Briefly World

Yemen al-Qaeda has new head

DUBAI: A fugitive Saudi Arabian man was named as a senior member of al-Qaeda’s Yemen wing, according to a tape by the group shown on al Arabiya television on Friday. The tape confirmed the deaths of three leaders killed in December and January during Yemeni air raid. Othman Ahmed al-Ghamdi, 31, was named as a leading al- Qaeda operative on Friday.

Obama in Gulf, vows to stopping leak

GRAND ISLE: During a visit to Louisiana, President Barack Obama said people in the Gulf of Mexico are “watching their livelihoods wash up on the beach” because of a oil spill. Obama vowed that the federal government will keep helping until the disaster is ended.

Indian-American gets key IT post

WASHINGTON: The Obama Administration has appointed Indian-American Kshemendra Paul to a key IT position, making him head of an agency that facilitates sharing of terrorism-related information within various wings of the government. Paul has been appointed as Program Manager for the Information Sharing Environment.

Simon Monjack buried near Brittany

LOS ANGELES: Brittany Murphy’s husband Simon Monjack was laid to rest next to her grave at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills. The filmmaker died last week, five months after the death of his wife. Family and friends gathered to pay respects to the screenwriter, who died from a suspected heart attack, said People magazine online.

95 German soldiers’ graves vandalised

COLMAR: Vandals have smashed crosses and monuments on the graves of 95 German soldiers in a joint French-German military cemetery in eastern France, officials said Friday. The cemetery in Guebwiller holds the remains of 5,843 German and French soldiers who fought against each other in the World Wars and is seen as a symbol of European reconciliation.

Terrorised by Taliban tribals scoff Pak Army’s ‘war is over’ claims

London, Apr.21 (ANI): Local residents in Pakistan’s tribal regions, where the Army had initiated an all out offensive against the Taliban and other extremist groups last year, are still living in fear despite claims that the militants have been flushed out.

While the Pakistan Army has been claiming huge success against the Taliban and said that things were fast returning to normal in the rugged terrains, people here are still terrorised by the outlawed militant group, which clearly suggests that the ‘war in not over’.

“People are very intimidated. They have been terrorised by the Taliban. They are scared to go out at night. They are scared to speak. The war is not over,” The Times quoted a former army officer Khalid Munir, as saying.

The tribal region close to the Afghan border has witnessed a sudden increase in army’s action and terror strikes over the past fortnight.

A few days ago over 70 people, mostly civilians, were killed in an air raid by the air force. Nearly 45 people were killed in a suicide attack in Kohat last week.

Earlier this week, suicide bombers targeted a police station killing seven security officials. Another terror strike in a busy market place in Peshawar, the capital city of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) killed over 25 people.

The surge in violence certainly puts a question mark over the Pakistan Army’s repeated remark that normalcy in returning in the tribal region, and also suggests that they are nowhere near to being defeated. (ANI)

Yemen says seeks cleric, yet to get U.S. intelligence

(Reuters) – Yemen said on Sunday it is trying to detain a Muslim cleric wanted dead or alive by Washington, but has yet to receive intelligence from the United States on the U.S.-born militant’s activities.

World

U.S. officials said on Tuesday that the administration of President Barack Obama had authorized operations to capture or kill U.S.-born Anwar al-Awlaki — a leading figure linked to al Qaeda’s Yemen-based regional wing which claimed responsibility for a failed bombing of a U.S.-bound plane in December.

“He (Awlaki) is wanted by Yemeni justice for questioning, so that he can clear his name … or face trial,” Yemeni Foreign Minister Abubakr al-Qirbi told Al Jazeera television.

Qirbi did not give details of any manhunt by Yemeni security forces to arrest Awalaki, but referred to an air raid on a suspected al Qaeda gathering last December which the cleric reportedly had attended.

Qirbi said Yemen had not received U.S. intelligence on Awlaki’s contacts with a Nigerian suspect in the attempted bombing of the transatlantic passenger plane and with a U.S. Army psychiatrist accused of shooting dead 13 people at a military base in Texas in November.

“The detailed information … and evidence gathered by U.S. agencies has not been given to Yemen,” Qirbi said.

Qirbi had been quoted by media reports as saying that Yemen saw Awlaki as a preacher and not a terrorist, but he told Al Jazeera that those remarks referred to the period just after Awlaki’s return to Yemen when he was not suspected of wrongdoing by the United States.

Born in New Mexico, Awlaki led prayers at U.S. mosques. He returned to Yemen in 2004 where he taught at a university before he was arrested and imprisoned in 2006 for suspected links to al Qaeda and involvement in attacks. Awlaki was released in December 2007 after he was said to have repented.

Awlaki’s tribe has denounced U.S. plans to target him, vowing it “will not stand by idly and watch.”

Heavily armed tribes in Yemen, the poorest Arab country, often try to protect their kin by seeking to gain their release or favorable treatment. At times, they have kidnapped foreign tourists to pressure the government.

Western countries fear that al Qaeda’s resurgent regional wing is exploiting instability in Yemen to launch attacks in the region and beyond.

Yemen has carried out air strikes with U.S. assistance to target al Qaeda leaders, but there have been conflicting reports about whether Awlaki was present during any of those attacks.

U.S. officials believe he remains in hiding in Yemen.

(Reporting by Firouz Sedarat; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Yemen kills suspected Al Qaeda chief in air raid

A suspected Al Qaeda chief was killed in a new wave of Yemeni air raids against the branch of the global terrorist network thought to be behind a botched US airliner bombing, an official said.

Jamil Nasser Abdullah al-Ambari, 25, believed to be the leader of Al Qaeda in southern Abyan province, was one of two militants killed in the overnight raid, the security official said, requesting anonymity.

Ambari had figured on a list of wanted militants, but the official did not disclose the name of the other dead person.

The defence ministry had said earlier that an air strike killed two senior Al Qaeda members on Sunday night in Abyan’s Moudia district.

“Our air force carried out a raid on terrorist elements who were planning attacks on vital installations [and] two Al Qaeda leaders were killed,” said a report on the ministry’s 26sep.net news website.

Yemen’s air force launched a second successive day of air strikes on Monday, targeting a suspected Al Qaeda training camp in the same area, the defence ministry said.

A brief ministry statement said the raids were carried out in Moudia, but did not confirm whether anyone was killed or wounded in the latest strike.

A security official, who asked not to be named, said the disfigured remains of those killed in the strikes had been transported to the capital for DNA testing, and suggested the death toll could be as high as nine people.

Moudia residents reached by telephone alleged the raids caused civilian casualties, but fell short of giving figures.

Some said they fled their homes in fear of being targeted by the strikes.

-AFP

Civilian killed in new US air attack in Afghanistan

Kabul – A US air attack in Afghanistan has killed a civilian, the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) confirmed on Sunday.

Contrary to earlier reports, the victim had not been attempting to plant a booby trap bomb at a roadside.

ISAF said it was launching an investigation into the incident, which occurred on Wednesday in the south east province of Paktia.

The US air force launched the air attack at the request of ISAF. The civilian was taken to hospital but died of his injuries.

Last week an ISAF airstrike in Helmand province, south Afghanistan, killed eight civilians, the most recent in a series of such incidents.

At the start of the month the Afghan government accused the US military of killing 140 civilians in an air raid. The US insisted that the May 4 attack killed around 60-65 Taliban fighters, plus 25- 30 bystanders. (dpa)

Courts free Sri Lanka editor held over air strike

Colombo – A journalist arrested on suspicion of helping Tamil rebels to carry out an air raid in Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo was released by a court on Friday after the investigators failed to prove the allegations against him.

The editor of the Tamil daily Sudar Oli, N. Vithyatharan, who had been held by police since February 26, was accused of maintaining telephone links with the rebels who carried out a suicide attack by air in the capital on January 24.

When the Colombo Criminal Division (CCD) in charge of the investigation failed to provide evidence to link the journalist to the attack, he was released by Colombo Magistrate Ginhan Pilapitiya.

Investigators spent two months going through hundreds of phone calls made and received by the journalist. Police also checked his bank accounts without finding any link with the Tamil Tigers.

Justice has been delayed, but not denied, the journalist said on leaving court.

“Why did they need to detain me for two months over completely false accusations?” he asked.(dpa)

Helicopters fly over Somali pirate lairs-witnesses

MOGADISHU, April 12 (Reuters) – Helicopters flew over a coastal area used by Somali pirates on Sunday, causing panic among residents who feared an air raid, witnesses said.

Locals said they could see the legs and faces of white soldiers on one of two helicopters, and assumed they were from nearby U.S. or other foreign warships monitoring a standoff over an American hostage held by pirates on a lifeboat. (Reporting by Abdi Guled and Ibrahim Mohamed, writing by Andrew Cawthorne, editing by Jack Kimball)

Helicopters fly over Somali pirate lairs

MOGADISHU (Reuters) – Helicopters flew over a coastal area used by Somali pirates on Sunday, causing panic among residents who feared an air raid, witnesses said.

Locals said they could see white soldiers on one of two helicopters which flew over for around half an hour in the area of Haradheere port on Somalia’s Indian Ocean coast.

They said they believed the helicopters came from nearby U.S. or other foreign warships monitoring a standoff over an American hostage held by pirates on a lifeboat.

“We woke with loud sounds of helicopters flying over Haradheere,” resident Hassan Jimale told Reuters. “We could see the legs and faces of soldiers as the helicopter flew low. Maybe they are monitoring the sea or pirates planning to reinforce those on the lifeboat.”

Another resident, Ahmed Haji Abdi, said locals were afraid of being bombed. “We thought there would be air raids this morning. Haradheere is full of pirates,” he said.

“They might be Americans. They have left now.”

Pirates have various bases around Haradheere, and are holding some hijacked vessels in the area.

(Reporting by Abdi Guled and Ibrahim Mohamed, writing by Andrew Cawthorne, editing by Jack Kimball)

Somali elders in fresh attempt to free US captain

Nairobi – Somali elders on Sunday began a fresh attempt to secure the release of an American captain being held hostage by pirates on a lifeboat surrounded by US Navy warships, reports said. The move comes a day after other pirates seized an Italian tugboat – the seventh vessel taken in the last nine days.

Pirates have been holding Captain Richard Phillips hostage on the lifeboat since Wednesday, following a failed attempt to hijack his ship, the Maersk Alabama , in the Indian Ocean 500 kilometres off the coast of Somalia.

Earlier negotiations broke down on Saturday just hours after the pirates fired on a small US navy vessel that approached the lifeboat, the New York Times reported.

US Defence Department spokesman Major Stewart Upton said concern for Phillips meant that no information on the ongoing operation could be released.

However, other officials, speaking anonymously, said the sticking point appeared to be an American demand that the pirates be handed over to the authorities in Puntland, the semi-autonomous region of Somalia where most of the pirates are based.

The pirates want to be allowed to land the lifeboat, which is now reportedly only a few dozen kilometres from the coast, and set free before returning Phillips.

Earlier reports said the lifeboat had run out of fuel. It is unclear how the lifeboat managed to get so close to the coastline.

Media reports said that Somali elders set off from the port of Eyl on Sunday in a fresh attempt to find a compromise that will secure Phillip’s release.

The pirates have warned the US Navy against attempting to copy France and using force to free Phillips.

French naval forces on Friday stormed a yacht and freed four hostages. However, two pirates and one hostage died during the operation.

US network CNN reported that the coastal port of Harardhere, used by pirates as a stronghold, was buzzed by two unidentified helicopters on Sunday morning.

Residents of the town fled in panic, believing an air raid was about to take place, CNN reported, citing a local Somali journalist.

The lifeboat is surrounded by three US vessels, which have so far deterred attempts by other pirates to reinforce their colleagues.

A separate pirate group tried to steam the 20,000-ton Hansa Stavanger – a German-owned container ship hijacked one week ago – to help the embattled group of pirates, but was forced to return to anchor.

The Alabama – a 17,000-ton cargo vessel carrying food aid and operated by US company Maersk Line, Limited – was boarded by the pirates Wednesday morning, the first time US sailors have been seized in the treacherous waters near the Horn of Africa.

The unarmed crew quickly retook the ship, however.

The Alabama arrived under guard in the Kenyan port of Mombasa on Saturday night, where some crew members, dressed in blue overalls and helmets, defied orders from the FBI not to discuss the hijacking and shouted out to waiting journalists.

Accounts from the crew said that the pirates appeared on a small boat and then used grappling hooks to board the ship, firing shots in the air as they came.

Phillips then reportedly gave himself up to the pirates in order to safeguard his crew, something that second mate Ken Quinn said made him a “hero.”

John Reinhart, chief executive of Maersk Line, told reporters that the crew were required to stay on board during investigations and that the priority was securing Phillip’s safe release.

Somali pirates have stepped up their attacks in recent weeks after a brief lull.

Pirates hijacked a tugboat, the Buccaneer, on Saturday. It was the seventh vessel to have been seized in just over a week.

Andrew Mwangura of the East African Seafarers’ Association said Sunday that the vessel had reached the Somali coast and that the crew of 16 – including 10 Italians, five Romanians and a Croatian – was unharmed.

Another ship sailing under a Turkish flag narrowly escaped capture on Saturday, using water hoses to repel pirates after they fired a rocket-propelled grenade at the ship.

In 2008, pirates seized over 40 vessels in and around the Gulf of Aden and collected tens of millions of dollars in ransom, prompting the international community to send warships to the region.

Around 15 warships from the European Union, a coalition task force and individual countries such as Russia, the United States, India and China patrol an area of about 2.85 million square kilometres.

However, the pirates are now venturing farther into the Indian Ocean off the south-east coast of Somalia to avoid the international patrols.

Observers have said they feel piracy can only be stopped by dealing with insecurity on the ground in Somalia. (dpa)