometown of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto. Chief Minister Sindh Syed Qaim Ali Shah, Speaker Sindh Assembly Nisar Ahmad Khoro and MNA Faryal Talpur were also present in the meeting

Protesters warn of burning degrees!!!

LARKANA, Nov 16: Candidates who have passed the Sindh Public Service Commission’s test for lecturer’s job threatened on Sunday that they would burn their degrees and stage a sit-in outside the Chief Minister’s House if appointment letters were not issued to them.Imdad Tunio and Ms Kausar Samo, two of the candidates who observed a token hunger strike and held a demonstration outside the press club, told journalists that 650 lecturers had passed the commission’s test and given offer letters in May 2008.

The government had promised to give them joining orders but later deviated from its commitment, forcing the job-seekers to go to the court, which ordered the government on Oct 21 to issue appointment orders within four months but it did not happen, they complained.They said that they had learnt that a summery on their appointment had again been sent to the chief minister and hoped he would sign it this time.They said they would be forced to sell their kidneys if the government did not issue appointment orders.

Charge-sheet submitted against taluka nazim

LARKANA, Nov 17: The Anti-corruption Establishment (ACE) Larkana on Monday submitted a charge-sheet against the suspended taluka nazim of Larkana Qurban Ali Abbasi and five other officers of Taluka Municipal Administration in the special court of anti-corruption Larkana. About four month ago the circle officer ACE Larkana Niaz Hussain Khajjar had registered an FIR against Qurban Abbasi and five officers for allegedly auctioning 87 residential and commercial plots at old bus stand and Sachal Colony of Larkana.

The circle officer said that the suspended taluka nazim had allotted plots without seeking permission from the council and dished them out to his ‘favourites’ during the ban period.Others nominated in the FIR included Abdul Karim Shaikh, Taluka Municipal Officer, Manzoor Ali Dhamraho, Land Grant Officer, Atta Muhammed Channa, Taluka Officer Finance, Yusif Maseeh, Taluka Officer Regulation and Liaquat Mirani, Taluka officer infrastructures, the circle officer added.Presently all the officers and the taluka nazim Larkana Qurban Abbasi were on bail. Sindh government had already suspended the Taluka Nazim and the naib nazim.Yasir Junejo backed by Awam Dost Panel had taken over the charge of taluka nazim.

It was learnt that ADP had managed the ousters the taluka nazim Larkana through PPP government when they had failed to unseat him through vote of confidence.They had tried time and again but could not succeed, therefore, they had done it with the tool of Sindh Local Government Ordinance through Sindh Local Government Commission, the sources said.

Delay in opening rice purchase centres to deepen crisis

LARKANA, Nov 15: Leaders of growers’ organisations and rice millers foresee further deepening of crisis if the Pakistan Agricultural Storage and Supplies Corporation (Passco) delays opening procurement centres to buy rice produce from growers in Sindh and Balochistan.Ishaque Mughairi, president of Qambar-Shahdadkot chapter of the Sindh Abadgar Board, said on Saturday that the growers were compelled to sell Irri-6 rice at the rate of Rs500 to 600 per 40 kilograms in the absence of government’s procurement centres.

In Shahdadkot, which had 75 rice mills, the Basmati variety of rice was being sold at Rs700 to 800 per 40 kg, with small khatedars and growers bearing the brunt of what he called tremendous ‘cuts’ on sale of their rice produce.

The traders deduct 30 maunds from 1000 maunds of rice under different pretexts, he said.He termed government’s announcement of establishing Passco’s procurement centres an eyewash and said that no procurement centre had been set up so far in Sindh and Balochistan.He said that thing would never improve without a comprehensive procurement policy and alleged that exporters, millers and government had joined hands to squeeze out the growers.Reports from Qambar indicated that no procurement centre had been opened there and growers’ demand for enhancement in rice procurement price from Rs700 per 40 kg had fallen on deaf ears.The influential traders who had obtained wheat from government godowns at the rate of Rs675 per 40 kg were openly selling it to growers in the absence of certified seed at the rate of Rs2,000 to 2,200 per 50 kg bag, he said.

Gada Hussain Mahesar, senior vice-president of Larkana chapter of Sindh Abadgar Board, regretted the cold-shouldered attitude of the agriculture department and said that he had written to federal and provincial governments, cautioning that delay in procurement would harm wheat crop and so the economy.Mr Mahesar called for effective and timely arrangements for procuring rice and said that Sindh and Balochistan produced 2.6 million tons of rice (3.9 million tons of paddy) per year.He termed Passco’s claim about purchasing rice impracticable and said that it lacked experience and sufficient technical staff to cover all the 900 mills in both the provinces.

He disclosed that Sindh and Balochistan earned $700 million from exporting rice annually and called for convening a meeting of the representatives of growers, millers and concerned government officials to pull growers out of present crisis.Siraj Rashdi, president of the Larkana chapter of the Sindh Chamber of Agriculture, regretted non-existence of procurement centres in both the provinces and said the support price for rice at Rs700 per 40 kg was quite reasonable.He said that poor peasants were compelled to sell out their share in the yield at lower rates because they could not afford to withstand the pressure of repaying loans and meeting other requirements.