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ISLAMABAD: A
seven-member bench of Supreme Court of Pakistan on Thursday convicted
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in contempt of court proceedings
against him for refusing to comply with an order to write a letter to
the authorities in Switzerland asking them to re-open corruption cases
against President Asif Ali Zardari. The ruling said
that Gilani was guilty of contempt, but would serve a sentence only
"until the rising of the court," or by the time the judges left the
chamber. That happened about three minutes after the verdict was handed
down. "For reasons to be recorded later Prime Minister and
chief executive Yousuf Raza Gilani is found guilty and convicted for
contempt of court," Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk, the head of the seven-judge
Supreme Court bench, said. Counsel for Premier Aitzaz
Ahsan said he would appeal the verdict, further delaying any action that
could see Gilani lose his job. According to the order
issued by the Supreme Court, Prime Minister Gilani was found guilty and
convicted for contempt of court under Article 204(2) of the constitution
read with section 3 of the Contempt of Court Ordinance for willful
flouting, disregard and disobedience of this Court’s direction. The
court’s order further stated that as regards the sentence to be passed
against the convict we note that the findings and the conviction for
contempt of court recorded above are likely to entail some serious
consequences in terms of Article 63(1)(G) of the constitution which may
be treated as mitigating factors towards the sentence passed against
him. He is, therefore punished under section 5 of the Contempt of Court
Ordinance with imprisonment till the rising of the Court today. Prime
Minister Gilani stood before the SC to hear the verdict in contempt
case for not implementing the apex court’s ruling on the National
Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) and smiled when the verdict was read out
in a packed court house. Under Pakistan's constitution
anyone convicted of defaming or ridiculing the judiciary is barred from
being an MP, but legal experts say the process to disqualify Gilani
could be a lengthy one, involving the parliamentary speaker and the
Election Commission. Gilani is the longest-serving prime
minister in the history of Pakistan, where civilian governments have
repeatedly been toppled by the country’s powerful military, often with
the support of the Supreme Court, which critics allege is heavily
politicized. Corruption charges have routinely been used to target those
in power, or seeking to return. It is pertinent to note
here that the court issued contempt notice to the premier in February
for refusing to write to the Swiss authorities to re-open graft cases
against President Asif Ali Zardari The prime minister has appeared twice
before in court and has maintained his innocence throughout, saying he
had done nothing against the rules of business. Aitzaz, meanwhile, had
argued that the bench was not eligible to hear the case as it had taken
the notice itself. It should be mentioned here that it was
the first time in the history of Pakistan that a prime minister
appeared before the court and was convicted of contempt.

Islam will succeed Lt. General Shuja Pasha whose tenure expires on March 18.
The appointment of Lt. General Zaheerul Islam puts to rest rumours regarding whether Pasha's tenure would be extended.
According to sources DG Rangers Sindh Lt. General Ijaz Chaudhry will succeed Zaheerul Islam as Corps Commander Karachi.
Major General Rizwan Akhter will assume charge as DG Rangers Sindh.
He
has earlier served as the deputy director general of the ISI as a major
general. He was then promoted to the rank of lieutenant general and
moved to Karachi.
Lieutenant General Zaheerul Islam is the 18th
Director General of the ISI since 1959, the year when this premier spy
agency was first headed by Brigadier Riaz Hussain.
Interestingly,
only one ISI boss--- Lt Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani-has gone on to become
the Chief of the Army Staff during the last 53 years.
The 17 Pakistan Army officials, who have till date headed the ISI, are:
Brig
Riaz Hussain (1959 to 1966), Major General (then Brig) Mohammad Akbar
Khan (1966 to 1971), Lt General (then Major Gen) Ghulam Jilani Khan
(1971 to 1978), Lt General Muhammad Riaz (1978 to 1980), Lt General
Akhtar Abdur Rahman (1980 to 1987), Lt General Hamid Gul (1987 to 1989),
Lt General (retd) Shamsur Rahman Kallu (1989 to 1990), Lt General Asad
Durrani (1990 to 1992), Lt General Javed Nasir (1992 to May 1993), Lt
General Javed Ashraf Qazi (1993 to 1995), Lt General (then Maj Gen)
Nasim Rana (1995 to 1998), Lt General Ziauddin Butt (1998 to 1999), Lt
General Mahmud Ahmed (October 1999 to 2001), Lt General Ehsan ul Haq
(2001 to 2004), Lt General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani (October 2004 to October
2007), Lt General Nadeem Taj (2007 to 2008 and Lt. General Ahmed Shuja
Pasha (since September 2008).
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Mir was born on July 23,1966 in Lahore, Punjab. He educated there and completed his Matric examination from University Laboratory School New Campus and Government Central Model School. He earned his intermediate degree from Government Science College and his Bachelor of Arts (B.A) degree from Government College. He earned his Master of Arts (M.A) in mass communications from the University of Punjab in 1989. He played cricket but left the sport after the sudden death of his father.
Mir belongs to a literary and journalistic family. His grandfather Mir Abdul Aziz was a famous poet in Urdu, Persian, and Punjabi in Sialkot who actively participated in the movement for the creation of Pakistan under the leadership of Muhammad Ali Jinnah.[citation needed] Mir's father, the late Professor Waris Mir, was a columnist for Daily Jang and a critic of military dictator General Ziaul Haq, for which he was removed from the chairmanship of the Mass Communication Department of the University in the 1980s. Professor Waris Mir died on July 9, 1987 under mysterious circumstances at the age of 48; it has been alleged that he was poisoned by the then military regime. It was claimed the cause was a heart attack, contradicted by reports of frothing in his mouth. Mir entered the field of journalism immediately after the death of his father at a very young age.
Two brothers of Mir are also journalists. Amir Mir works for The News International[citation needed] and Imran Mir works for Pakistan Television. A third brother, Adil Mir, is an industrialist. Hamid Mir's wife worked with Pakistan television and for a private television channel for many years. Hamid Mir has two children, Arafat Mir and Ayesha Mir. His children and wife were forced to spend at least three months outside Pakistan from May 2007 to July 2007 for security reasons.Mir joined the Daily Jang (Lahore) in 1987 and worked there as sub-editor, reporter, feature writer and edition in charge. In 1994, he broke the submarines purchase scandal in Daily Jang. Some close friends of Asif Zardari (husband of then Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto) were involved in that scandal, along with some Navy officials. Mir lost his job the day his article was published.
In 1996, Mir became the editor of the Daily Pakistan in Islamabad, making him the youngest editor of any national Urdu newspaper in the history of Pakistani journalism. He lost his job again in 1997, when he wrote an article in the Daily Pakistan about the alleged corruption of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Also on December 25, 1997, he launched Daily Ausaf (Islamabad) as founding editor.
Mir spent ten days in eastern Afghanistan, where he investigated the escape of Osama bin Ladin from Tora Bora mountains in December 2001. Mir visited the caves of bin Ladin, where he spent time during the US bombing. Mir also disclosed that it was US-backed Northern Alliance leader Hazrat Ali who provided safe passage to bin Ladin after getting a huge bribe.
In 2002, Mir joined GEO TV as the Northern Region editor. Since November 2002, he has hosted GEO TV's Capital Talk, a political talk show in which top Pakistani politicians from the government and opposition have appeared. He is currently writing a biography of Osama bin Ladin, as well as a weekly column in Daily Jang.
Other international figures interviewed by him include Condoleezza Rice, Tony Blair and L K Advani. Mir was arrested by Hezbullah in Beirut during Israel-Lebanon war in July 2006 while trying to cover the scenes of Israeli jets bombing on Beirut, but was later set free after Hezbullah was assured that he was not an Israeli spy.
On March 16, 2007, during live coverage of the lawyers' protest against the suspension of the then Chief Justice of Supreme Court Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, Mir was attacked by police at his Islamabad office. Later the then President, Pervez Musharraf apologized to Mir in his live TV show Capital Talk within few hours of the attack. Mir was banned by General Pervez Musharraf in November 2007 for four months on Geo News network. Mir came on roads after the ban and organized street shows. He became an international figure after staging shows on the roads, gathering huge crowds. The Washington Post published a front-page article on his show on the roads. He was again banned by the government of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) in June 2008 for a few days on Geo News. His investigative documentary on the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto aired on Geo TV on December 23, 2008, and created considerable controversy in Pakistan.
Mir became a voice of peace and objective journalism during the India-Pakistan tension created after the Mumbai attacks in November 2008. Der Spiegel declared him the most popular journalist in Pakistan.
Mir has participated in many international seminars and conferences on terrorism. He appears regularly on CNN, BBC and many Indian channels as a security analyst. Mir claimed in an interview with independent online news source CanadianFreePress.com—that Al-Qaeda had acquired three so called 'suitcase nukes' from Russia, and had successfully smuggled them to Europe. Mir alleges these weapons have been in the possession of Al-Qaeda since long before the 9/11 terror attacks in New York and Washington, D.C., and that they were originally intended to be targeted against London, Paris and Los Angeles.
Mir also claims that Al-Qaeda has 23 sleeper agents inside the United States (minus the 19 who died carrying out the 9/11 attacks) and that these terrorists already have enough radioactive material for six 'dirty bombs'.
In May 2010 an audio tape of a conversation between Mir and the 2nd in command of Hakimullah Mehsud surfaced. In the tape they discussed then-kidnapped Khalid Khawaja with Mir urging that he be further interrogated by his Taliban-linked captors. Khawaja was later killed by his captors. Rashed Rahman, editor of the English-language Daily Times newspaper said "If this tape turns out to be genuine, it suggests a journalist instigated the murder of a kidnapee. A line must be drawn somewhere.". Mir has denied the authenticity of the tape "I never said these things to these people. This is a concocted tape,They took my voice, sampled it and manufactured this conspiracy against me."
During his career he has come into conflict with the authorities and been banned or limited from reporting on several occasions:
In 2009, Mir compared the Hamas and the Taliban. According to Mir, "Hamas probably have more suicide bombers than Taliban, but they are different from each other". In an article titled "Hamas builds while Taliban bomb schools", Mir wrote that both Hamas and Taliban were born in refugee camps, and both were initially encouraged by the west. Mir pointed out that some of the Hamas leaders were educated in Pakistani universities, and that many of them were part of the Afghan Jihad against former Soviet Union, and close to Dr. Abdullah Azzam who was also a mentor of Osama bin Ladin in early 80's.[30]
At the same time, Mir states that the Hamas leaders don't want to mix their identity with Taliban or al-Qaeda, and "oppose all those who are bombing girl schools". Mir states that unlike the Taliban, Hamas never attacked girl's schools even once in last 22 years of its creation. The biggest difference between Taliban and Hamas, according to Mir, is that Hamas believe in democracy, while Taliban have no faith in democracy.
Mir has been repeatedly accused of being pro-Taliban, while some known pro-Taliban personalities accuse him of being a CIA agent.
According to some analysts, Mir always propagated the agenda of Western forces. Zaid Hamid, founder of Brass Tacks, called him a CIA agent on an ABN Chicago Radio talk show.
Mir has publicly stated that certain people in Pakistan have claimed
that he is an Indian Agent. He commented about the response of people on
one of his programs in which he invited a peace activist Dr.Pervez
Hoodhbhoy: “There was an outcry next day in sections of Pakistan’s Urdu
press that two Indian agents were sitting on Geo TV,”
Former FBI official, Paul Williams, accused Mir of being dishonest: "He has back-pedaled on statements before. This guy is capable of mendacity" Williams is currently being sued by McMaster University for upwards of $2-Million, as a result of his claims that Islamic terrorists managed to steal 180 lbs of unspecified nuclear material from the McMaster Nuclear Reactor. The University has extracted an apology from the publisher of Dunces of Doomsday, WND Books/Cumberland House Publishing, who now say that statements made in Williams' book about the theft are "without basis in fact."
Some people say that he is too hard on the US. Recently he treated Pakistani Information Minister very roughly in his show on the US drone attacks.
He visited United States in April 2009 to deliver special lectures
and talks in universities and think tanks. During this visit, he
criticized the US policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan. He proposed some
long- and short-term solutions for combating terrorism in Asia Society,
New York.