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Archive: February 2008

26/02/2008 GMT 1

US, Britain want Musharraf to stay

latestnews @ 15:41
Tuesday, 26 February 2008

US, Britain want Musharraf to stay

London: Senior figures in Pakistan's two largest political parties say the US and Britain are trying to ensure that President Pervez Musharraf is not removed from his position.

Accusing the two countries of meddling in Pakistan's post-election scenario, senior leaders in the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) told The Times that British and US envoys met several party leaders after the Feb 18 elections.

British High Commissioner to Pakistan Robert Brinkley held talks with PPP leader Asif Ali Zardari Thursday and PML-N leader Nawaz Sharif Friday.

US Ambassador Anne Patterson has similarly met with Zardari and Asfandyar Wali Khan, head of the secular Awami National Party, a potential coalition partner in the new government.

She is due to meet Sharif this week, the paper reported, adding the US consul in Lahore had also met with Sharif's brother Shahbaz and PPP leader Aitzaz Ahsan.

While British and American diplomats have described these meetings as introductory, party figures told the newspaper that they had been urged not to impeach Musharraf or reinstate Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, the chief justice who was controversially deposed by the president.

"There is huge pressure from America to work with Musharraf, but we'll do whatever we feel is right," the paper quoted a PPP figure as saying.

A senior aide to Sharif said: "The British and Americans are working together on this. They don't understand that it's time for Musharraf to go."

Source: Indo-Asian News Service

Terrorism is anti-Islam

latestnews @ 15:28
Tuesday, February 26 2008

Terrorism is anti-Islam

Clerics denounce terror, seek to dispel public perceptions

Bangalore: The declaration made by Darul Uloom(Deoband) on Monday that violence and terrorism are “anti-Islam and anti-national” should go a long way in dispelling public perceptions  about muslim community as abettors of  terrorism and in reaffirming Islam’s thrust on peace.

The resolution passed at the conference,  attended by Deobandis and members from other sects, noted that Muslims were being discriminated against to please the "colonial master of the west" and that madrassas were unfairly targeted. It said Muslims working in madrassas feared being made scapegoats for terrorist violence. The resolution demanded the government "curb those maligning madrassas and Muslims". It also said no community should be subjected to adverse profiling.

The resolution  acknowledged dangers of being lured by a call to arms issued by jihadi organisations. "It appeals to them (Muslims) to fully understand the alarming situation and feel the pulse of present so that they might not be employed as tools by anti-Islamic or anti-national forces," the resolution said.

Speakers at the conference maintained that madrassas did not produce terrorists. Some even blamed modern colleges for ills like eve-teasing and crime. There were also proposals for maintaining clean financial records and avoiding mixing up with "evil forces".

Islamic extremism, rooted in wrong interpretations of Islam, was responsible for a major chunk of  terrorist fatalities across the word, the most gruesome being the 9/11 attack on United States. So far the enlightened muslim leadership has been keeping quiet on the increasing involvement of members of the community in terrorist activities.

The rector’s speech and the declaration made at the conference marked a bold attempt on the part of the clergy to counter the jihadi propaganda unleashed by terror outfits like  LeT and Al Qaeda.

Source: India syndicate

16/02/2008 GMT 1

Cop to be confronted with kidney kingpin on Monday

latestnews @ 15:12
Saturday, 16 February 2008

Cop to be confronted with kidney kingpin on Monday

New Delhi: A city court on Saturday asked Delhi Police to confront a policeman, arrested on Friday for allegedly accepting bribes from kidney scam kingpin Amit Kumar, with him Feb 18.

Metropolitan Magistrate Chandra Shekhar ordered Delhi Police to conduct the Test Identification Parade (TIP) of assistant sub-inspector Ravinder Kumar with Amit Kumar in the Tihar Jail premises.

Delhi Police arrested Ravinder Kumar on Friday and registered a case against him and six other constables for accepting bribes from Amit Kumar, who was nabbed earlier this month in Nepal.

Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate A.K. Kohar sent Ravinder Kumar to four-day judicial custody on Friday.

The six policemen were allegedly bribed by Upendra Aggarwal, a key associate of Amit Kumar, to let off the scam kingpin. Aggarwal was the first to be arrested when the racket was unearthed Jan 24 from a Gurgaon clinic run by Amit Kumar alias Santosh Rameshwar Raut.

The multi-million-rupee racket of illegal kidney transplants served clients from Britain, the US, Greece, Lebanon, Canada, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, among other countries.

Amit Kumar was arrested Feb 7 from a resort hotel near the India-Nepal border and deported to India last week. He is presently in the custody of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

Source: Indo-Asian News Service

Prabhakaran critically injured, says Lanka air chief

latestnews @ 15:10
Saturday, February 16, 2008

Prabhakaran critically injured, says Lanka air chief

Colombo: Tamil Tiger chief Velupillai Prabhakaran was "critically injured" in an air raid on Nov 26, 2007, said Air Marshal Roshan Goonetilleke, commander of the Sri Lankan Air Force (SLAF).

However, B. Nadesan, head of the political wing of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), said the claim was baseless.

On Friday, Goonetilleke told the state-owned television network ITN that Prabhakaran's presence in the targeted site was evident from the volume of anti-aircraft fire the raiders faced.

A mobile anti-aircraft unit always accompanied the LTTE chieftain wherever he went, the air chief said in support of his claim. It could be surmised that the LTTE chief was hit on that day, from two facts: firstly, all the 20 bombs dropped were bang on the targeted bunkers, destroying them totally; secondly, Prabhakaran has not been seen anywhere outside since then, Goonetilleke said.

"He had not even attended the funeral of Charles, his trusted chief of military intelligence," the air chief said.

But denying the incident in an interview to the Tamil daily Thinakkural, LTTE's spokesperson Nadesan said Prabhakaran's defences were foolproof and impregnable. "Nobody can approach our leader," he said.

The Sri Lankan air chief discounted the story that Prabhakaran had left the shores of the country for medical treatment.

"A terrorist leader usually doesn't leave his movement at a critical juncture like this as he fears that someone else might take his place," Goonetilleke said.

Asked when the LTTE would be defeated, he said: "Very shortly."

Earlier, the government had said the war would be over by August this year before the summit of the South Asian heads of government to be held at Kandy in Sri Lanka.

But Army Commander Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka had said it would be over before he retired the end of the year. More recently, President Mahinda Rajapaksa told a foreign magazine interviewer that it would take another year and a half.

Reacting to this, Nadesan said there was "no military pressure" on the organisation's defences in the north for the government to talk of any such time schedules.

He charged that the government was hiding the bitter truth from the people of south Sri Lanka, which was that the army was taking heavy casualties and burying its dead on the spot, instead of taking the bodies to the south for funerals.

Source: IANS

07/02/2008 GMT 1

FEMA watched closely after deadly twisters

latestnews @ 07:50

55 people killed across South; Bush to visit Tennessee, where 31 died

Image: Clay and Seavia Dixon pick through the debris of what is left of their tornado damaged home.

Mike Wintroath / AP
Clay and Seavia Dixon pick through the debris of what is left of their tornado-damaged home Wednesday in Atkins, Ark.
MSNBC and NBC News
updated 9:58 p.m. ET Feb. 6, 2008 function UpdateTimeStamp(pdt) { var n = document.getElementById("udtD"); if(pdt != '' && n && window.DateTime) { var dt = new DateTime(); pdt = dt.T2D(pdt); if(dt.GetTZ(pdt)) {n.innerHTML = dt.D2S(pdt,((''.toLowerCase()=='false')?false:true));} } } UpdateTimeStamp('633379499212000000');

Local and state officials warned Wednesday that they would not tolerate a slow response from the federal government after the deadliest wave of tornadoes in a decade killed at least 55 people across the South, 31 of them in Tennessee alone.

President Bush planned a visit Friday to Tennessee, the hardest hit of five states where residents were trying to salvage what they could from homes reduced to piles of debris. More than 150 other people were injured, and thousands were left without power after as many as 50 twisters were reported in Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama.

Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., echoed the concerns of numerous government officials in the affected states when he recalled the sluggishness with which the Federal Emergency Management Agency responded to Hurricane Katrina in 2005. He told FEMA Director David Paulison on Wednesday that he would “not tolerate a slow reaction time.”

“FEMA must not use bureaucratic excuses to avoid helping Arkansans,” Pryor said in a letter to Paulison.

Bush promised that the federal government would step up to the plate this time, calling the governors of all five affected states and vowing to help “in any way we can.”

“This is a bad storm that affected a lot of people in a variety of states,” Bush said at a swearing-in ceremony for his new secretary of agriculture. “Our administration is reaching out to state officials.”

Michael Chertoff, secretary of the Homeland Security Department, which oversees FEMA, said he took the concerns seriously and was personally consulting with state officials to make sure they got what they needed.

Representatives of FEMA were already in the five affected states to assess what help was needed, said James McIntyre, a spokesman for the agency. Basic supplies, such as water and food, were on their way to hard-hit areas, he said, adding that vehicles with high-tech communications equipment had been sent to heavily damaged Lafayette, Tenn.

Worst tornado impact in two decades
The Associated Press reported that the death toll was the highest in an outbreak of tornadoes since 76 people were killed in Pennsylvania and Ohio on May 31, 1985.

“This is one of the most impressive February outbreaks ever,” said Bill Karins, a meteorologist with NBC Weather Plus, who said the worst impact was in Arkansas and Tennessee.

Tennessee emergency management officials said 31 people died in the state overnight.

“I’ve been working 34 years, and I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Keith Scruggs, emergency management director in Macon County, Tenn., where 12 people were reported to have been killed.

“Roads are blocked. It’s massive. We can’t tell the extent of the damage yet,” Scruggs said. “They have search teams going out now to check subdivision developments, housing and more rural areas.”

The state Highway Patrol reported looting in Macon County, said Julie Oaks, a spokeswoman for the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency.

“Obviously, that’s not something that needs to be going on,” she said. “If people are caught looting, they will go to jail.”

 

 

 

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