Tuesday, March 13, 2012

court has ordered Prime Minister Yusaf Raza Gilani to reopen a corruption probe against Zardari.Gilani has refused, arguing that Zardari has immunity from prosecution so long as he remains president. If found guilty of contempt for ignoring the order, Gilani could be imprisoned for six months and lose his job.


which after a gap of 16 years has opened an investigation into allegations;  Pakistan’s powerful military establishment is under rare scrutiny from the country’s top court,
Pakistan’s powerful military establishment is under rare scrutiny from the country’s top court, which after a gap of 16 years has opened an investigation into allegations the army funnelled money to politicians to influence elections.
The case has showcased the emerging power of the Supreme Court, which is also hearing a contempt case against the prime minister that could see him imprisoned. The court’s activism has led to some uncomfortable headlines for politicians and pierced the perception of the generals’ invulnerability.
But it’s unclear who, if anyone, will be held accountable.
Indeed, some critics say by moving against the generals now, the court is just seeking to deflect criticism that it focuses solely on the alleged misdeeds of the elected civilian government and wants to dislodge President Ali Zardari, with the supposed nod from the military itself.
The court is also demanding answers from the army and spy agencies over the fate of hundreds of ‘missing’ Pakistanis: suspected militants or separatists picked up and held by military authorities for months and years in secret detentions.
Analysts say the developments are part of jostling between the army, the court and the government, with each wanting to stake a claim on its sphere of influence. There seems to be a balance among them so far, with no side willing or strong enough to strike a decisive blow against another. Speculation of a military coup or the imminent ousting of the government, frequently raised in the media just a few months ago, has receded.
The court is acting on a petition filed in 1996 by former Air Vice Marshal Asghar Khan, demanding it investigate what he claimed were payments to right-wing politicians made by the army-run Inter-Services Intelligence spy agency, known as the ISI. The money was to be used to ensure that the Pakistan People’s Party — currently in power — would not win the 1990 general elections.
Without explaining why, the court began hearing the case last month. Testimony this week has shone a light on longtime allegations that the ISI has tried to influence elections.
On Thursday, Yunus Habib, a 90-year-old banker from the state-owned Mehran Bank, testified that he doled out the equivalent of $1.5 million in bank funds to politicians and ISI officers on the orders of then army chief Gen. Aslam Beg and President Ghulam Ishaq Khan, who was considered close to the army.
Some of the politicians who allegedly took the funds remain powerful political players, including opposition leader and former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. He has denied taking any money.
On Friday, former ISI chief Lt. Gen. Asad Durrani testified that he was directed by Beg to distribute the money among politicians from the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad, a right-wing political alliance allegedly set up by the military establishment to counter the PPP. He said Beg told him the money had been collected from the business community in Karachi.
The alliance led by Sharif went on to win enough seats to form a coalition government.
What happens next is uncertain.
Khan’s lawyer Salman Raja said he wanted criminal cases brought against all those who distributed and received the money. That would roil the political scene and likely be opposed by the army. Moreover, the nature of the evidence against them is unclear.
Pakistan’s Information Minister Firdous Awan, a PPP member, urged the court to prosecute those involved.
‘The court has already unveiled the faces. It shall now punish them,’ she said Saturday. The party is enjoying seeing the army and Sharif on the defensive.
Retired justice Tariq Mahmood said the case was a ‘morale booster’ for the current government, but that it was unlikely anyone would be put on trial. ‘The government now has a chance to bring the intelligence agencies ... under its control,’ he said.
Political analyst Moeed Pirzada said the case put both the military and Nawaz Sharif on the defensive, which benefits the current PPP government, but would likely remain inconclusive. He said the court saw the case as ‘an opportunity to assert itself’ following criticism by some over its pursuit of President Asif Ali Zardari. Supreme Court justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudry has been accused of pursuing a vendetta against Zardari’s PPP government. Zardari opposed Chaudry’s reinstatement to the job in March 2009. The court has ordered Prime Minister Yusaf Raza Gilani to reopen a corruption probe against Zardari.Gilani has refused, arguing that Zardari has immunity from prosecution so long as he remains president. If found guilty of contempt for ignoring the order, Gilani could be imprisoned for six months and lose his job. SOURCE : Khaleej Times

Cases of children abandoned by parents have increased in UAE


Cases of children abandoned by parents have increased in UAE. Such children are cared for at hospitals and at the social welfare department. Police are searching for the parents of a baby girl who was found abandoned near a villa in Sharjah March 4. The 10-day old girl is recovering at Al Qasimi Hospital after she was found by a man who alerted the police on March 4. 
Naeemah Al Nakhi, head of the social services section at Al Qasimi Hospital said the infant, whose nationality is not known, was brought to the hospital with symptoms of cold and fever.She has recovered and is in perfect health now, the official said. “She was left in the open with not even a blanket to shield her from the elements. It could have led to her death, but she was saved in time,” said Al Nakhi.
Al Nakhi said the girl will spend two more days in the hospital and then be sent to the social welfare department. A file will be opened on her until her parents are found or she is handed to a new family for adoption. 
In January 2012, a 10-day-old baby boy was found abandoned in Al Dhaid. Two babies were found abandoned in Al Badea and Abu Shagara last December. 
Police are searching for the parents of a baby girl who was found abandoned near a villa in Sharjah on March 4. The 10-day old is recovering at Al Qasimi Hospital. 
Nobody’s Children  ??
From  Archives


18 January, 2012 - A ten-day-old baby boy was found abandoned last week on a street in Al Dhaid area, Sharjah Police said on Tuesday. This is the third incident in two months and police are searching for the parents. 
 Who are The Parents? 
Newborn found abandoned in Sharjah 
(2 June 2011, 10:23 PM; SHARJAH : A three-day-old girl was found abandoned on Wednesday by the Sharjah Police in a building under construction in Al Zubair.The baby was placed in a cardboard box and wrapped in a blanket. Clothes and a feeding bottle were kept beside the child, who was sick, tired and dehydrated, the police said) 
Mother of  a  abandoned  baby held
(26 May 2011, 10:24 PM : The mother of a baby boy found abandoned in a garbage pile near a mosque on the Al Kuwait Hospital Street here a month ago has been arrested, the police confirmed on Tuesday.)

Baby abandoned near mosque in RAK
( 26 April 2011, 12:04 AMAn infant was found abandoned near a mosque on the Al Kuwait Hospital Street in Ras Al Khaimah, police confirmed here on Monday. Residents called the police on Sunday evening after finding the baby boy near a mosque. ‘‘He was crying,’’ said Major Marwan Jikka Al Mansouri, head of the Public Relations and Moral Guidance Department at the RAK Police.)

Mystery of two abandoned babies solved
(4 August 2010, 10:56 PM Sharjah:  They were found on the same day: two babies, wrapped in blankets and placed in cardboard boxes outside of a Sharjah mosque.For a long time police were baffled by the case. But a five-month investigation that led to the arrest of the parents uncovered a final twist to their story.The two children were, in fact, unrelated.)

Newborn found left in a bag in Khor Kalba 
(28 June 2010, 6:25 AM Just a day after a month-old baby girl was found abandoned in Ajman, a newborn girl was found wrapped in a garment and placed in a bag near a house in Khor Kalba.Police said the baby was born only 12 hours before being found abandoned and was doing fine.The man living in the house heard the baby’s cry at dawn and peered out of the house. As he tracked the cry he was surprised to find the infant in the bag with her tiny head sticking out.) 

Another baby abandoned in Ajman 
( 27 June 2010, 06:00 AM : Another abandoned baby was found in Ajman on Saturday — the second such case reported from the emirate this year.The nationality of the child has not been revealed yet. Police are looking for the parents of the month-old infant girl, who was found crying at the entrance of a mosque.)

Unwanted babies, wanted mothers 
( 27 June 2010, 6:26 AM They are no one’s babies. Abandoned and left to survive on others goodwill. Six such cases were reported this year alone. )

Twice Abandoned, Alone Again 
( 27 June 2010, 6:25 AM DUBAI - Sad but true. A 20-year-old woman, abandoned by her biological parents as an infant, has been abandoned again. Now her adoptive family does not want her as it has fallen on bad times. Moreover, some members have set up homes of their own.) 

18 December, 2011 - The Sharjah Police are searching for the parents of a newborn baby boy, who was found abandoned near an under-construction building in Al Badea area in Sharjah.

12 December, 2011: - A newborn baby, found abandoned in the Abu Shaghara area of Sharjah last month, was handed over to the Sharjah Department of Social Services by Al Qasimi Hospital.

25 November 2011: A new-born baby of a few days was found abandoned by the Sharjah Police in the Abu Shagarah area.

30 October 2011: Mother of a newborn baby boy was arrested by the Ras Al Khaimah Police after the body of the baby was found abandoned in a garbage bag in the trash container.

2 June 2011: A three-day-old girl was found abandoned by the Sharjah Police in a building under construction in Al Zubair.

26 April 2011: An infant was found abandoned near a mosque on the Al Kuwait Hospital Street in Ras Al Khaimah. 

28 June 2010: Just a day after a month-old baby girl was found abandoned in Ajman, a newborn girl was found wrapped in a garment and placed in a bag near a house in Khor Kalba.

27 June 2010: A month-old infant girl was found at the entrance of a mosque in Ajman.

March 2, 2010: Two well-dressed baby boys, wrapped in blankets and placed in cardboard boxes, found at the entrance of a mosque in Sharjah 

Feb 14, 2010: Seven-day-old girl found abandoned at the door of a mosque in Jazeera Al Hamra area of Ras Al Khaimah

Feb16, 2010: Newborn girl abandoned by parents found at a mosque in Dubai’s Naif area

Feb 7, 2010: Three-month-old girl found abandoned at the Ajman Corniche

Feb 1, 2010: Boy abandoned in Al Sahabah Mosque, Sharjah

Criteria Of Adoption  in UAE 

1)  The Children’s Welfare Committee scrutinises applications for adoption and select prospective ‘parents’ based on their social and economic status.
2) The age of the wife should not be less than 25 and not more than 45 .The family should undertake that they will provide care to the children and the court should issue them a no-objection certificate (NOC).

3)Only permanent UAE residents can adopt abandoned children.

The Ministry of Social Affairs said in some cases, the ministry has the right to give the child to unmarried, divorced or widowed women whose age is not less than 30, or more than 50.

The foster family has the right to give the first name, while the judge will give the father’s, family and tribe name.
The documents issued to the child should not show that he or she is an illegitimate child. 
Once adopted, the children will bear the name of the adopting father in all records. 
After a child is handed over to a family, social services staff will visit the child frequently. These visits can drop to once a year until the child has turned six.
During the follow up, if a problem is noticed in the care of the child, the adoption is cancelled, but if the child is in good hands, the family is allowed to renew the adoption contract.


Legally speaking...
According to UAE law, an abandoned child can gain citizenship based on Article 17 of 1972
This was amended in1975 which says the abandoned child would be a UAE national
A draft of 2009 law is in the process and will be submitted to the cabinet
The draft law calls to establish shelters for kids and lays down conditions for alternative families and obligations of federal and local departments concerned
Foster families should inform the children of their adopted status only after permission from the social affairs department.
An Indian Neel, holding UAE residence visa EXPRESSED wish to adopt the girl.  Source: Khaleej Times