Who Kidnapped Najam Sethi???

desan

President (40k+ posts)
Here is the excerpt from the article. Please click on the link below to follow the whole story...

Mr. Sethi: My case was quite bizarre. An armed posse of the Punjab Police and the IB [Intelligence Bureau] smashed its way into my bedroom at 2:30 am on May 8th, 1999, beat up my wife and me, gagged me, blindfolded me, handcuffed me and dragged me away. I was in their custody for many hours. Then I was handed over to the ISI. The ISI kept me in a safe house first in Lahore and then in Islamabad . It investigated everything, found that the treason charges against me were trumped up politically by the Prime Minister (PM) and then confidentially told me that it was under pressure from the PM to court martial me. But it said that Gen Mush [sic] was against the idea of any military involvement in my case and was telling the PM that the civilians should handle it.

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In due course, the ISI actually protected me from the IB which wanted to take me away for a few days and "fix" me at the behest of the PM and Saif ur-Rehman. The ISI general in charge of my case was Major General Ghulam Ahmad (deceased now) who came to see me in the ISI safe house three times and initally told me that he was giving me a clean chit of health because he would not be party to any wrongdoing. It was the ISI's clean chit of health that persuaded the Supreme Court (SC) to put pressure on the civilian government to release me. But within a day of releasing me, the government lodged a case of treason in a civil court against me and tried to arrest me again; but Justice Mamoon Qazi of the SC stepped in and judged that I could not be arrested in any case without the government's first showing the evidence against me to the SC. When I was released, I told the BBC in an interview that the ISI was largely responsible for my well-being.

Incidentally, the so-called "anti-Pakistan" speech that I was supposed to have made in India, which was the basis of the charge against me, was the same speech that I had made at the National Defence College in Islamabad earlier on the basis of which I had duly received a formal letter from the NDC commending me for having obtained the "highest marks ever" from the NDC for a presentation before the college.

The real reason why I was arrested by Nawaz Sharif had to do with a BBC documentary in which I had taken part, exposing the corruption of the PM. I was interviewed by the BBC in Pakistan two days before I left for India . The IB found out and informed the PM. Saif ur-Rehman called me and asked what I had told the BBC. I told him: "everything." "Negative or positive?" he asked. "Is there anything positive in your regime?" I replied. "We will get you," he warned.

That was that. They used the India thing to try and silence and discredit me so that my BBC testimony would be rejected by the people. Then they took the BBC to court in London for potential libel and threatened to close down its operations in Pakistan if the film was shown to Pakistani audiences. Then a “settlement” took place between the two parties--the BBC film was subsequently shown in the UK but never in South Asia . Before showing the film in the UK, the BBC asked me whether I wanted to censor or edit my statements against the PM in the film in view of what had happened. I said “no.” Everything I said was on the record and should be shown.

When Saif ur-Rehman was arrested in 1999 after the coup, he got his wife to phone me and ask for my "forgiveness." Later, Shahbaz Sharif called from exile and claimed he had never been a party to my ordeal and apologised on behalf of the Sharif family. Nawaz Sharif's son Hussain met me in London two years [later] and also apologised. Other members of that government have also apologised. But Nawaz is still silent.

Nonetheless, I remain committed to the view that military rule is not good for the country and that Gen Mush [sic] must compromise with the mainstream PPP and PMLN despite the many faults of their leaders. And I remain opposed to the continuing political role of the ISI in the internal and external affairs of Pakistan . In short, I propose a truth and reconciliation process in the national interest. This is the truth.


http://hnn.us/article/3968
 
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desan

President (40k+ posts)
What "patriots" have to say as to why ISI was protecting this agent????

In due course, the ISI actually protected me from the IB which wanted to take me away for a few days and "fix" me at the behest of the PM and Saif ur-Rehman.
 

desan

President (40k+ posts)
Biography

Najam Sethi, an award-winning Pakistani journalist, is the editor-in-chief of The Friday Times, a Lahore-based political weekly, and the Anchor/Analyst of Geo News’ political program: “Aapas ki Baat”. He is the only journalist in S Asia to receive three international press freedom awards in a decade, as well as the Hilal i Pakistan, the country’s highest civil award. He is married to Jugnu Mohsin, Publisher and Managing Editor of The Friday Times, and Good Times. They have two children – Ali Sethi and Mira Sethi. Ali graduated from Harvard University in 2007 and his novel titled “The Wish Maker” has been published in English, Dutch, German, Italian, Turkish etc. Mira graduated with honours from Wellesley College in the USA, worked as Asst Books Editor at The Wall Street Journal in New York, USA for two years and is now based in Pakistan as a journalist/tv actor.

Najam Sethi, 65, graduated from Government College, Lahore, Pakistan, in 1967. He was awarded the Presidents Gold Medal for standing first among 50,000 students of Punjab University.

He took an MA degree in Economics and Politics from Cambridge University, UK, in 1970 and was awarded the Davies Prize for Economics by Clare College. He was a PhD research student at Clare College from 1971 to 1972.

Najam Sethi abandoned his PhD work to join the struggle of the Baloch and Pashtun for their constitutional provincial rights. He was arrested and detained as a political prisoner by the Zulfikar Ali Bhutto regime from 1975 to 1977 for protesting military action in Baluchistan province following the illegal dismissal of the elected governments in Balochistan. Amnesty International included him among its list of political prisoners in Pakistan at that time. He was discharged in 1978 when all political prisoners were freed.

In 1978 he established Vanguard Books, an independent publishing house which has published over 400 titles since then in history, politics and economics.

In 1984 he was imprisoned by the military government of General Zia ul Haq for one month (“preventive detention”) without formally being charged for any crime. But the real reason was Gen Zia’s aversion to a book published by Vanguard Books. It was titled “From Jinnah To Zia” and authored by the former chief justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan, Justice Mohammad Munir. The book was a sort of mea culpa in which the author had admitted his grave error in legitimizing the first martial law in Pakistan in 1958, thereby paving the way for Gen Zia’s martial law in 1977. It was very critical of Gen Zia. Trumped-up charges of “piracy” of books were leveled in the media to undermine his credibility and hide the real reason for Gen Zia’s anger but no such formal charges were brought to bear.

In 1989, along with his wife Jugnu Mohsin, he launched The Friday Times (TFT), an independent national weekly paper which espouses internationalism, human rights, regional peace and democracy. Newsweek Magazine described him in the 1990s as a “crusading editor” for exposing corruption in government. He has unfailingly written the editorials of the paper every week since 1989.

In 1999 he was imprisoned by the government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on trumped up charges of treason. The real reason was relentless exposure in The Friday Times of corruption in the Sharif family. The supreme court of Pakistan rejected the trumped up charges of “treason” and freed him after one month. While in detention he suffered a heart attack, which necessitated heart surgery in 2000.

After he was freed by the SC, the Nawaz Sharif government started to harass him by slapping over 50 trumped-up income tax fraud cases. It also accused him of being a “non-Muslim” and tried to deprive him of his voting rights before the ECP. But all the cases against him were rejected by the tax tribunals and high court of the country and all his rights were restored by the Chief Election Commissioner.

In 1999, he was awarded the JOURNALISM UNDER THREAT AWARD by Amnesty International, UK, and the INTERNATIONAL PRESS FREEDOM AWARD by the Committee to Protect Journalists, New York.

In 2002 he launched Daily Times, an independent national daily newspaper published from Lahore and Karachi and Islamabad. Like The Friday Times, this daily paper was an outspoken liberal humanist internationalist voice in the country. Its editorials constantly argued for peace with India, supported the war against Taliban-Al-Qaeda terror and opposed religious fundamentalism and extremism.

In August 2008, he launched AajKal, a national Urdu daily paper from Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad. Within a year, the paper became the most outspoken voice of rational discourse, internationalism and liberalism in the Urdu print media of Pakistan.

In 2007 he set up Beyond Borders, a public interest production company for South Asia television channels. The mission statement of this project is to promote South Asian cultures, build confidence and trust and sustain democracy, civil society and human rights in the region. The company has produced 13 short films on the partition of the subcontinent in 1947 based on the short stories of the grand literary masters of India and Pakistan. It also produced a serial titled ROOTS, which is a compilation of interviews of famous Indians and Pakistanis who crossed over to the “other” country at the time of partition and have inspiring stories to tell of the warmth, love, humanity and affection of the “other” community. The aim of these projects is to build trust between Indians and Pakistanis, Hindus and Muslims, and promote the cause of peace in the region.

In 2007-8, he received open death threats from the Taliban-Al Qaeda and the Taliban’s mouthpiece in Waziristan did a cover story in which it identified Najam Sethi as an “enemy of Islam”. Radical Islamists demonstrated against his papers in Islamabad and openly called for his elimination.

He was awarded the Golden Pen Press Freedom Award from the World Association of Newspapers in 2009 for courage in upholding human rights and press freedom.

Najam Sethi has received written and telephonic death threats from Al Qaeda and the Taliban Movement of Pakistan. He has accordingly been provided 24 hour armed security by the government of Pakistan. He has disregarded the advice of the authorities to leave the country and continues to edit his papers independently as well as continues to anchor a popular TV show on Geo TV.

In March 2013, he was nominated by the PPP and endorsed by the PMLN as the neutral consensus Chief Minister of Punjab to oversee the general elections. Later, the PMLN nominated him as the Chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board. His talk-show Aapas ki Baat on Geo TV continues to enjoy high ratings.



Najam Sethi: A Resume

He is the Editor-in-Chief of The Friday Times, and the former Founding Editor-in-Chief of Daily Times and Daily Aajkal and former Editor-in-Chief of Dunya TV.

He has been the Pakistan Correspondent of The Economist, London, from 1990 to 2008, and of The Economist Intelligence Unit from 1999-2005.

He is Chairman of the Pakistan Publishers and Booksellers Association, the country’s apex body of printers and publishers.

He is the Secretary General of the Pakistan International Book Fair Trust which organizes an international book fair annually in Lahore.

He is the Chairman of the Afro-Asian Book Council, the apex literary institution headquartered in New Delhi, India, for the promotion of the literature of the two continents.

He has served as senior Vice President of the Council of Pakistan Newspaper Editors, the apex body of national editors, and is on the standing committee of the All Pakistan Newspapers Society, the apex body of national newspaper publishers.

He was a Minister for Political Affairs & Accountability in the Federal Government of Pakistan (interim) in 1996-97.

In 2008 he was unanimously elected Secretary-General of the South Asia Media Commission to defend media rights, a post he vacated in 2011.

He is the Vice Chairman, South Asia Foundation, Pakistan.

He was on the Board of Directors of the International Copyright Protection Board of Pakistan from 2000-2008.

He is a regular commentator for various international radio and TV channels including BBC TV and Radio, Radio Deutchewelle, Zee TV, Star TV, VOA Radio, PBC, NDTV, CNN-IBN TV, ABC TV, Radio Australia, Radio Iran, NPR, ARY TV, GEO, etc.

He has made a documentary for BBC titled: “The inside story of the coup in 1999”. He was the “correspondent” in it.

He has lectured at the National Institute of Public Administration in Lahore, the National Defense College, Rawalpindi, the National Institute of Public Affairs, Lahore, Lahore School of Management Sciences (LUMS) and the Civil Services Academy, Lahore. All these national institutes are engaged in the task of educating the managers and bureaucrats of Pakistan into issues of governance and accountability.

He has given inaugural lectures at the Eqbal Ahmad Foundation in Islamabad and the Asian College for Journalism in Chennai, India.

He has written for the Op Ed pages of The Wall Street Journal (USA), The International Herald Tribune, The Independent (UK), The Indian Express (India), The Telegraph (India), and his signed articles and editorials have been translated and published by international papers and magazines in Italy, Germany and France.

He is a frequent speaker at international conferences in London, Paris, Geneva, New York, Washington DC, Chicago, Germany, India, Italy, Thailand, on matters related to Press Freedom, Corruption, Nuclear Proliferation, CBMs and National Security Policy in South Asia.

He is an International Trustee of the ASIA SOCIETY in New York and of The Leaders Project, Washington DC, established by former US Defense Secretary Bill Cohen.

In 2011, his alma mater, Clare College, Cambridge University, UK, nominated him as Alumni of 2011 and conferred the Eric Lane Fellowship on him.

He continues to receive death threats from militant Islamic groups who are violently opposed to the liberal values and views that he espouses in his interviews, editorials and articles which are regularly published in English and Urdu papers.

His editorials in The Friday Times since 2001 can be accessed at www.thefridaytimes.com (username guest and password is abc234).

The editorials of Daily Times were either written by Najam Sethi or based on his exclusive briefings to his editorial writers and daily edited and subbed by him personally from April 2002 to October 2009. These are available at www.dailytimes.com.pk in the archives section.

Links to Najam Sethi’s last few opeds in the Wall Street Journal are given below:

Najam Sethi: The Road to Kabul Runs Through Islamabad – WSJ.com

30 Jun 2010 … In The Wall Street Journal, Pakistani journalist Najan Sethi writes that Pakistani leaders are desperate to broker a deal with Karzai and …
online.wsj.com/…/SB10001424052748704103904575336551084011556.html – Cached

Najam Sethi: Now India and Pakistan Can Get Down to Business – WSJ.com7 Mar 2010 … Najam Sethi, editor of Pakistan’s Friday Times, …online.wsj.com/…/SB10001424052748703936804575106940181288162…


Musharraf’s second coup by Najam Sethi (WSJ, November 6, 2007)

http://www.ppp.org.pk/party/issues/p_articles116.html

Musharraf in the middle by Najam Sethi (WSJ, Oct 11. 2007)

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119205245189655118.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Pakistan in the balance by Najam Sethi (WSJ, June 16, 2007)

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\06\18\story_18-6-2007_pg3_2

Precariously perched by Najam Sethi (WSJ, April 15, 2007)

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\11\07\story_7-11-2007_pg3_2

There are over a dozen articles in the WSJ from 2001-2002 starting with the following:

Pakistan’s folly in Afghanistan by Najam Sethi (WSJ, Oct, 12, 2001)

http://www.saja.org/sethioped.html

http://www.najamsethi.com/about/
 

khan afghan1

Minister (2k+ posts)
You forgot to mention here that he was fighting along side BLA not for the rights of
Baloch and Pashtoons but he was against the PPP govt and Zulfiqar ALi Bhutto as the later
declared QADIANIS a non Muslims and that cause brought NAJAM SETHI to fight and
take revenge from Pakistan and Bhutto as NAJAM SETHI himself is QADIANI and fighting
for the cause of his religion.They want to destroy Pakistan as Pakistan is the only country
who declared QADYANI a non muslim.
.
 

desan

President (40k+ posts)
In 2002 he launched Daily Times, an independent national daily newspaper published from Lahore and Karachi and Islamabad. Like The Friday Times, this daily paper was an outspoken liberal humanist internationalist voice in the country. Its editorials constantly argued for peace with India, supported the war against Taliban-Al-Qaeda terror and opposed religious fundamentalism and extremism.

Becomes crystal clear who is running Nawaz's current policy!!!!
 

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