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Turkish police fight protesters, clear square

Turkish police fight protesters, clear square

Posted on 12 June 2013 by admin Roha

A riot police fires tear gas against anti-government protesters during clashes in Ankara.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Istanbul, ( GNS )  :  Turkish riot police fought running battles with pockets of protesters  overnight, clearing the central Istanbul square that has been the focus of nearly two weeks of protests against Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan.

By dawn, Taksim Square, strewn with wreckage from bulldozed barricades, was largely deserted and taxis crossed it for the first time since the troubles started.

Several hundred remained in an endampment of tents in Gezi Park abutting the square. Erdogan, who has repeatedly dismissed the demonstrators as “riff-raff”, was expected to meet a grouping of public figures about the protests on Wednesday.

In the fighting talk that first endeared him to voters 10 years ago, he said on Tuesday he would not “kneel” before the protesters and that “this Tayyip Erdogan won’t change”.

The United States, which has held up Erdogan’s Turkey in the past as an example of Muslim democracy that could benefit other countries in the Middle East, expressed concern about events in Turkey and urged dialogue between government and protesters.

“We believe that Turkey’s long-term stability, security and prosperity is best guaranteed by upholding the fundamental freedoms of expression, assembly and association, and a free independent media,” White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said.

Erdogan, though, has increasingly accused foreign forces and international media and market speculators of stoking conflict and trying to undermine the economy of the only largely Muslim NATO state.

He has also exerted strong pressure on the media, seven newspapers last week carrying the identical headline citing Erdogan as saying he, not the protesters, guaranteed democracy.

Fierce clashes

The night had brought some of the worst clashes since the troubles began. Police fired tear gas into thousands of people gathered on the square,including people in office clothes who had gathered after work, some with families with children.

The crowd scattered into narrow streets around, leaving a hard core of protesters to return, lighting bonfires and stoning water cannon. Police then launched tear gas attacks again, the cycle repeating itself until numbers dwindled.

“We will continue our measures in an unremitting manner, whether day or night, until marginal elements are cleared and the square is open to the people,” Istanbul Governor Huseyin Avni Mutlu declared on television on Tuesday night.

Police were less in evidence by the morning and it was not clear if protesters would return in the course of the day, as they have previously.

A fierce crackdown on initial protests against planned redevelopment of Gezi Park, a leafy corner of Taksim, triggered the wider protests, drawing in a broad alliance of secularists, nationalists, professional workers, unionists and students – some of whom would never before have considered sharing a political platform.

Erdogan argues that the broader mass of people are at best the unwitting tools of political extremists and terrorists and points to his 50 percent vote in the last of three successive electoral victories for his political authority.

Hs critics, some of whom who say conservative religious elements have won out over centrist reformers in his AK Party, accuse him an increasingly authoritarian conduct and of inflaming the crisis with unyielding talk.

Some charge that his politics are too often shaped by a religious agenda, with the introduction of alcohol restrictions and comments suggesting he favours a traditionalist role for women.

For his part, Erdogan has complained of the contempt he feels secularist leaders have shown in the past for religious sentiments, excluding women with head scarves from universities.

He has accused protesters of attacking women in headscarves and of desecrating mosques by bringing in beer. “There’s no room for dialogue when there’s ongoing violence,” said Mucella Yapici of the Taksim Solidarity Platform, a core group behind the Gezi Park campaign.

Unyielding

Gezi Park has been turned into a ramshackle settlement of tents by leftists, environmentalists, liberals, students and professionals who see a plan to develop one of the few green spaces in Istanbul as symptomatic of an overbearing government.

Erdogan swept to power in 2002 after forging his AK Party from an alliance of centrist reformers and nationalists as well as remnants of Islamist parties banned in the past by secular authorities.

Denying any plans to subvert Turkey’s secular order, he set about deep-reaching social reforms. He broke the political power of an army that had toppled four governments over four decades, including Turkey’s first Islamist-led government with which he was associated.

He also opened talks with the European Union, introduced some social reforms and sought to negotiate and end to a long-running Kurdish rebellion. What is notably absent during this crisis is the speculation of a military coup that has in the past accompanied social unrest – some tribute to Erdogan’s reforms.

Army power is broken. Nor though does there seem to be any political alternative to Erdogan who faces a weak opposition in parliament and fragmented groups on the streets.

“They say the prime minister is rough. So what was going to happen here? Were we going to kneel down in front of these (people)?” Erdogan said after the action to clear the square began on Tuesday morning. “If you call this roughness, I’m sorry, but this Tayyip Erdogan won’t change,” he told a meeting of his AK party’s parliamentary group.

The unrest has knocked investor confidence in a country that has boomed under Erdogan. The lira, already suffering from wider market turmoil, fell on Tuesday to its weakest level against its dollar/euro basket since October 2011.

The cost of insuring Turkish debt against default rose to its highest in 10 months, although it remained far from crisis levels. Turkey’s Medical Association said that as of late Monday, 4,947 people had sought treatment in hospitals and voluntary infirmaries for injuries, ranging from cuts and burns to breathing difficulties from tear gas inhalation, since the unrest began more than 10 days ago. Three people have died.

 

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TCS and Canada’s ICTC to roll out innovative program for high school students

Posted on 10 June 2013 by admin Roha

Program to encourage students to take up STEM related careers to bridge skills gap

Plans to reach out to 1,000 students in greater Toronto area in first year

Toronto, ( GNS ) : Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) (BSE: 532540, NSE: TCS), the leading IT services, consulting, and business solutions organization, today announced the expansion of its goIT initiative into Canada.

goIT is a key TCS initiative to get high school students interested in pursuing higher education in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields. Over the past 12 months, TCS has been working with Canada’s Information and Communications Technology Council (ICTC) to develop an innovative program to spark interest among Canada’s Grade 7-10 students to pursue careers in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields.

The program will be initially rolled out to 10 schools within the Greater Toronto area starting in the 2013/14 school year, with the intent to expand to more school boards and regions across Canada.  It will be led by TCS professionals and involve multiple in-school workshops throughout the entire school season on some of the latest technology topics. In the first year, the program will target over 1,000 students.

In a statement here today,  TCS Canada’s Marketing Head & local goIT Program Owner., Loucas Saites, said,
“Building on a long history of working with Canadian universities, TCS is delighted to introduce our goIT program which is designed specifically for students at the stage that they most likely start making career choices.Canada needs to attract more students into ICT and we are proud to partner with ICTC to further this cause.”

In 2009, TCS launched the goIT program within the US to address the issue of decreasing university enrolment in careers related to science, technology, engineering and mathematics.  The TCS Canada goIT program is designed to encourage students to take up ICT as a career choice to solve the long term skills shortage in the country.

“Preparing the workforce of the future will be critical to our economy and who better to bring on board than our youth, we’re thrilled to see TCS’s leadership in this arena striving to be part of the solution,” said Namir Anani, President and CEO of the ICTC.  “This program brings emerging technologies into the classroom and gives students direct interaction with some of today’s leading experts.  It has all the right ingredients to help enable and nurture tomorrow’s talent.”

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6 dead in Philadelphia building collapse

6 dead in Philadelphia building collapse

Posted on 05 June 2013 by admin Roha

 

building collapse

photo caption: In this photo provided by Jordan

McLaughlin, emergency personnel respond to a building

collapse on the edge of downtown Philadelphia on Wednesday.

PHILADELPHIA, ( GNS) : A building that was being torn down collapsed with a thunderous boom, raining bricks on a neighbouring thrift store, killing six people and injuring at least 13 others in an accident that witnesses said was bound to happen.

Early reports from Mayor Michael Nutter had been that one woman had died in the Wednesday morning accident, but rescuers using buckets and their bare hands to move bricks and rubble kept working through the evening.

Body bags were removed from the collapse site at night, and Mr. Nutter said at a news conference that authorities didn’t know how many people had been in the thrift shop or on the sidewalk.

Mr. Nutter said the city’s emergency workers had been “diligent, determined, focused” in their rescue efforts.“If anyone else is in that building, they will find them,” he said.

One woman was pulled from the rubble of the Salvation Army thrift store, two hours after the 10:45 a.m. collapse when rescuers heard her voice, city fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers said.

Rescuers had been prepared to dig through the rubble all night because they didn’t know how many people were in the thrift store when the building collapsed on it.

Survivors were taken to hospitals with mostly minor injuries, and some had been treated and released by evening.

Officials from the Department of Labour and Occupational Safety and Health Administration were at the scene.

The collapse involved an empty building that once housed a first-floor sandwich shop and apartments above. The thrift shop was on one side. The other side was an adult bookstore and theatre that had been taken down within the last few months.

 

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Posted on 16 May 2013 by admin Roha

Sharif, who is set for an unprecedented third term as premier after the PML-N won the May 11 general elections, may appoint an adviser to assist him.

LAHORE, ( GNS0 : Pakistan’s Prime Minister-elect Nawaz Sharif  may retain the crucial foreign affairs portfolio with himself despite intense lobbying within the PML -N party for the plum post, sources said today.

Sharif, who is set for an unprecedented third term as premier after the PML-N won the May 11 general elections, may appoint an adviser to assist him in handling foreign affairs, party insiders told mediamen here today.

Former Foreign Minister Sartaj Aziz, 84, is currently considered a frontrunner for the post of adviser.

“Sartaj Aziz has been present at almost all important meetings Mr Sharif held with foreign diplomats since the party’s victory in the polls. Other senior PML-N leaders were not present at these meetings,” one party insider said.

Two former diplomats – Tariq Fatemi, who very briefly served as Ambassador to the US in 1999, and   Shamshad Ahmad Khan, who was Foreign Secretary during 1997-2000 – are also in the race for the post of adviser, sources said.

Some sources said Aziz’s advanced age could go against him and one party insider said Aziz had shown an interest in becoming President after  Asif Ali Zardari   completes his term in September.

Over the past few days, there has been intense lobbying within the PML-N for the post of Foreign Minister.

Senior PML-N leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, who is considered close to the military establishment and was Leader of Opposition in the last National Assembly, had indicated his interest in the slot, sources said.

However, others within the PML-N were opposed to Khan being allocated the important position, the sources said.

Khan had even successfully contested polls to the Punjab Assembly  in the hope of becoming Chief Minister of the province but the PML-N has now decided to retain Shahbaz  Sharif   in that slot, party leaders said.

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Gartner Says PC Market in Western Europe Declined 20.5 Percent in First Quarter of 2013

Posted on 15 May 2013 by admin Roha

France Exhibited Weakest PC Shipments of the Region’s Three Biggest Country Markets

PC Shipments in Germany Showed Eleventh Consecutive Quarterly Decline

Steep Decline in Mobile PC Shipments in the U.K. in First Quarter of 2013

Mumbai, (AJAY RAWAL) :  PC shipments in Western Europe totaled 12.3 million units in the first quarter of 2013, a decline of 20.5 percent from the corresponding period of 2012, according to Gartner.

“The first quarter of 2013 brought the worst quarterly decline in Western Europe since Gartner started tracking PC shipments in this region,” said Meike Escherich, principal research analyst at Gartner. “Wide availability of Windows 8-based PCs could not boost consumer PC purchases during the quarter. Although the new Metro-style user interface suits new form factors, users wonder about its suitability for traditional PCs — non-touchscreen desktops and notebooks.”

All PC segments in Western Europe exhibited year-on-year declines in the first quarter of 2013. Mobile and desktop PC shipments fell by 24.6 percent and 13.8 percent, respectively. Shipments to the professional PC market declined by 17.2 percent, while those to the consumer PC market decreased by 23.7 percent.

PC shipments in France totaled just over 2 million units in the first quarter of 2013, a fall of over 25 percent from the corresponding period of 2012 (see Table 3).

 

This was the third consecutive quarterly decline in France’s PC market. It was also the weakest performance of the three major Western European countries.

 

“The shift to buying devices other than PCs persisted in France, and businesses continued to extend life cycle of traditional PCs,” said Isabelle Durand, principal analyst at Gartner.

 

In the first quarter of 2013, the mobile PC market accounted for 62 percent of PC shipments in France as volumes decreased by 26 percent. “One reason for the decline was a drop in ‘netbook’ shipments, which represented less than 1 percent of all notebook shipments in France during the quarter,” said Ms. Durand. The decline in desktop PCs, of 24 percent, was less steep than that of mobile PCs.

 

Shipments of Ultrabooks remained slow as prices were still relatively high. New models with more attractive prices will reach the market only in the second half of 2013. The ultraportable segment represented 14 percent of the mobile PCs shipped in France in the first quarter 2013.

The consumer PC market decreased by 28 percent, while the professional PC market declined by 21 percent.

“Some organizations do not adopt new operating systems — in this case Windows 8 — immediately, as it takes time for their IT departments to test them before deployment. As a result, some organizations continued to refresh their PCs with models running Windows 7.

Four of the top five vendors recorded double-digit declines in shipments. The exception was Lenovo, which grew slightly owing to a strong retail presence that helped it gain share in the consumer sector. HP remained in the lead, but had a challenging quarter in both the professional segment and the consumer segment. Asus’s shipments declined mainly because of a fall in netbook sales, with sales of Ultrabooks remaining low.

“Overall, we expect the PC market in France to show a double-digit decline in the second quarter of 2013,” said Ms. Durand.

HP and Acer both recorded declines of over 30 percent. However, despite seeing its consumer notebook volumes halve during this quarter, HP remained the market leader.

Lenovo and Apple were the only top-five vendors to record growth. Lenovo was again the fastest-growing vendor, with growth in both desktop and notebook PC shipments. This enabled it to close the gap with Acer, which held on to second place. Lenovo continued to expand in the consumer PC sector by winning share from both Acer and HP, and by being aggressive in the professional PC market, where it competed closely with HP and Dell.

“The battle for consumer wallet share continues between different devices,” said Ms. Escherich. “The PC is the first to fall by the wayside as usage patterns shift toward smartphones and tablets. This ongoing trend will have a profound impact on the size of the installed base of PCs,” said Ms. Escherich.

PC shipments in the U.K. totaled 2.5 million units in the first quarter of 2013, a decrease of 15.8 percent from the corresponding period of 2012 (see Table 2).

“Many consumers no longer require a PC as usage of smartphones and tablets takes over,” said Ranjit Atwal, research director at Gartner.

Mobile PC shipments declined by 22.0 percent in the first quarter of 2013, while desktop PC volumes decreased by 5.2 percent.

Consumer and professional PC demand declined by 23.5 percent and 7.6 percent, respectively. “Lenovo’s strong performance in the first quarter of 2013 prevented the professional PC market declining faster. While the professional PC market continues to see the importance of the productivity gained from using a PC, consumers attribute much less value to the use of PCs,” said Mr. Atwal.

HP retained the No. 1 position, despite losing nearly 25 percent of its PC volume in a single year. Acer exhibited the worst performance of the first quarter, with a decline of 26.6 percent. Only Lenovo achieved growth. It performed strongly in the professional PC sector, but like other vendors, declined in the consumer PC sector.

PC shipments in Germany totaled 2.6 million units in the first quarter of 2013, a decrease of 20 percent from the corresponding period of 2012.

“This was not only the eleventh consecutive quarter of shipment decline, but also the worst we’ve seen since Gartner started tracking the German market,” said Ms. Escherich.

Mobile PC shipments declined by 24.7 percent while desktop PC volumes fell by 13.1 percent. Consumer and professional PC demand fell by 18.6 percent and 21.4 percent, respectively.

“Consumers generally don’t buy tablets with the aim of replacing a PC, but tablets, once in use, often take a central role in everyday computing tasks and people find themselves spending less and less time at a PC. We expect the installed base of PCs to shrink as more tablets and smartphones are purchased,” said Ms. Escherich.

In Germany, Lenovo retained the No. 1 position that it has held since the third quarter of 2012. It performed better than the market average in all segments, including 2 percent growth in the consumer segment.

Acer exhibited the worst performance of the first quarter, with an overall shipment decline of 45.6 percent. Its shipments in the consumer PC segment fell by 48 percent.

HP, the No. 2, remained the leader in the professional and desktop PC segments. But the gap with Lenovo is widening rapidly.

“We expect this market to decline further through 2013. However, demand in the professional PC sector and the release of Intel’s ‘Haswell’ processor could boost shipments in the second half of 2013 and into 2014,” said Ms. Escherich.

 

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Ranbaxy whistleblower Thakur to get Rs. 266 crore

Posted on 14 May 2013 by admin Roha

Washigton, (GNS) :  Dinesh Thakur, former Ranbaxy  director and global head of research information & portfolio management, is entitled to $48.6 million (Rs. 266 crore with respect to $1=Rs. 54.80) as the whistleblower in the case, the U.S. Justice Department said. It was Thakur who uncovered the unsafe practices and violations at Ranbaxy.
“Ranbaxy’s management was notified of these widespread problems. When they failed to correct the problems, it left me with no choice but to alert healthcare authorities,” Thakur said in a statement.
“It took us eight years to help government authorities unravel a complicated trail of falsified records and dangerous manufacturing practices that threatened to compromise the quality and safety of Ranbaxy drugs,” he added.
Ranbaxy Laboratories pleaded guilty on Monday to felony charges related to drug safety and will pay $500 million (Rs. 2,740 rore) in civil and criminal fines under the settlement agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice.
The settlement is its largest-ever with a generic drugmaker over drug safety, according to the U.S. government. It includes $150 million in payments for a criminal fine and forfeiture and $350 million in payments for civil claims.
Ranbaxy USA pleaded guilty to three felony counts related to the manufacture of drugs at two Indian locations that did not meet safety standards and to four counts of making material false statements.

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UK launches ‘super-priority’ visas for Indians

UK launches ‘super-priority’ visas for Indians

Posted on 14 May 2013 by admin Roha

UK visa

London, ( GNS ) : Britain has launched a new “super priority” same-day visa service for urgent travellers from India, the first-of-its-kind service to be launched by the UK anywhere in the world.
The super priority visa service was announced by British Prime Minister David Cameron during his visit to the country in February this year.

The service is open for appointment bookings in India from today.

“I am delighted to see the super priority visa service being launched in India before any other country,” said Sir James Bevan, the British High Commissioner to India.

“For the first time, Indian visitors will now have the option of a same-day visa to the UK. This underlines our strong commitment to make an already excellent visa service even better. We expect this new service to be particularly useful for business,” he said, adding that it will cater to those who need to travel on very short notice.

“Opportunities arise at short notice. We want Indian entrepreneurs and businessmen to be able to seize these. The UK and India are already on course to double bilateral trade by 2015.  The new super priority visa will help make sure that we hit this target,” he added.

The service is optional and incurs an additional fee of 600 pounds besides the standard fee for the type of visa being applied for.

Applicants are required to complete an online form and submit their applications, by appointment, before 9.30 am.

If an application is successful, the visa will be ready for collection by 5.30 pm the same day in New Delhi or by 6.30 pm the same day in Mumbai.

It complements the UK’s existing Fast Track Service and the recently announced online payment option.

The new service is available to customers applying for a six-month or two-year multiple entry visit visa (excluding student visitors) who have previously travelled to the UK, US, Australia, New Zealand, Canada or a Schengen country within the last five years.

It is also available to visa applicants sponsored by companies who are members of the UK’s Business Express Programme.

“We are committed to making the UK an attractive place to visit and a destination for the brightest and best to work and do business. That’s why we’ve launched this new service, to provide our valued customers from India with the choices to fit their particular circumstances and needs,” immigration minister Mark Harper said.

“The UK and India have always had close commercial ties and I am determined to ensure that we continue to build stronger links in the future,” Harper said.

India is the UK’s biggest visa operation in the world, processing around 400,000 applications each year and the government claims that the vast majority of applications – over 97 per cent of UK business visit visas and 86 per cent of visit visas – are approved.

The latest service does not replace the process for expediting visas on compassionate grounds.

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bebe stores, inc. Names Narry Singh, Digital Technology Entrepreneur, to its Board of Directors

Posted on 14 May 2013 by admin Roha

BRISBANE, California.(GNS ) : bebe stores, inc. (NASDAQ: BEBE) today announced that Narry Singh has been named to the Company’s Board of Directors. Mr. Singh has been a widely respected entrepreneur, hands-on executive, advisor and deal-maker for over 20 years, with a focus on launching and growing businesses in the digital entertainment, new media, eCommerce and software sectors. Mr. Singh was recently selected by the United Nations Foundation as one of their Top 10 “Global Entrepreneurs” and will serve as their entrepreneurship and innovation ambassador for two years.

“We are delighted to welcome Narry Singh to the bebe Board of Directors. Throughout his distinguished career, Narry has combined visionary thinking with an ability to execute on strategy and build growing businesses. His expertise in digital commerce, in particular, will help to reinforce bebe’s position as an innovator in the digital space,” said bebe stores’ Chief Executive Officer, Steve Birkhold.

Mr. Singh commented, “I am extremely enthusiastic about joining the bebe Board. The Company is to be applauded for recognizing the massive untapped opportunity presented by mobile and digital technologies and business models. I am looking forward to helping advance bebe’s growth in these and other innovative areas.”

 

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Imran Khan fractures spine as Pakistan campaign halts

Imran Khan fractures spine as Pakistan campaign halts

Posted on 08 May 2013 by admin Roha

IMRAN INJURED

Lahore, (GNS) : Doctors said on Wednesday they expect Pakistani politician Imran Khan to make a full recovery despite fracturing his spine in a fall at a campaign rally just days before the general election.

The retired cricket star and head of the Pakistan Movement for Justice (PTI) suffered several fractured vertebrae and a broken rib on Tuesday night when he fell from a lift raising him onto a platform at a campaign rally.
Medical staff have ordered the 60-year-old to remain immobile in bed, throwing his high-octane campaign for office in Saturday’s election in doubt, although his party has sought to capitalise on the sympathy vote.
The man tipped to win the polls, former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, suspended campaigning on Wednesday in tribute to Khan.

His fall was the latest dramatic twist to an election campaign that has been overshadowed by a series of attacks on politicians and political parties which have killed 111 people since mid-April, according to an AFP tally.
The Pakistani Taliban have condemned the polls as un-Islamic and directly threatened the outgoing secular Pakistan People’s Party and its main coalition partners, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement and the Awami National Party.
On Wednesday a suicide bomber killed three people and wounded 23 outside a police station in the northwestern district of Bannu, police said.
Aides said Khan would still address a final election rally on Thursday, even if it has to be from hospital.
Television footage showed him flat on his back in hospital wearing a neck brace, and looking pale and groggy after his fall in the city of Lahore.
Doctors have advised at least two days’ rest but say he is in full control of his limbs and bodily functions and expected to make a full recovery.
A television statement filmed from his bed in which Khan urged people to vote for his party has been re-released as a “paid content” advertisement for PTI.
“Mr Khan has been advised bed rest for the next one or two days and after that doctors will review his condition and decide accordingly,” Doctor Faisal Sultan, the head of the private Shaukat Khanum hospital, told reporters.
“The exact duration of how long he will require bed rest or immobilisation will be decided as time goes on.”
A medical report listed a series of fractures to Khan’s spine, one in his neck, another in a rib and an injury to his scalp.
But Sultan stressed that Khan’s spinal canal was intact and “he is in total control of all limbs and body functions”.
Party official Shah Mehmood Qureshi said PTI’s campaign finale — a rally outside parliament in Islamabad — would go ahead as planned on Thursday evening.
“Wherever he is, in any condition, even from the ICU (intensive care unit), he will address the nation in the last moments of the campaign,” Qureshi said.
Saturday’s vote will be a democratic milestone in a country ruled for half its history by the military. It will be the first time a civilian government has served a full term and handed over to another through the ballot box.
It remains unclear whether a wave of sympathy for Khan will improve his poll prospects. Most commentators expect him to do well enough to become a strong opposition but not to form a government.
Khan, who has only ever won one seat, led an electrifying campaign until his fall, galvanising the middle class and young people in what he has called a “tsunami” of support that will propel him into office.
“Definitely in Pakistan people get very sympathetic when things like this happen. We expect to see a five to 10 percent increase in our support at least,” said Salman Malik, a PTI worker campaigning in the Punjab town of Narowal.
Haseeb Asif, 27, a writer speaking to AFP in the same town, said Khan’s fall had not swayed his own vote but predicted it might do so that others.
“The fact that Imran Khan had a primetime speech from his bedside, that’s very powerful,” he said. “I wasn’t voting for PTI before. I haven’t changed my mind but I can see how other people would.”
Sharif, a millionaire steel tycoon, won praise for suspending his campaign and joining other political leaders to convey his sympathies.

 

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Sharif poised to take over mess in Pakistan

Sharif poised to take over mess in Pakistan

Posted on 06 May 2013 by admin Roha

Photo Caption: Nawaz Sharif (2nd Left), leader of political party Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N), sits on stage with members of his party at an election campaign rally in Islamabad May 5, 2013.

 

LAHORE, Pakistan ( GNS ) :  After 14 years out of power, Nawaz Sharif is a man in a hurry.

As his motorcade speeds to another campaign rally ahead of a general election next week, the politician tipped to be Pakistan’s next prime minister is frank about what he will inherit – “a mess”.

“The challenges are huge,” the portly Sharif told Reuters in his bullet-proof car. “We have to bail out the conomy.”

With the nuclear-armed nation in crisis after decades of either military or socialist rule, it’s a job few might be able to handle. Sharif, who vows to bring in free market enterprise and ease economic controls, says speedy growth is the only answer.

According to opinion polls, his Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) is expected to win the May 11 general election after capitalizing on the failures of the outgoing Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), a left-leaning party.

The powerful military still calls the shots in Pakistan but it is the first time that an election is being held to decide on a transition between civilian governments. Nevertheless, the new prime minister will have to work with the generals, who control foreign policy and security.

The new civilian government will also have to play its part in Pakistan’s difficult relationship with the United States. Washington has a deep alliance with Pakistan, but is troubled by elements in the country supporting Islamic militants fighting U.S. troops in neighboring  Afghansitan. Osama bin Laden was found and killed in a Pakistani town in 2011.

In addition, the economy  is stuttering. Chronic power cuts have infuriated Pakistanis and crippled key industries. Corruption and poverty are rampant, and infrastructure is crumbling.

Sharif seems to have matured as a politician since he was toppled by former army chief and president Pervez Musharraf in a bloodless coup in 1999.

As the main opposition leader, he has avoided antagonizing Pakistan’s powerful generals, or bringing down the unpopular PPP-led coalition government when it was in trouble.

Instead, he waited patiently for an opportunity to rule and now that his moment has come, he is in a hurry to fix Pakistan. Sharif however acknowledges that if he wins, the honeymoon will be short.

NEED FOR REFORM

Pakistan needs billions of dollars from donors to avert a balance of payments crisis but the cash may not flow to the South Asian nation unless politically sensitive economic reforms are implemented.

So far, one politician after another has failed to muster the courage to bring change. Sharif’s background suggests he may have the stomach for it, based on his attempts in the past to reverse socialist policies and open up the economy.

“I think Nawaz Sharif will be very capable of making tough decisions,” said Zaffar Abbas, editor of Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper. “He has proven this before.”

Sharif, who was born into a family of wealthy industrialists in 1949, served as prime minister twice in the 1990s, when he tried to promote free market policies. His family is from Lahore, the capital of Punjab, Pakistan’s most prosperous and populous province.

Now he says he is willing to again risk a backlash, and cut government expenditure by 30 percent in order to secure international backing for the economy.

“You see privatization, free market economy, deregulation – have been hallmarks of our party in government,” Sharif told mediapersons. “We are going to pick up the threads from where we left off.”

Despite his reform credentials, Sharif may raise concerns in the West because of his conservative Islamic values: in 1991 he tried to make sharia the country’s supreme law.

More recently he has been accused of failing to act against militant groups which have a breeding ground in Punjab. He is one of the few major politicians not on the hit-list of Taliban insurgents who have vowed to disrupt the elections.

His two terms as prime minister in the 1990s were marred by allegations of graft and he ordered Pakistan’s first nuclear tests in 1998.

THE MILITARY CONNECTION

Nawaz was a protégé of military dictator General Zia ul-Haq in the 1980s.

But he became a victim of the powerful military when he was overthrown by Musharraf. He was then convicted of corruption and given a life sentence for hijacking, because he refused to allow an airliner carrying Musharraf to land in Pakistan.

Sharif went into exile in Saudi Arabia, but never lost hope of returning to politics one day.

“In private conversations, Nawaz still gets very emotional when he remembers that period,” said a senior journalist who has reported on Sharif for decades. “He has not forgotten being handcuffed and walking through the airport. His face still gets red in anger when he recalls those days.”

No surprise, then, that he now talks tough against the army meddling in civilian affairs – a risky stance in a country ruled by generals for more than half of its 66-year history, either through coups or from behind the scenes.

Sharif’s attempt to fire Musharraf as army chief ultimately cost him his job in 1999. If elected he will have to avoid any other errors in judgment, especially when it comes to Pakistan’s top army officers.

Musharraf attempted a political comeback of his own in March when he returned after nearly four years of self-imposed exile hoping to contest the election.

Instead, he has been barred from public office for life and is under house arrest at his luxury farmhouse as cases against him grind through the courts.

With his nemesis humiliated and out of the picture, politics has come full circle for Sharif. He has patiently plotted his own return to the top from his lavish, 700-acre estate near Lahore where peacocks strut on the lawns.

“I think we have a track record. We have contributed to the country in the past,” said Sharif. “Wherever I have been during this campaign, the response of the people has been very emotional and charged.”

 

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