KHI 23-12-2011_Layout 1 12/23/2011 1:56 AM Page 1
Pakistan is safe on economic front, says Dr Sheikh
A third of South Asians made to pay bribes: survey
Rulers raising hue and cry to blackmail Supreme Court: Imran
PROFIT | PAGE 01
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pakistantoday.com.pk
rs15.00 vol ii no 176 22 pages Karachi edition
Friday, 23 december, 2011 muharram-ul-haram 27, 1433
‘i’M the boss’
MohMand killings
There can be no state within a state: PM g
g
ISLAMABAD
T
MIAN ABRAR
HE differences between the army and the government appeared to have reached a point of confrontation and alarm bells started ringing in the corridors of power as the normally soft-spoken and reconciliatory-in-approach Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani finally lost control over his patience on Thursday and hit out hard at the military establishment while asserting his authority as the chief executive of the
Gilani asserts his position as country’s top authority, tells military and ISI to fall in line Says conspiracies being hatched to send democratically elected govt packing
country, with a message to all that no one should be mistaken that state institutions were answerable to him. He started his day addressing as chief guest an exhibition of rare photographs of the Pakistan movement to mark the birth anniversary of Quaide-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah and instead of speaking on the subject, he made a fully-loaded extempore political speech to build his case as the head of a political government against Continued on page 23
‘n’, anp against undemoCratiC move | page 03
US enquiry does not satisfy military ISLAMABAD SHAIQ HUSSAIN
ISLAMABAD: Former ambassador to US Husain Haqqani is escorted out of the Supreme Court by security personnel after a meeting with his lawyer Asma Jehangir on Thursday. afp
If president wants immunity he has to claim it: SC ISLAMABAD MASOOD REHMAN
On the question of constitutional immunity to President Asif Ali Zardari, the Supreme Court made it clear on Thursday that immunity to anyone did not apply automatically as it ruled in clear terms that in order to benefit from this constitutional provision, the court had to be asked for it. “In a case wherein a high personality is involved, but claims to have constitutional immunity for submitting replies to the court, there is a legal principle which says that the court has to be asked for it,” Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry told Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq during the hearing of the memo case. A nine-
member larger bench headed by Chaudhry is hearing the petitions. The chief justice had previously hinted on many occasions that immunity to the president under Article 248 of the constitution was still an undecided issue and anyone seeking it would have to come to the Supreme Court for a judgement. As the court continued proceedings into the memo case, a hapless Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq told the bench that despite repeated attempts, he could not Continued on page 23
memogate: who says what | page 04 army wants zardari out but no Coup | page 24
Pakistan Army rejected on Thursday the findings of a US enquiry into the NATO air strikes against two border outposts in Momhand Agency in which 24 Pakistani soldiers were killed. In a late night response to the US military enquiry’s findings, which were announced earlier in the day by the US Defence Department, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said: “Pakistan Army does not agree with the findings of the US/NATO enquiry as being reported in the media.” “The enquiry report is short on facts. Detailed response will be given as and when the formal report is received,” it said in a brief statement. Earlier, the army had refrained from formally reacting to investigation’s findings. The US enquiry report states that both sides were to blame after a chain of misunderstandings led to a tragic result. Continued on page 23