Some beautiful places of pakistan

N W F P

Northwest Frontier Province
Impenetrable mountains, intractable people and impossibly romantic cities are just some of the reasons why the Northwestern Frontier Province is perhaps the most memorable of Pakistan's destinations.
Most visits begin in Peshawar, the rough and ready provincial capital. The highlight here is the Old City- a brawl of vendors selling everything from tribal jewellery to leather pistol holsters. Clopping horse-drawn tongas choke the streets, which are thick with fearsome-looking Pashtuns (members of a vast tribal society), Afghans and Chitrali. A short distance outside Peshawar (but a million miles away) is the Smugglers Bazaar. It's definitely not what you'd expect: turbanned merchants in tents have been replaced by Westernised malls stocking the latest TVs, VCRs and refrigerators. There's even a shop flogging Marks & Spencer's merchandise. The fabled Khyber Pass, sprinkled with tiny army forts, is nearby.
North of Peshawar is the district of Swat, reckoned to have the loveliest scenery in Pakistan's northern valleys, and Chitral, a relatively unspoilt area of lush valleys, hot springs and great walks. Vertigo sufferers should steer clear of Indus Koshitan to the west, a land of colossal peaks and bottomless canyons with more good walks. Those intending to visit Swat shoud also check the political situation prior to departure.
You can catch domestic flights from Peshawar to any number of Pakistani destinations, as well as direct flights to Qatar, Tashkent, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and Jeddah. Buses and minibuses go to and fro from Lahore and Rawalpindi all day, although the train is as cheap, and safer than, the buses. Peshawar is 150km (93mi) west of Islamabad.LINKE...

Peshawar derives its name from a Sanskrit word "Pushpapura" meaning the city of flowers. Peshawar's flowers were mentioned even in Mughal Emperor Babar's memories.
Alexander's legions and the southern wing of his army were held up here in 327 B.C. for forty days at a fort excavated recently, 27 1/2 kms north-east of Peshawar at Pushkalavati (lotus city) near Charsada. Islamia College at the University of Peshawar.linke...
The great Babar marched through historic Khyber Pass to conquer South Asia in 1526 and set up the Moghal Empire in the Indo-Pakistan sub-continent.
The Khyber Pass and the valley have resounded to the tramp of marching feet as successive armies hurtled down the crossroad of history, pathway of commerce, migration and invasion by Aryans, Scythians. Persians, Greeks, Bactrians, Kushans, Huns, Turks' Mongols and Moghals.
Peshawar is now, as always, very much a frontier town. The formalities of dress and manner give way here to a free and easy style, as men encounter men with a firm hand-clasp and a straight but friendly look. Hefty handsome men in baggy trousers and long, loose shirts, wear bullet studded bandoliers across their chests or pistols at their sides as a normal part of their dress.
There is just that little touch of excitement and drama in the air that makes for a frontier land. An occasional salvo of gun fire, no, not a tribal raid or a skirmish in the streets but a lively part of wedding celebrations.
Remember, we are in the land of the Pathans - a completely male-dominated society. North and south of Peshawar spreads the vast tribal area where lives the biggest tribal society in the world, and the most well known, though much misrepresented.
Pathans are faithful Muslims. Their typical martial and religious character has been molded by their heroes, like Khushhal Khan Khattak, the warrior poet and Rehman Baba, a preacher and also a poet of Pushto language.
Today, they themselves guard the Pakistan-Afghanistan border along the great passes of the Khyber, the Tochi, the Gomal and others on Pakistan's territory, but before independence they successfully defied mighty empires, like the British and the Moghal and other before them, keeping the border simmering with commotion, and the flame of freedom proudly burning.
Peshawar is the great Pathan city. And what a city! Hoary with age and the passage of twenty-five centuries, redolent with the smell of luscious fruit and roasted meat and tobacco smoke, placid and relaxed but pulsating with the rhythmic sound of craftsmen's hammers and horses' hooves, unhurried in its pedestrian pace and horse-carriage traffic, darkened with tall houses, narrow lanes and overhanging balconies, intimate, with its freely intermingling crowd of townsmen, tribal, traders and tourists - this is old Peshawar, the journey's end or at least a long halt, for those traveling up north or coming down from the Middle East or Central Asia, now as centuries before when caravans unloaded in the many caravan series now lying deserted outside the dismantled city walls or used as garages by the modern caravans of far-ranging buses.
QISSA KHAWANI BAZAAR:
Here perhaps visiting travelers or the relaxing townsmen were regaled with stories by professional story tellers, in the evening, in the many teashops that still adorn the bazaar front with their large brass samovars and numerous hanging teapots and teacups.
As in most eastern bazaars, the shops of delicacies predominate, and here too you will find many colorful fruit shops displaying the glorious harvest of Peshawar's unrivaled bread and justly celebrated "Kababs" and "Tikkas" meat sizzling on hot coals, in the many wayside cafes.
Leather goods shops are the next most numerous, selling that wonderful footwear, the Peshawari "Chappals" or sandals, belts, holsters and bandoliers and a special variety of light but sturdy suitcase called "Yakhdaan".

OTHER BAZAARS
As you move up, the Qissa Khawani Bazaar turns left and here begins the bazaar of coppersmiths whose jewel-like engraved and embossed jars, bowls, ewers and plates are piled up in shops like glistening treasure trove. Other famous bazaars of Peshawar are the Khyber Bazaar. Bird Bazaar and Meena Bazaar, Jewellery Bazaar and Mochilara (Shoe Makers' Bazaar).
In fact, the variety of craft in which Peshawar excels even today is amazing and this is a part of the city's character often eclipsed by its martial tradition. Remember that it was in this valley of Peshawar that there flourished that remarkable school of Ghandhara sculpture, which is one of the glories of Pakistan's heritage.

CHOWK YADGAAR
Soon you reach the central square called chowk Yadgaar the traditional site of political rallies. The two routes from the old city meet here. Parking of cars can safely be done only at this place in the old city

BALA HISAAR FORT:
The mighty Bala Hisaar Fort lies on both eastern approaches to Peshawar city. It meets the eye when coming from Rawalpindi or from the Khyber. It is a massive frowning structure as its name implies, and the newcomer passing under the shadow of its huge battlements and ramparts cannot fail to be impressed. Originally built by Babar, the first of the Moghals in 1526-30, it was rebuilt in its present form by the Sikh Governor of Peshawar, Hari Singh Nalva, in the 1830's under the guidance of French engineers. It houses government offices at present.

PESHAWAR MUSEUM:
Peshawar Museum is housed in an imposing building of the British days. It was formerly the Victoria Memorial Hall built in 1905. The large hall, side galleries and the raised platform which were used for ball dances now display in chronological order finest specimens of Gandhara sculptures, tribal life, the Muslim period and ethnography.

Peshawar Museum.linke...
SETHI HOUSES:
These houses are situated in Mohallah Sethian and can be approached from Chowk yadgaar. These are highly decorated style of building with carved wooden doors, partitions, balconies, mirrored and painted rooms. The Sehtis are the traditional business community of Peshawar. The main house was built in 1882 AD. by Haji Ahmed Gul who migrated from Chamkani (a near village) almost 6 generations ago.
NEW PESHAWAR:
Across the railway line was built the new modern Peshawar, the Cantonment, like the ones which the British built near every major city for their administrative offices, military barracks, residences, parks, churches and shops.
The Peshawar "Sadder" (Cantonment) is a spaciously laid out neat and clean township with avenues of tall trees, wide tarred roads, large single storied houses with lawns and a pervading scent of rare shrubs and flowers that is Peshawar's own.
The heart of the sadder is the Khalid bin Walid (Company) Bagh which is an old Moghal Garden. Its huge ancient trees and gorgeous big roses are a sight to remember. Two other splendid old gardens are the Shahi Bagh in the north-east and the Wazir Bagh in the south-east, all of which give the character of a garden city to Peshawar.In Sadder, there are the splendid modern state bank building, Governor's house, hotels, old missionary Edwards collage ,archly stocked museum, fine shopping area and right in the middle is the tourist Information center at Dean's hotel (Phone:279781). The Peshawar of the hoary past is the old city, the Peshawar of the British period (1849 to 1947) is the Cantonment but the Peshawar of independent Pakistan is the vast extension of the city west and east.Westward, on the road to the Khyber, where in the days gone by, no one was safe from tribal raids, today stretches a long line of educational and research institutions, such as the Academy of rural development, the teachers training college, the north regional laboratories of the council of scientific and industrial research and many others. But the pride of Peshawar today is its university, a vast sprawling garden town of red brick buildings and velvet lawns, which comprises a dozen departments and colleges of law, medicine, engineering and forestry. Special mention must be made of the Islamia college, which was the pioneer national institution that ignited the torch of enlightenment in this region,67 years ago.The road stretching out east towards Rawalpindi is lined for miles upon miles with factories producing a variety of goods and also orchard producing some of the world's finest plums, pears and peaches. Rice, sugar-cane and tobacco are the rich cash-crops of the well-watered Peshawar valley through which flows the Kabul River and at the end of which the mighty Indus forms the district boundary for 48 1/2 Kms (30miles),the two joining near the historic Attock fort.

The prime attraction in this region is the Khyber Pass situated in the Sulaiman Hills which form the western barrier of Pakistan. The hills dip down here, leaving a passage sometimes as broad as 1 1/2 kms and sometimes as narrow as 16 meters. The pass begins near Jamrud Fort 18 kms from Peshawar and extends beyond the border of Pakistan at Torkham 58 kms away.
You may travel by road from Peshawar via Jamrud fort which lies amongst low stony hills capped with pickets manned by Khyber Rifles. Also on the way you will see Ali Masjid and the fort with insignia of the regiments that have served in the Khyber. On route is also the Sphola sputa of Buddhist period and Landikotal Bazaar until you reach the border post at Torkham. The other exciting way of seeing Khyber Pass is to undertake a 42 kms and 3 1/2 hours journey to Landikotal by the equally legendary Khyber Railway.

Valley of Swat, with its rushing torrents, lakes, fruit-laden orchards and flower-bedecked slopes is an idyllic valley. It has a rich historical past. It was described as "Udayana" (the garden) in ancient Hindu epics where Alexander of Macedon fought and won some of his major battles before crossing over to the plain of Pakistan.
Swat was once the cradle of Buddhism where at one time more than 1,400 monasteries flourished.
It was the house of the Gandhara schoo lsculpture.
which was an expression of Graeco-Roman style mixed with thelocal swat vally (photo by Amjad khan)
Buddhist traditional sculpture.
The valley of Swat sprawls over 10,360 sq.kms. The normal temperature is maximum 21.11C and minimum 7.22C. Tourist season is all year round. The main town of the valley is Saidu Sharif with a museum which houses most archaeological finds excavated in the are.



A 50 minutes flight from Peshawar takes you to the north-western extremity of Pakistan where lies the exotic valley of Chitral. Towering the valley is the majestic 7,705 meters high Trichmir peak. In three narrow valleys about 40 kms from the town of Chitral live the famous Kafir Kalash tribe. They are known the world over for their primitive pagan traditions and their love for dance and music. Chitral has many sculpture swat vally(photo by Amjad khan)
prings and is popular for trekking and mountaineering.

Facilities exist for trout fishing. There are a number of hotels in Chitral proper.linke...
















LadyReadingHospital.linke... Interior of the Mahabat Khan Mosque.linke...

Top News






Pakistan police in Musharraf move.


Police in Pakistan have formally filed a case against former president Pervez Musharraf for illegally detaining senior judges in 2007.


The police move follows a court ruling on Monday ordering them to take action against the former president.
Mr Musharraf is accused of putting senior judges under illegal house arrest after imposing emergency rule.
Last month, the Supreme Court ruled that the move was invalid and unconstitutional.
Mr Musharraf resigned a year ago to avoid impeachment and is now living in Britain.linke...




Possibility of prosecution


"We have registered a case against Pervez Musharraf under Pakistan's Penal Code," news agency AFP quoted police spokesman Hakim Khan as saying.
The BBC's Haroon Rashid in Islamabad says that the possibility of prosecution means that the chances of the former president returning to Pakistan in the short term look slim.
Mr Musharraf faces a three year sentence in jail for his move to detain senior judges, our correspondent adds.
His move to impose emergency rule also clears the way for him to be tried for treason because under the constitution, anyone found guilty of abrogating it can be prosecuted.
However, the Supreme Court made it clear in July that parliament was the best place to debate whether or not Mr Musharraf should face treason charges.
President Musharraf sacked judges who refused to take an oath of loyalty under the 3 November 2007 emergency rule.
They have since been reinstated. Among them is Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry.
His suspension started the protest movement that ended with Mr Musharraf being driven from office.
He eventually had to end emergency rule and hold general elections which led to the defeat of his political allies in February 2008.
Mr Musharraf was finally forced to resign in August 2008. He has argued that his actions were necessary to combat militancy.




Profile: Pervez Musharraf


Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf took power in a coup in 1999. One of Pakistan's longest-serving rulers, his time in power was characterised by dramatic upheavals.


The then Gen Musharraf ousted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif promising to bring "true" democracy, law and order and economic revival to Pakistan.
The early part of his rule was also dominated by questions of foreign policy, particularly tensions with India over Kashmir.
Then came the events of 11 September 2001 that became the defining feature of his presidency, leading to a dramatic change in Pakistan's relations with the rest of the world. It became a country in the forefront of President George W Bush's "war on terror". linke...


Suicide bombings

Such a course inevitably meant that President Musharraf would end up clashing with Islamic militants in his country sympathetic to the Taliban and al-Qaeda.
Perhaps the most powerful manifestation of this change of direction came in July 2007, when the president ordered his security forces to storm the Red Mosque with its adjacent Islamic school in Islamabad, resulting in the deaths of more than 100 people.
MUSHARRAF'S CV
Born on 11 August 1943, Delhi, India
Married with two children
Joined Pakistan Military Academy in 1961
Saw action in the 1965 war against India
Attended Royal College of Defence Studies in the UK
Frequently promoted, was made a general in 1998

Clerics and students of the mosque were accused of waging an increasingly aggressive campaign to enforce strict Sharia law in Pakistan's capital.
In the weeks after the mosque was seized, clashes between soldiers and Islamic militants in the country's northern tribal regions escalated and suicide bombings - a rarity in Pakistan - became more commonplace.
President Musharraf was challenged by others too.
His decision to suspend the country's Chief Justice, Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, in March 2007 backfired seriously and led to a major loss of his authority.
The move triggered huge protests across the length of the country against his perceived flouting of the rule of law.
Such was the level of dissent over the decision that the president was forced to back down and reinstate Mr Chaudhry in July 2007.
President Musharraf's oft-stated desire to remain head of the army while simultaneously being president of Pakistan was then challenged in the courts.
Although he was elected to a new term as president by the four provincial assemblies and both houses of parliament in October, the result was not validated by the Supreme Court.
Before the vote, the president's lawyers said he would stand down as army chief once re-elected. Pressure for him to give up the army post had been rising considerably.
On 3 November 2007, President Musharraf declared a state of emergency, removing many Supreme Court judges and going on to install hand-picked replacements in their stead.
All legal challenges to the president's eligibility in the October poll were subsequently dismissed and the reshaped Supreme Court ordered the Election Commission to declare him the winner.

President Musharraf went on to hand over command of the army to his personally anointed successor on 28 November 2007, the day before his new term was to start.
The turbulent events of 2007 were in contrast to the relatively smooth way in which the man who was shunned as a dictator by many in the West after his bloodless coup became, almost overnight, a pivotal player on the world stage as Washington realised it needed the co-operation of Pakistan in order to defeat the Taliban.
Pakistan had previously been one of only three countries to recognise the Taliban diplomatically and had been accused of playing a pivotal role in its early development.
The president was often described as walking a tightrope as he has sought to balance demands from the US to crack down on extremism in Pakistan and the demands from an increasingly vocal and anti-American Islamist constituency.linke...
Humanitarian tragedy.
Tensions with nuclear rival India have lowered since the two countries began peace talks in early 2004.
Relations had worsened after an attack on the Indian parliament in Delhi in December 2001. India blamed terrorists sponsored by Pakistan - an allegation denied by Pakistan.
By the summer of 2002 the two countries appeared to be on the brink of war with over a million troops massed along both sides of the Line of Control that divides the disputed territory of Kashmir.
However, problems with neighbouring Afghanistan have got worse. Afghan officials - along with Nato - have increasingly accused Pakistan of not doing enough to stem the movement of militants sympathetic to al-Qaeda and the Taliban across the border into Afghanistan.
In another sign of growing uncertainty in the West over the Mr Musharraf's usefulness in the "war on terror", the policy of signing local peace agreements with militants in the north-west of the country has also been strongly criticised.
Pakistan counters that it has sent its troops into Waziristan and other tribal regions to target al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters for the first time in the country's history.
President Musharraf was also engaged on another front against nationalists in the province of Balochistan who accuse the government of exploiting the region's natural resources but neglecting its development.
Mr Musharraf had to cope with a humanitarian tragedy in October 2005 as a massive earthquake measuring 7.6 on the Richter scale hit Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
More than 73,000 people died and three million were made homeless as a result of the quake.
Turning around the decline in economic growth was part of President Musharraf's promise on assuming power.
Initially he oversaw an improvement in economic growth - receiving praise from international institutions for the introduction of reforms - but more recently the strength of the Pakistani economy has been called into question.
The former president's departure has not brought an end to the major problems facing the country, not least about how it is governed.
Another of Mr Musharraf's promises on assuming office was to devolve power to the grassroots and improve accountability.
'Failed state'
The Delhi-born son of an Urdu-speaking family that migrated to Pakistan after the partition of the Indian sub-continent in 1947 has survived numerous assassination attempts and plots.
But he faced an increasing number of challenges on the domestic front - especially rising prices of fuel and food.
At the same time his one of main political enemies, Nawaz Sharif, returned to the country from exile to lobby strongly against him from November 2007 onwards. In the early years of Mr Musharraf's rule, such a development would have been unthinkable.
Sectarian violence between Sunni and Shia Muslims also simmers on.
President Musharraf relinquished power as Pakistan sits in the shadow of an increasingly blossoming relationship between the US and arch-rival India.
Its battle against militancy continues unabated.link...

Top News



Who are the Taliban?





Recent years have seen the re-emergence


of the hardline Islamic Taliban movement


as a fighting force in Afghanistan and a major


threat to its government.
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They are also threatening to destabilise Pakistan, where they control areas in the north-west and are blamed for a wave of suicide bombings and other attacks.
The Taliban emerged in the early 1990s in northern Pakistan following the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan.
A predominantly Pashtun movement, the Taliban came to prominence in Afghanistan in the autumn of 1994.
It is commonly believed that they first appeared in religious seminaries - mostly paid for by money from Saudi Arabia - which preached a hard line form of Sunni Islam.
The Taliban's promise - in Pashtun areas straddling Pakistan and Afghanistan - was to restore peace and security and enforce their own austere version of Sharia, or Islamic law, once in power.
In both countries they introduced or supported Islamic punishments - such as public executions of convicted murderers and adulterers and amputations of those found guilty of theft.
Men were required to grow beards and women had to wear the all-covering burka
.linke...



Madrassas


The Taliban showed a similar disdain for television, music and cinema and disapproved of girls aged 10 and over from going to school.

Pakistan has repeatedly denied that it is the architect of the Taliban enterprise.
But there is little doubt that many Afghans who initially joined the movement were educated in madrassas (religious schools) in Pakistan.
Pakistan was also one of only three countries, along with Saudi

Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which recognised the Taliban when they were in power in Afghanistan from the mid-1990s until 2001.
It was also the last country to break diplomatic ties with the Taliban.
The attention of the world was drawn to the Taliban in Afghanistan following the attacks on the World Trade Centre in September 2001.linke...


Mullah Omar.

The Taliban in Afghanistan was accused of providing a sanctuary to Osama Bin Laden and the al-Qaeda movement who were blamed for the attacks.
Soon after 9/11 the Taliban were driven from power in Afghanistan by a US-led coalition, although their leader Mullah Mohammad Omar was not captured and neither was Osama

In recent years the Taliban have re-emerged in Afghanistan and grown far stronger in Pakistan, where observers say there is loose co-ordination between different Taliban factions and militant groups.
The main Pakistani faction is led by Baitullah Mehsud, whose Tehrik Taliban Pakistan (TTP) is blamed for dozens of suicide bombings and other attacks.
Observers warn against over-stating the existence of one unified insurgency against the Pakistani state, however.
The Taliban in Afghanistan are still believed to be led by Mullah Omar, a village clergyman who lost his right eye fighting the occupying forces of the Soviet Union in the 1980s.
Afghans, weary of the mujahideen's excesses and infighting after the Soviets were driven out, generally welcomed the Taliban when they first appeared on the scene.

THE TALIBAN
Emerged in Afghanistan in 1994
Mainly supported by ethnic Pashtuns
Toppled after US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001
Fugitive leader Mullah Omar wanted, whereabouts unknown
Their early popularity was largely due to their success in stamping out corruption, curbing lawlessness and making the roads and the areas under their control safe for commerce to flourish.
From south-western Afghanistan, the Taliban quickly extended their influence.
They captured the province of Herat, bordering Iran, in September 1995.
Exactly one year later, they captured the Afghan capital, Kabul, after overthrowing the regime of President Burhanuddin Rabbani and his defence minister, Ahmed Shah Masood.
By 1998, they were in control of almost 90% of Afghanistan.
They were accused of various human rights and cultural abuses. One example was in 2001, when the Taliban went ahead with the destruction of the famous Bamiyan Buddha statues in central Afghanistan, despite international outrage.linke...

US onslaught
On October 7, 2001, a US-led military coalition invaded Afghanistan and by the first week of December the Taliban regime had collapsed.

Mullah Omar and his comrades have evaded capture despite one of the largest manhunts in the world

Mullah Omar and most of the other senior Taliban leaders, along with Bin Laden and some of his senior al-Qaeda associates, survived the American onslaught.
Mullah Omar and most of his comrades have evaded capture despite one of the largest manhunts in the world and are believed to be guiding the resurgent Taliban.
Since then they have re-grouped in both Pakistan and Afghanistan, but are now under pressure in both countries, from the Pakistani army and Nato respectively.
Despite ever higher numbers of foreign troops, the Taliban have steadily extended their influence, rendering vast tracts of Afghanistan insecure, and violence in the country has returned to levels not seen since 2001.
Their retreat earlier this decade enabled them to limit their human and material losses and return with a vengeance.linke...