USERNAME 
PASSWORD 
Subscriber? · Lost password?
Lost username? · More help

Pakistan

29-30
26-27
26-28
57-65
20-22
97-102
6-7
7
56-68
78-81
74-78
51-57
44-55
541-551
319
Dec 2006Chances that a Guantánamo detainee was turned over to Coalition forces by an Afghan or Pakistani citizen: 9 in 10



Average reward that leaflets airdropped over their countries promised for every “terrorist” turned in: $5,000
Source:

Mark Denbeaux, Seton Hall University Law School (Newark, N.J.)

Jun 2004Estimated percentage of women in Pakistani prisons whose crime was fornication : 80
Source:

National Commission on the Status of Women (Islamabad, Pakistan)

Apr 2004Number of countries whose technologies are suspected of having contributed to Pakistan's nuclear program : 6
Source:

Guarav Kampani, Center for Nonproliferation Studies (Monterey, Calif.)

Apr 2004Number of countries that have received Pakistani nuclear technology : 4
Source:

Guarav Kampani, Center for Nonproliferation Studies (Monterey, Calif.)

Apr 2003Chance that a delegate to Pakistan's National Assembly is a member of an Islamist party: 1 in 6
Source:

Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan (Washington)

Oct 2002Percentage of seats in Pakistan's parliamentary elections this month that will be reserved for women: 19
Source:

Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan (Washington)

Apr 2001Minimum number of stuffed lions that Pakistan's recently ousted prime minister took with him into exile last year: 2
Source:

Embassy of Pakistan (Washington)

Oct 1999Weeks after Pakistan vowed last July to rid a disputed territory of Pakistani rebels that India downed one of its planes: 6
Source:

Embassy of Pakistan (Washington)

Jul 1999Number of male witnesses that Pakistan requires for a rape prosecution: 4
Source:

Permanent Mission of Pakistan to the United Nations (N.Y.C.)

Aug 1998Number of years the U.S. trained Pakistani nuclear-research scientists as part of the “Atoms for Peace” program: 19
Source:

Arms Control Association (Washington)

June 16, 2008 Taliban forces raided a prison in Kandahar, Afghanistan, allowing 870 prisoners to escape. Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened to send troops across the Pakistan border to fight the Taliban.
Source:

Christian Science Monitor

June 15, 2008 British and American special forces were operating in Pakistan in an attempt to capture Osama Bin Laden before George W. Bush leaves office. “If he can say he has killed Saddam Hussein and captured Bin Laden,” a U.S. intelligence source told the “Times” of London, “he can claim to have left the world a safer place.”
Source:

Times

June 15, 2008Sheikh Ali al-Neda, the head of Saddam Hussein's tribe, was killed by a car bomb, and it was reported that Pakistani smuggler A. Q. Khan possessed blueprints for nuclear warheads more advanced than those he is known to have sold to Libya, though it was unclear whether he had sold them to North Korea or Iran.
Source:

Fox News

February 24, 2008The Pakistani government caused a global crash of YouTube when it attempted to block the site from its country. “Users are quite upset,” said the convener of the Association of Pakistan Internet Service Providers. “They're screaming at ISPs which can't do anything.”
Source:

BBCnews.com

February 19, 2008Benazir Bhutto's party received the most votes in the Pakistani parliamentary election. Calls were made for President Pervez Musharraf to step down after his party performed poorly, and opposition leaders who had been under house arrest since Musharraf declared emergency military rule last November found that their phones had suddenly started working again.
Source:

New York Times

January 31, 2008Abu Laith al Libi, alleged to be a high-ranking Libyan member of Al Qaeda, was killed in a missile strike in Pakistan.
Source:

Top Al Qaeda Leader Killed

January 7, 2008 Benazir Bhutto's 19-year-old son, Bilawal, asked the media to leave him alone after he was made head of his mother's party, and Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf blamed Bhutto for her own assassination. “For standing up outside the car, I think it was she to blame alone,” he said. “Nobody else.”
Source 1:

BBCnews.com

Source 2:

BBCnews.com

November 28, 2007President Pervez Musharraf quit his role as chief of Pakistan's army.
Source:

Emotional Musharraf quits as Pakistan army chief

November 25, 2007Exiled prime minister Nawaz Sharif returned to Pakistan. “I have come,” he said, “to save this country.”
Source:

New York Times

November 18, 2007U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte called on President General Pervez Musharraf to end emergency rule in Pakistan. “Emergency rule,” said Negroponte, the ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985, “is not compatible with free, fair and credible elections.”
Source:

BBC News

November 9, 2007 Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf said that the country will hold parliamentary elections in January but refused to give a date for ending his emergency decree or stepping down as head of the military. Opposition leader Benazir Bhutto was placed under house arrest when she tried to attend a political rally. President George W. Bush said that General Musharraf has been an “indispensable ally.”
Source 1:

NY Times

Source 2:

BBCnews.com

November 6, 2007In Lahore, Pakistan, police armed with clubs and tear gas attacked the thousands of lawyers protesting General Pervez Musharraf's imposition of martial law.
Source:

New York Times

October 17, 2007 Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto returned from self-imposed exile to Karachi, where bombs struck her welcome parade, killing 134 and wounding 450; police believed they had found the bomber's head.
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

CNN

October 17, 2007 Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto returned from self-imposed exile to Karachi, where bombs struck her welcome parade, killing 134 and wounding 450; police believed they had found the bomber's head.
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

CNN

August 3, 2007Presidential hopefuls Barack Obama and Rudy Giuliani pledged to invade Pakistan,.
Source 1:

New York Post

Source 2:

AP

July 15, 2007Militants in northwest Pakistan, misleadingly calling themselves the Taliban, tore up a peace treaty and killed at least 70 people in a series of bombings.
Source 1:

IHT

Source 2:

NYT

Source 3:

BBC

June 25, 2007Flooding in Karachi, Pakistan, left 200 people dead and 1,000 homes destroyed.Flooding in Karachi, Pakistan, left 200 people dead and 1,000 homes destroyed.
Source:

BBC

June 5, 2007Three adulterers were executed by firing squad in Khyber, Pakistan.
Source:

BBC News

May 7, 2007Twenty thousand Pakistanis rallied in Islamabad to protest the suspension of Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry by President Gen. Pervez Musharraf. “The dictatorial system of government and the concept of concentration of power is now ended,” Chaudhry said. “All these are bitter lessons of history.”
Source:

AP via SignonSanDiego.com

May 2, 2007American officials denied reports of a plan to require entry visas for British citizens of Pakistani origin.
Source:

Guardian Unlimited

April 29, 2007A suicide bomber killed 26 people in Peshawar, Pakistan, in an attack targeting Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao, who was wounded. “We have got the severed head of the bomber, and it is identifiable,” said Information Minister Asif Iqbal Daudzai.
Source:

Reuters

March 23, 2007Jamaican police continued to search for the murderer of Bob Woolmer, the coach of Pakistan's cricket team, who, hours after Pakistan lost to Ireland in the cricket World Cup, was strangled in his room at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston.
Source:

BBC

February 28, 2007A suicide bomber attacked Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, killing twenty Afghans, a South Korean, and two Americans but missing his prime target, Vice President Dick Cheney, who has taken to speaking in the first person on the condition of anonymity. “I've seen some reporting,” said the “senior administration official” of his meeting with Pakistani authorities, “that says, ‘Cheney went in to beat up on them, threaten them.' That's not the way I work.”
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

San Jose Mercury News

February 11, 2007 American forces, targeting Taliban fighters, launched artillery rounds into Pakistan.
Source:

Breitbart

February 6, 2007Pro-Taliban militants in northern Pakistan killed two suspected U.S. collaborators.
Source:

BBC News

January 10, 2007Shahwar Matin Siraj, a 24-year-old clerk at an Islamic bookstore in Brooklyn, was sentenced to 30 years in jail for discussing phony plans to bomb a subway station with a police informant; Siraj’s father, mother, and sister, all asylum-seekers, were arrested for deportation to their native Pakistan.
Source:

WNBC

December 14, 2006 British geneticists investigating the case of a 10-year-old Pakistani boy who could walk on burning coals announced that they had discovered a gene that influences the perception of pain. They could not examine the boy directly because he had died after leaping off a roof to impress his friends.
Source:

NYT

September 29, 2006Amnesty International alleged that Pakistani authorities have been selling terrorism suspects to the U.S. for $5,000 or less.
Source:

CBC News

September 28, 2006President George W. Bush served Presidents Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan and Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan sea bass with stuffed tomatoes, fondue, and a pomegranate-dressed endive salad at a White House dinner.
Source 1:

BBC News

Source 2:

The Australian

September 21, 2006 Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf said it was “very rude” for former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage to threaten to bomb his country “back to the Stone Age.”
Source:

Times of London

September 8, 2006In Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai said he was “very happy to hear” Pakistan was not sponsoring terrorist attacks on his country.
Source:

New York Times

August 15, 2006The Sri Lankan air force bombed an orphanage and killed dozens of schoolgirls, and the Tamil Tigers failed to kill the High Commissioner of Pakistan with an exploding rickshaw.
Source:

Guardian

July 16, 2006 Bombings on trains and in train stations killed 181 people in Mumbai, India, and led India to postpone peace talks with Pakistan. The diamond industry of Mumbai was said to be particularly hard hit by the bombings.
Source:

Reuters Alertnet

July 10, 2006 Airliners crashed in Russia and Pakistan, killing hundreds.
Source:

Associated Press

July 3, 2006Floods killed dozens of people in Romania, Pakistan, China, and the northeastern United States.
Source:

Reuters

June 29, 2006A prison inmate in Pakistan awoke to discover a lightbulb in his anus, which surgeons removed several days later. “Thanks Allah,” said the man. “Now I feel comfort.”
Source:

Reuters

June 3, 2006 Pakistan banned The Da Vinci Code. “Degradation of any prophet,” said Minister of Culture Ghulam Jamal, “is tantamount to defamation of the rest.”
Source:

Yahoo! News

March 2, 2006In Pakistan, four people, including a U.S. diplomat, were killed in a suicide bombing.
Source:

The New York Times

February 19, 2006Riots over cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad continued around the world. In Nigeria 16 people were killed in rioting and 11 churches were burned; in Libya at least 10 people were killed; and in Pakistan at least 5 people were killed. In Volgograd, Russia, officials closed the city newspaper after it published a cartoon that showed Muhammad, Jesus, Moses, and Buddha watching TV together. Fifteen thousand people protested the cartoons in London. “We have to speak up,” said a Muslim demonstrator, “to prevent something like the Holocaust from happening.”
Source 1:

CNN.com

Source 2:

The New York Times

January 15, 2006The United States bombed Pakistan. The missiles were intended to kill Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, who was expected at a dinner; instead, 18 people were killed, including women and children, and al-Zawahiri remains alive.
Source:

Reuters

December 10, 2005 Pakistan extended its ban on kites due to the deadliness of kiteflying; in February, 19 people died and over 200 were injured during a kite festival.
Source:

The New York Times

October 10, 2005At least 42,000 people died in an earthquake in Pakistan.
Source:

ABC News

September 16, 2005 Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf was under criticism for saying that rape victimhood was "a money-making concern"; "A lot of people," he explained, "say if you want to go abroad and get a visa for Canada or citizenship and be a millionaire, get yourself raped."
Source:

BBC News

August 7, 2005The United States sentenced a South African man to three years in jail for smuggling nuclear bomb parts to Pakistan and India.
Source:

IOL.co.za

July 13, 2005A three-express-train crash in Pakistan killed 132 people.
Source:

BBC News

May 27, 2005Brigadier General Jay Hood, Guantánamo Bay's commander, said that an investigation at Guantánamo Bay had uncovered five incidents of Koran abuse, but none involved toilets; protesters rallied against Koran abuse in Egypt, Pakistan, Jordan, Malaysia, and in Lebanon, where they chanted “America is the biggest Satan.”
Source:

BBC News

May 18, 2005 Pakistan was working to stop bearbaiting.
Source:

BBC News

March 31, 2005 Pakistan successfully test-fired the Hatf II, a short-range nuclear-capable missile.
Source:

Aljazeera.com

March 26, 2005The United States approved the sale of U.S. F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan, upsetting India. The United States was also planning to sell fighter jets to India.
Source:

BBC News

February 22, 2005 Pakistani soldiers were ordered to shoot at U.S. troops who enter Pakistan without permission.
Source:

HindustanTimes.com

December 31, 2004In Pakistan, Pervez Musharraf announced that he would hold on to his dual post as president and army chief, reneging on his promise to relinquish authority over the country's military by the end of 2004. "The spirit of democracy has been restored in the country," he said.
Source:

New York Times

December 29, 2004Peace talks between India and Pakistan went nowhere.
Source:

New York Times

October 29, 2004 Pakistan's lower house of parliament passed a bill that would impose the death penalty for honor killings, which have traditionally been ignored.
Source:

New York Times

October 7, 2004A suicide car bombing killed at least 39 people at a rally in central Pakistan.
Source:

Reuters

October 2, 2004A suicide bomber killed 23 people at a Shiite mosque in Sialkot, Pakistan.
Source:

New York Times

September 19, 2004The United Nations Security Council passed another resolution asking the Sudanese government to prevent its proxies from slaughtering people in Darfur (China, Algeria, Pakistan, and Russia abstained). The resolution, which for the first time formally invokes the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, says that the council will "consider" sanctions if the genocide continues.
Source:

New York Times

August 7, 2004Bombs exploded in Karachi, Pakistan, and in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and
Source:

Associated Press

June 27, 2004Three Turks and a Pakistani were kidnapped, and militants threatened to kill a captured U.S. Marine.
Source:

Reuters

June 20, 2004A Hindu ascetic was busy rolling his way 800 miles from India to Pakistan to promote world peace.
Source:

Los Angeles Times

May 24, 2004A land mine blew up a bus in Kashmir; Hizbul Mujahedeen, a terrorist group based in Pakistan, took credit for the attack.
Source:

Reuters

May 23, 2004 Pakistan was readmitted to full Commonwealth membership, less than five years after General Pervez Musharraf took power in a coup.
Source:

Independent

May 7, 2004At least ten people died in a suicide bombing at a Shiite mosque in Karachi, Pakistan.
Source:

Agence France-Presse

March 28, 2004Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, speaking of Pakistan's nuclear-weapons trafficking, said, "I do not believe that there's any evidence or any suggestion that President Musharraf was involved." Musharraf, for his part, denied that he had made a deal with the Americans to crack down on Al Qaeda in return for lenient treatment for selling nuclear technology to North Korea, Libya, Iran, and others; he also denied that his country's proliferation had done much harm. "If I hand over a missile or a bomb to any extremist, believe me, he can do nothing about it," Musharraf said. "He cannot explode it."
Source:

Reuters

March 27, 2004Political violence continued in Kosovo, Gaza, Ivory Coast, Iraq, Sudan, Pakistan, Taiwan, Afghanistan, Thailand, and Syria; there was unrest in Haiti, where armed gangs continued to terrorize the people; in Congo, where the government put down a coup attempt; and in France, where firefighters battled police during a strike over retirement benefits. The firefighters threw garbage cans, firecrackers, and smoke bombs; the police fired tear gas.
Source:

New York Times

March 25, 2004 India defeated Pakistan in a cricket tournament.
Source:

Reuters

March 19, 2004 Pakistan was designated a "major non-NATO ally" by the Bush Administration.
Source:

Reuters

March 10, 2004 Pakistan tested a new long-range missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead.
Source:

New York Times

February 23, 2004 Pakistan was preparing for a spring offensive against the Taliban.
Source:

New York Times

February 6, 2004The Bush Administration praised Pakistan after General Pervez Musharraf pardoned Abdul Qadeer Khan, the nuclear scientist who took the blame for selling nuclear technology to Iran, Libya, and North Korea; Khan claimed that no one in the government or in the military was aware of his activities.
Source:

MSNBC

January 26, 2004President Pervez Musharraf admitted that some of Pakistan's top nuclear scientists had sold nuclear technology to other countries but denied that the government was involved; Musharraf was accused of scapegoating the scientists to appease the United States.
Source:

Christian Science Monitor

December 28, 2003General Pervez Musharraf, the dictator of Pakistan, survived another assassination attempt.
Source:

Telegraph

December 15, 2003President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan was almost assassinated.
Source:

New York Times

May 15, 2003Eighteen Shell gas stations were bombed in Karachi, Pakistan.
Source:

The Hindu

March 4, 2003 Pakistani authorities arrested Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the Al Qaeda leader who is suspected of planning the September 11 attacks, and turned him over to the United States.
December 24, 2002 The Department of Justice added Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and Armenia to the list of countries whose adult male citizens residing in the U.S. must register with federal authorities but later dropped Armenia after it was pointed out that most Armenians are Christian.
December 25, 2001 India recalled its ambassador to Pakistan and threatened to go to war if Pakistan did not stop sponsoring terrorist groups such as Jaish-e-Muhammad, which attacked India's parliament building last week.
December 25, 2001 Pakistan denied involvement in the attack, but a captured member of the group admitted that the Pakistani Army donated the weapons and that Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency provided logistical support.
December 18, 2001Hundreds of Al Qaeda fighters made their last stand in Tora Bora, Afghanistan; Osama bin Laden was not found, however, and there were reports that he had escaped to Pakistan.
December 11, 2001 Afghan refugees, particularly children, were dying in great numbers; Uzbekistan finally agreed to allow humanitarian aid to cross its border at the “Friendship Bridge.” The CIA asked Pakistan for help in finding Osama bin Laden, whose mother told a Saudi newspaper that she was disappointed in her son.
November 13, 2001President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan came to the United States asking President Bush for “visible gestures” of appreciation for betraying the Taliban, and received $1 billion in aid.
October 16, 2001The image of Bert from Sesame Street showed up in an Osama bin Laden poster used by protesters in Pakistan; “This is not at all humorous,” said a spokesman for the Sesame Workshop.
September 25, 2001 Bush Administration officials announced that they would lift sanctions against Pakistan, which were imposed after it tested nuclear weapons in 1998.
September 25, 2001Paleontologists in Pakistan discovered a missing link between the ancient hoofed ancestors of whales and their descendants, who fancied fish, learned to swim, and eventually just stayed in the water.
September 18, 2001 Pakistan agreed to American demands that it allow a multinational force to attack Afghanistan from within its borders, though the military establishment there was divided, with some generals calling for a holy war against the West.
August 14, 2001A family of five died in Pakistan when a bomb blew up a school bus.
March 6, 2001Important clerics in Egypt, Pakistan, and Iran pointed out that the Mullah's interpretation of the Koran was incorrect. Mawlawi Qudratullah Jamal, the Taliban's minister of information and culture, replied that it was “not a big issue,” that the statues were “objects only made of mud or stone.” After announcing that the destruction of the Buddhas had begun, Jamal noted that “it is easier to destroy than to build.”
January 2, 2001There were bombings in Pakistan and Indonesia and Israel.
November 7, 2000Computer vandals known as the Pakistan Hackerz Club defaced the website of the Israel Public Affairs Committee and stole email addresses and credit card information, which they posted on the Web.

JULY 2008

HIGH NOON FOR THE REPUBLICAN PARTY
Why the G.O.P. Must Die
A Forum with Kevin Baker, Scott McConnell, Kevin Phillips, and Thomas Schaller

THE MAGIC OLYMPICS
With Tricks Explained!
By Alex Stone

THE CASE OF THE SEVERED HAND
A story by Robert Coover

Also: J.G. Ballard: The Boy from Shanghai