Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Disclaimer

Wikileaks is absolutly legal and contain only links to other sites on the Internet : ( rapidshare.com, megaupload.com, megashare(s), mega, dailymotion.com, myspace.com, ouou.com, stage6.com, tudou.com, veoh.com, youku.com, youtube.com and others.. ) We do not host or upload any video, films, media files ( avi, mov, flv, mpg, mpeg, divx, dvd rip, mp3, mp4, torrent, ipod, psp ), FunBolo.com is not responsible for the accuracy, compliance, copyright, legality, decency, or any other aspect of the content of other linked sites. If you have any legal issues please contact appropriate media file owners / hosters.
Any Question please E-mail :
admin@apnieyesp.com

DMCA

Wikileaks blog is an online service provider as defined in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

We take copyright violation very seriously and will vigorously protect the rights of legal copyright owners.
If you are the copyright owner of content which appears on the Wikileaks website and you did not authorize the use of the content you must notify us in writing in order for us to identify the allegedly infringing content and take action.

In order to facilitate the process, we have provided an online form for your use.
We will be unable to take any action if you do not provide us with the required information, so please fill out all fields accurately and completely. Alternatively, you may make a written notice via e-mail to our DMCA Agent as listed below. Your written notice must include the following:

Specific identification of the copyrighted work which you are alleging to have been infringed. If you are alleging infringement of multiple copyrighted works with a single notification you must submit a representative list which specifically identifies each of the works that you allege are being infringed.
Specific identification of the location and description of the material that is claimed to be infringing or to be the subject of infringing activity with enough detailed information to permit us to locate the material. You should include the specific URL or URLs of the web pages where the allegedly infringing material is located.
Information reasonably sufficient to allow us to contact the complaining party which may include a name, address, telephone number and electronic mail address at which the complaining party may be contacted.
A statement that the complaining party has a good faith belief that use of the material in the manner complained of is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent or the law.
A statement that the information in the notification is accurate, and under penalty of perjury that the complaining party is authorized to act on behalf of the owner of an exclusive right that is allegedly infringed.
Written notice should be sent to our designated agent as follows:

DMCA AGENT

Contact Us

Please also note that under applicable law, 17 U.S.C. 512 (f), any person who knowingly materially misrepresents that material or activity is infringing may be subject to liability.

Breaking News WikiLeaks Revels Pakistan Secrets : UAE Throws Weight Behind Pervez Musharraf

The Government of Pakistan is said to be under unprecedented pressure from the rulers of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to pave the way for a safe, secure and honourable homecoming for former president General (retd) Pervez Musharraf.UAE’s rulers in Musharraf’s
Pervez Musharraf Political future
They are also said to have asked Islamabad to initiate steps to build a favourable political image of the former military dictator and ensure that upon his return home, he will not be harassed by court cases and the police.
According to an understanding reached between the UAE and Pakistan several months ago, it was decided that the Pakistani government would facilitate Musharraf’s return as soon as the two-year bar on his participation in politics ends, sources said. Official sources claimed that the pressure had already forced President Asif Ali Zardari to curtail his visits to Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
This extraordinary interest of UAE rulers in Pakistan’s internal affairs, especially in Musharraf’s political future, was thrown into light once again due to UAE’s foreign minister Sheikh Abdullah Bin Zayed al Nahyan’s covert visit to Islamabad within three days of the Federal Investigation Agency’s (FIA) announcement that Musharraf has been included in the investigation of former premier Benazir Bhutto’s assassination. He spent a mere 30 minutes with President Zardari before heading back home but, immediately after his visit, Interior Minister Rehman Malik told the media that the government did not intend to question Musharraf. Rehman, on November 27, categorically said that the government had not taken any decision to include Musharraf in the probe.
Earlier, a joint investigation team of the FIA had prepared a 32-point questionnaire which was meant to be sent to the former military ruler. FIA Director-General Waseem Ahmed said that the agency wanted to record the statement of everyone who had any connection with the case.
When asked why General Musharraf was being involved in the case after the team had completed its report and submitted it to an anti-terrorism court, Ahmed said the case would remain open until all supplementary information was obtained.

Pervez Musharraf May Gamble On Return To Pakistan

http://patdollard.com/wp-content/uploads/musharraf.jpg
News Source By JULIE MCCARTHY Musharraf May Gamble On Return To Pakistan.Former Pakistani leader Pervez Musharraf is contemplating a return home from exile — and a possible run for the presidency. But any comeback for the former president and army chief is fraught with uncertainties.
For Musharraf, who has been in exile since 2008, coming home would be like Sisyphus pushing the rock uphill. He faces the possibility of arrest for treason or an attempt by al-Qaida to kill him — they’ve tried before. Musharraf also must win back the support of the political class he alienated, the judges he fired, and the former underlings in the military who believe he disgraced them.
EnlargeFareed Khan/AP

A supporter of Pakistani opposition leader Nawaz Sharif — a former prime minister who was arrested in 1999 by Musharraf — symbolically beat Musharraf with a shoe during a rally in Karachi in 2009. Opposition to Musharraf’s potential return to Pakistan is strong.
Retired Pakistani Brig. Javed Hussein says it is impossible for Musharraf to regain the trust of the army he once ran because it resents the former general, who came to power in a military coup in 1999.
“[They are] resentful of the fact that he was using the army for his personal purposes to project himself. The army is quite sick of him, and they don’t want to be embarrassed,” Hussein says.
Analysts say senior and retired military officers also do not want to become entangled in the controversies attached to Musharraf. Investigators last week sought to question him about the murder of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto to ask why, despite threats on her life, security was not provided for her when she was killed in 2007.
The same year, Musharraf ordered the bloodiest assault in Islamabad’s history — the storming of the Red Mosque to root out Islamist militants who had taken it over. Critics say that attack sowed the seeds for the militancy that plagues Pakistan today.
Analyst Najam Sethi says memories of all this would haunt Musharraf’s return and a run for office in the 2013 election.
“The minute he comes back to Pakistan, the two mainstream parties — the one in government and the one in opposition — would launch all manner of criminal cases against him, and he would have a snowball’s chance in hell of surviving,” he says.
EnlargeJulie McCarthy/NPR
Toy store owner Malik Waheed, 33, expresses nostalgia for Musharraf’s years in power. He remembers it as a time of prosperity and is not concerned by the former leader’s poor record on human rights. He calls Musharraf a “pragmatist” who did not hesitate to make tough decisions.
“Having said that, both parties are losing a lot of credibility because of their corruption and inefficiency, and I think in that sense a vacuum is being created into which Musharraf could conceivably flow,” he says.
Mixed Memories Of Musharraf’s Rule
http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ZivcvKC3srmpmM:http://pkpolitics.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2007/08/musharraf.jpg&t=1
At the central market in Rawalpindi, cart-pushers, vegetable vendors and shoppers watch prices rise and their incomes fall, and some are nostalgic for the time Musharraf was in power.
Malik Waheed, 33, owns a toy store and says he supports Musharraf’s possible return. He says during Musharraf’s rule, the country experienced prosperity, and business and employment were better.
When asked if it troubles him that Musharraf was viewed as a dictator, Waheed says no.
“His tenure was good,” he says.
But deeper among the market’s stalls, shop owner Sheikh Jabbar is indignant over the fact a former “dictator” would be attempting to revive his political career. In addition, he says, Musharraf “got a lot of money from the West to fight the Taliban and al-Qaida. But that money did not benefit Pakistan at all.”
NPR Related Stories
Musharraf Discusses India, Terrorism And His Future
Pervez Musharraf intends to return to Pakistan — as an elected leader. He even has a Facebook page.
Musharraf has made much of the response he’s received from young people on his Facebook page. But 22-year-old international relations student Raja Qaiser notes there is no “dislike” option on the site.
If there were, he says, the “dislikes” would outnumber the “likes” 10 to 1.
“I visited his website — the monotonous stance. But my question is: He has served this country for 10 years; did he make any remarkable achievement in these 10 years? No. So why should I try him again? No, I will not,” Qaiser says.
‘Anything’s Possible’
Pakistan has a history of leaders in exile returning home.
Sheikh Rashid Ahmed, Musharraf’s former information minister, says the fortunes of his old boss could improve.
“The numbers could change. This is a very emotional nation,” he says.
Rashid says no one ever expected current President Asif Ali Zardari — the deeply unpopular widower of Benazir Bhutto — to win office.
“If Zardari can be the president of Pakistan, anything’s possible,” he says.

Breaking News WikiLeaks Secret Documents: If Asif Zardari Assassinated His Sister Faryal Talpur as President of Pakistan

Asif Zardari Fearing an Assassination Attempt, President Asif Ali Zardari has made extensive arrangements, revealed a new WikiLeaks cable release.
Zardari had spoken to former US ambassador Anne Patterson in 2009, saying that he had instructed his son Bilawal Bhutto Zardari to name his sister Faryal Talpur as President if he is assassinated, reported The Guardian.
In another cable quoted by the newspaper, US Vice President Joe Biden recounted to Britain’s then Prime Minister Gordon Brown a conversation with Zardari last year. Zardari told him that Kayani and the Inter-Services Intelligence agency “will take me out,” according to the cable.
Another memo cited in The New York Times quotes General Ashfaq Kayani, chief of the military, telling the US ambassador during a March 2009 meeting that he “might, however reluctantly,” pressure Zardari to resign.
Kayani was quoted as saying that he might support Asfandyar Wali Khan, leader of the Awami National League Party, as the new president — not Zardari’s arch-nemesis Nawaz Sharif.
The cables also laid bare US frustrations at what officials see as Pakistan’s refusal to cut off ties with extremists such as Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is blamed for carrying out the bloody 2008 siege of Mumbai.
“There is no chance that Pakistan will view enhanced assistance levels in any field as sufficient compensation for abandoning support for these groups, which it sees as an important part of its national security apparatus against India,” Ambassador Anne Patterson said in a cable quoted by the Times.
The cables also touch on allegations of extrajudicial killings by Pakistani forces, according to the Times.
A cable last year suggested there was credible evidence that the or paramilitary forces killed some detainees after an offensive against Taliban insurgents in the northwestern regions.
The embassy said that news of killings should not be leaked to the press, for fear of offending the Pakistani army. However, this year the United States said it would cut off support for some Pakistani units following the release of a video that appeared to show extrajudicial killings.

Pakistani Spy Chief Hamid Gul , Dr.AQ Khan Responds to WikiLeaks Allegations

Former Pakistani Spy Chief Hamid Gul , Pakistani Nuclear Scientist Dr.AQ Khan Responds to Wiki Leaks Allegations
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange
WikiLeaks began releasing thousands of classified U.S. State Department documents Sunday. The documents contain information that is being condemned as “reckless and dangerous” and some worry this will affect international relations.
The documents expose confidential American diplomatic cables revealing back-room bargaining at embassies, assessments of terrorist and nuclear threats and frank, unflattering views of foreign leaders.
Publications such as the New York Times and Britain’s The Guardian received the documents beforehand so reporters could analyze the information. The newspapers began publishing stories based on the leaks Sunday. Topics covered included a 2007 standoff with Pakistan over nuclear fuel, a U.S. spying campaign on United Nations leadership, suspicions of corruption within the Afghan government, bargaining to empty Guantanamo Bay prison, plans for uniting South and North Korea, and Saudi Arabian King Abdullah “frequently” urging the U.S. to attack Iran to destroy Iran’s nuclear program.
International reaction and response to the leaks is growing. The Pentagon announced Sunday that it has changed procedures to make it harder to steal secrets. Presidential Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said President Barack Obama wants transparency in government but called WikiLeaks’ actions “a risk.”
“By releasing stolen and classified documents, WikiLeaks has put at risk not only the cause of human rights but also the lives and work of these individuals,” Gibbs told the Associated Press. “We condemn the strongest terms of unauthorized disclosure of classified documents and sensitive national security information.”
Gibbs also said the cables contained incomplete information that didn’t express policy and didn’t influence decisions. The British Foreign and Commonwealth Office joined the United States in the condemnation while the countries issued statements defending their political decisions. On Monday Pakistani officials defended their stance to deny the United States access to the nuclear research reactor in question.
WikiLeaks will release its 251,287 cables in a gradual manner, reviewing them with media partners. The cables date from late December 1966 to February 2010 and contain communications between the State Department and 274 embassies. The documents are marked unclassified, confidential and secret. None of them are top secret. A post on the WikiLeaks website claimed that no one has been harmed by any disclosures made during the four-year year publishing history of the whistle blowing group.
“These cables, by giving the players an unvarnished description of how they are seen, there will be a common ground on which to effectively negotiate peace and stability,” wrote one WikiLeaks member. “We do not see this as a risk to destabilisation, but an opportunity for stabilisation and reform in the Middle East.”
WikiLeaks writers said they asked the UD State Department officials to review the documents with them so they would know who would be put at risk by the publication but that State Department Legal Advisor Harold Hongju Koh wrote back saying the Obama administration wouldn’t negotiate with efforts to release classified materials. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is expected to address the leaks Monday as she embarked on a four nation tour of Central Asia and the Persian Gulf.
News organizations worked with WikiLeaks in taking precautions before unveiling the stories and The New York Times reported that WikiLeaks redacted some of the cables to protect diplomatic sources. The New York Times also advised the U.S. State Department about when it received the documents and both the New York Times and Guardian excluded information they felt could jeopardize individuals.
WikiLeaks does not reveal its sources, but authorities allege Army intelligence analyst Pfc. Bradley Manning gave the documents to WikiLeaks. Manning has been charged with illegally leaking information and faces a possible court martial and a long prison sentence if convicted. Earlier this year WikiLeaks released documents on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as a video of civilian killings in Iraq.

Tag: Dr.AQ Khan Responds to WikiLeaks Allegations, Former Spy Chief Hamid Gul Responds to WikiLeaks, Former Spy Chief Hamid Gul Responds WikiLeaks, General Gul Hamid calls Wikileaks a pack of lies, General Gul Hamid calls Wikileaks pack of lies, Pakistani Spy Chief Hamid Gul Responds to WikiLeaks Allegations, Wikileaks Afghanistan former Pakistani general blames US for war, wikileaks cover names, wikileaks down, wikileaks insurance, wikileaks ip address, wikileaks mirror, wikileaks mormon, WikiLeaks Release Secret Diplomatic Communication, WikiLeaks Release Secret Diplomatic Communications, wikileaks scientology, WikiLeaks US embassy cables as it happened, wikileaks website

Mazhar Majeed Secret Video Expose Wahab Riaz, Kamran Akmal, Umar Akmal, Imran Farhat Involved in Spot-Fixing

  

Mazhar Majeed Expose Wahab Riaz, Kamran Akmal, Umar Akmal, Imran Farhat Involved in Spot-Fixing



Geo News Tuesday received a secret video of bookie Mazhar Majeed in which he disclosed that four more Pakistani cricketers Wahab Riaz, Kamran Akmal
News Source jang.com.pk