Three Israeli policemen wounded in W.Bank attack

June 14 (Reuters) – Unknown assailants shot and wounded three Israeli policemen in an attack on their vehicle in the occupied West Bank on Monday, Israeli officials said.

An ambulance service spokesman said two of the three policemen had been seriously wounded in the attack near the town of Hebron. All three were being taken to hospital, said the spokesman.

The number of attacks and casualties in the West Bank has dropped markedly in the past few years, but last month armed settlers shot dead a Palestinian teenager near the city of Ramallah after he threw rocks at their car.

Some 500,000 Jewish settlers and about 2.5 million Palestinians live in the West Bank and areas near Jerusalem annexed by Israel after a 1967 Arab-Israeli war. (Writing by Ori Lewis; Editing by Ralph Gowling)

Man shot at, robbed by bikers

New Delhi, June 5 — Two bike-borne assailants shot at a 40-year-old businessman and robbed him in northwest Delhi on Friday night, the police said. “The incident was reported from Ranjit Singh Road, located in the Adarsh Nagar area, at 9.30 p.m.,” said a senior police officer on condition of anonymity, as he was not allowed to talk to the press. The police identified the victim as Rajinder Kumar Jain, a resident of Inderlok who is a shoe retailer. “Jain was returning from a friend’s wedding with his family, when the two bike-borne assailants overtook him and attempted to stall him,” the officer said. According to the police, they assailants then started threatening Jain with dire consequences and shot him in his right arm when he talked back. “The duo brandished a country-made pistol during a heated exchange with the businessman and shot at him when he refused to get intimidated and attempted to drive away,” said the officer.

“According to Jain, robbery was not the duo’s intent. We have registered a case and investigations into the matter are under way,” the officer added.

13 students injured in knife attack in China’s Hainan province

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): More than 10 men, armed with knives, burst into two dormitories at a vocational college in Hainan and slashed nine students, two of them seriously.

The pre-dawn attack took place in Haikou, the capital of South China’s island province of Hainan at the Hainan Institute of Science and Technology.

The new attack has sparked fears in China, which is already on edge following a series of such horrific assaults.

Four students had been wounded in an earlier confrontation between the two groups, bringing the total number of injured to 13, according to local authorities.

The assailants attacked a guard and disabled a security camera before gaining access to the dormitories, The China Daily reports.

Among the wounded, two were severely injured, with one student having his hand cut off. Following eight hours of surgery at the Haikou City People”s Hospital, their conditions were not considered to be life threatening.

Students from the school, who accompanied the injured to the hospital, said the violence began late on Tuesday when a confrontation took place at a food stall outside the campus with some men from surrounding villages, The China Daily reports.

Four students were attacked with knives in the incident and the police were called, they said, but left after questioning the students.

The villagers then called for reinforcements and attacked the school at about 2:30 am on Wednesday, witnesses said.

The violence has resulted in security being tightened at schools across China. (ANI)

Two policemen killed in Bangkok

Bangkok, May 8 (DPA) Unknown assailants attacked policemen guarding an area occupied by an anti-government demonstration, killing two officers and wounding nine people, police said Saturday.

In the first attack, occurring about 10.45 p.m. Friday, men on a motorcycle fired on police and pro-government counter demonstrators on Silom Road, killing Police Sergeant Pannupat Lertkanpen with a bullet to the stomach, said Metropolitan Police

Commissioner Lieutenant General Santan Chayanol.

The attack also wounded three other policemen and two civilians.

A second attack occurred at 1.30 a.m. Saturday, in which three grenades were fired at policemen stationed outside the U-Chuliang Building across the road from Lumpini park, an area occupied by the protesters.

Police Sergeant Wittaya Phomsalee died from a chest wound he sustained in the attack. Four other policemen were wounded.

‘It’s too early to say who was behind these attacks,’ Santan said. ‘I believe it was a group of people who want to create chaos.’

The fresh violence comes at a bad time for Bangkok, where a nearly two-month-old anti-government protest has already sparked clashes that have claimed 27 lives, including six soldiers, and wounded more than 900.

Negotiations are underway to end the costly demonstration, which has seized the heart of Bangkok’s main commercial district, and cost the country millions of dollars in lost tourism revenues.

The United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), better known as the red shirts, started its protest March 12 in a bid to force Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to dissolve parliament and hold new elections.

In what was hailed as a major breakthrough, Abhisit Monday announced plans to hold an election Nov 14, which would require dissolving parliament between Sep 15 and Sep 30.

He also laid out a five-point road map to be followed in the coming months to deal with some of the political issues that have deeply divided the country over the past four years.

The UDD has accepted the road map in principle, but has yet to leave its protest site in the middle of the city, which it has occupied with thousands of followers since April 3.

Although the red shirt protest began peacefully, it adopted more aggressive tactics in April after failing to force Abhisit to meet their demand for an immediate dissolution of parliament.

Abhisit placed the capital under emergency decree April 7. An attempt to clear protesters from their previous demonstration site at Phan Fa Bridge, in the old part of Bangkok, led to a bloody street battle that left 25 dead, including five soldiers, and wounded more than 800.

The UDD protest has been accompanied by an unprecedented number of attacks on government and army installations by unknown assailants armed with military weapons.

To date the government has not said who the militants working in tandem with the UDD are. An impartial investigation into the April 10 event is one of the five steps on Abhisit’s proposed road map.

Indian man faked attack to claim insurance: Australian police

MELBOURNE: The Indian man, who said he was attacked and set ablaze by assailants here, had falsely reported the incident for claiming insurance, Australian police alleged today.

Jaspreet Singh, Grice Crescent, Essendon, in the city’s north, faced an out-of-sessions hearing today before a bail justice at St Kilda Road police complex charged with making a false report to police and criminal damage with a view to gaining a financial advantage, the Sky News TV said.

Singh, who is in Australia on his wife’s student visa, told police that he was doused with petrol and set alight as he parked his car near his home early on January 8.

Singh, 29, was taken to the Alfred hospital with 15 per cent burns, affecting his face, arms and hands.

Detective Senior Constable Danielle O’Keefe of the arson and explosives squad told the hearing Singh suffered the burns while trying to torch his 2003 Ford Futura.

O’Keefe said arson chemists and hospital staff had concluded the damage to the car, Singh’s clothes and his injuries were not consistent with his story.

“Police inquiries have led us to believe that Mr Singh is in some financial difficulty and that he intended to sell his car but instead stood to gain USD 9,750 from an insurance claim out of this particular incident,” she told the hearing.

The January 8 incident occurred amid growing tension between India and Australia over a spate of violence against Indian students in recent months here.

Police had obtained security footage depicting Singh buying a 15-litre opaque plastic container and 15.96 litres of petrol on the day before the attack. The container and other evidence were found at his unit when he was arrested yesterday, O’Keefe said.
However, Singh has denied all allegations. His wife had been questioned about her knowledge of the incident, she said.

Burns were still obvious on Singh’s face and neck, and he wore pressure bandages on his arms.

Through an interpreter, Singh told the hearing he and his wife planned a holiday to India, leaving on February 20 and returning in late April to visit his child and extended family.

O’Keefe said while police did not oppose bail it has been noted that Singh was a potential flight risk.

The justice, who declined to be named, granted him bail with strict conditions banning him from contacting witnesses and attending points of international departure.

He must report to police three times a week and surrender his passport. He will appear before the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on March 15.

At the time, police Detective Acting Senior Sergeant Neil Smyth described the attack as “a bit strange” and said there was no evidence the attack was racially motivated.

Are Indians bigger racists than Australians?

Why do you think Indians are being attacked in specific in Australia?

D.C.-Area Sniper Lee Boyd Malvo Pens Letter of Apology to Victim

NEW ORLEANS — A Louisiana man shot by Lee Boyd Malvo before the criminal spree that terrorized the Washington, D.C., area in 2002 has received a letter of apology from the convicted sniper.

John C. Gaeta, 58, of Albany, said Thursday that he’s glad Malvo wrote him but remains skeptical about Malvo’s intentions.

“I’m glad he wrote the letter,” Gaeta said. “I do wonder, though, if he’s truly sorry or if this is a part of him trying to get his sentence reduced. He knows that he should express remorse, so I question whether it is genuine and from the heart.”

Gaeta was shot in the neck Aug. 1, 2002, outside a mall near Baton Rouge, La. He has said that two men approached him as he tried to change a tire. When he leaned down to pull out his spare, he noticed a shadow near the front of the truck.

Last month, Malvo confessed to Louisiana detectives that he shot Gaeta, but said he thought the man had died. The shooting was part of a spree by Malvo and John Allen Muhammad that left 10 people dead.

Muhammad was executed in Virginia in November for killing a man at a gas station. Malvo was sentenced to life in prison for one of the killings.
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The short, brief letter Gaeta received was dated Feb. 21. Malvo wrote: “I am truly sorry for the pain I caused you and your loved ones. I was relieved to hear that you suffered no paralyzing injuries and that you are alive.” Malvo then printed and signed his name.

Gaeta said he never got a good look at his assailants’ faces.

“I said, ‘What are you doing?’ He lifted up the gun and shot me. Once I saw the weapon, my concentration was on that. And on dying. I thought, ‘Is this how it’s going to end?’ I dropped to the ground and played dead. I didn’t wiggle around and I didn’t fight, because I thought if I did he might shoot me again,” Gaeta recalled.

Gaeta said his faith has helped him get through the ordeal.

“Absolutely,” he said. “Otherwise, I’d still be angry and bitter. You have to go on living and it has been almost eight years.”

Afghan intelligence chief claims Pak hand in election-related suicide attacks

Kabul, Aug.21 (ANI): The chief of Afghanistan’s National Security Directorate, Amrullah Saleh, has claimed a Pakistan hand in the several suicide attacks that hit the country on the eve of the second presidential elections as also on the day of the election, which took place on Thursday (August 20).

“These anti-government elements had planned to destroy the electoral process and they had received a large budget for this. The money was there. In Pakistan, the madrassas had called a holiday for the students and told them they should go to Afghanistan to do some symbolic activities that would destroy Afghan people psychologically.Almost 70 had been trained and sent here for destructive activities,” the Toronto Star quoted Saleh, as saying.

Saleh said that security forces had stopped five suicide attacks on Kabul on Thursday, and over 20 others elsewhere across Afghanistan.

He said on Thursday evening that documents seized from slain and arrested insurgents indicated a further 25 suicide plots had been aimed at Kabul alone.

The majority of these were thwarted before the assailants could position themselves. But five individuals, wearing suicide vests and carrying other explosive devices, had slipped through the city’s heavy security perimeter, prevented from detonating themselves only at the last minute, the paper quoted him, as saying.

“Fortunately, we have stopped them so that none of these plans were implemented. The Taliban will now have to face up to their failures,” he added.

Twelve of the 25 suicide bombers were halted in their tracks in Herat,along with six in Kandahar and several in Paktia, Logar and Nangarhar provinces, Saleh claimed.

According to Saleh and other government officials, the neo-Taliban had plotted a vast and cunning array of attacks on the capital over the last 48 hours.

“They had focused on hiding themselves in tall buildings. There were plans for (improvised explosive devices), multiple suicide attacks, car bombings, ambushes, mines and other explosions. Their targets included, allegedly, ministry buildings and one hotel where a large number of journalists were staying,” he said.

Saleh said his agents had arrested three key individuals instrumental to the overall plot, including Haji Abdullah, head of intelligence during the Taliban regime and latterly a resident of Quetta, in Pakistan.

Other documents discovered also established funding and command-and-control elements connecting them “to people outside our country,” particularly into Waziristan and other tribal areas of Pakistan.

“This is an old complaint that we have against Pakistan and I don’t want to say anything more.”

Defence Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak said 135 violent incidents had been recorded across the nation involving both heavy weapons and light gunfire, IEDs and mine blasts, but the casualties were minimal.

Interior Minister Mohammad Hani Hatmar said that in 34 provinces 6,199 polling stations out of about 7,000 were able to open their doors to voters.

Kai Eide, the United Nations special envoy to Afghanistan, expressed relief over the way the elections had gone.

“It’s clear that the number of people who turned out has varied, from region to region. We don’t know what the numbers are in the north, south, west and east.

But the fact these elections have taken place across the country is an achievement for the Afghan people. The mobilization of political energy and interest that we saw in the candidates has been reflected at the ballot stations.Overall, the 20th of August, 2009, has been a good day for Afghanistan,” he said. (ANI)

Tasers can limit injury to police officers and suspects if used properly

Washington, July 4 (ANI): A three-year study released by researchers at the University of South Carolina and funded by the US Department of Justice has determined that conducted electrical devices (CEDs), such as Tasers, limit injury to police officers and suspects if used properly.

The study, one of the largest epidemiological studies to look at injuries from police use of force, comes at a time when more than 10,000 US police agencies now use Tasers as one method to control suspects.

The study also provides valuable understanding of injuries that result from other less lethal devices, such as pepper spray and batons, as well as firearms.

According to Dr. Geoff Alpert, a criminal justice professor, said the study is particularly important for its findings on the use of pepper spray and CEDs, which have generated controversy and been linked to deaths, overuse and abuse.

“We found that the use of pepper spray and CEDs, such as Tasers, reduced the likelihood of injuries to both officers and assailants,” said Dr. Alpert, principal investigator of the study.

Alpert said the study, which included the review of 24,000 cases as well as national data, provides a much-needed picture of police use of force in America.

The team’s findings were based on data from a national survey of law enforcement policies and practices on use of force and statistics from law enforcement agencies in Miami, Florida, Seattle, Washington, Columbia, South Carolina, Austin, Texas and Orlando.

They also interviewed more than 250 officers and citizens.

Their data provide valuable insights on police use of force before and after the use of CEDs.

Alpert said that questions about the safety and misuse of Tasers mirror concerns raised in the 1990s when pepper spray became a popular method used by law enforcement.

“Pepper spray was the ‘new’ less lethal weapon. Now it’s the Taser, and, if used properly, it can be a great tool,” Alpert said. “Often just seeing the laser dot of a CED on them will stop an assailant,” he added.

The study looked at reported cases of death associated with the use of CED. While low in rate, a few resulted from excessive rounds of CED use.

Excessive use and the potential for abuse was the second key finding of the university study.

Alpert said good CED policies and training, monitoring and systems for accountability can remedy and discourage such abuse. (ANI)

UN calls for better prosecution in slayings of Mexican journalists

Mexico City – The Mexico office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights called for swift and efficient resolution and prosecution of cases of violence against journalists in the country.

The call came just before the news Wednesday that Fidel Perez Sanchez, a journalist for the newspaper Notiver in the eastern state of Veracruz, was missing. His wife said that he has not answered her calls since Tuesday, when he failed to pick up their children after school.

On Tuesday, police news reporter Eliseo Barron Laguna was found dead of gunshots with signs of torture, a day after his abduction. A group of eight armed assailants burst into his home on Monday in the state of Durango, where Barron Laguna worked for the newspaper La Opinion Milenio, and dragged him away in front of his wife and children.

Barron Laguna was reportedly the 50th journalists slain since 2000 in Mexico, where the country’s drug war and public corruption have made journalism highly dangerous.(dpa)

Jalandhar witnesses violence over Sikh Gurudwara shooting in Vienna

Jalandhar, May 25 (ANI): At least three bogies of Kanyakumari-Jammu Tawi Express were put on fire and another train near Phagwara attacked by agitated protestors on Monday morning over Sikh Gurudwara shooting incident in Vienna.

Authorities have closed down the Jalandhar-Phagwara National Highway to prevent escalation of the violence.

In Amritsar and Patiala, a large number of protestors have come on roads and taken to violence to express their angst over the incident.

On Sunday, Jalandhar witnessed protests in the evening over the shooting incident in Austrian capital Vienna in which at least 11 people had been reportedly injured in the afternoon.

Tension gripped Jalandhar as soon as news about the shooting on Saint Niranjan Dass, head of Dera Sachkhand Ballan, reached the city.

Agitated followers of the Saint here turned violent and torched several vehicles.

Fearing escalation of protest, authorities in Jalandhar imposed curfew in several parts of the city as a preventive measure.

Reports from Austria, stated that eleven people were wounded after some armed men attacked the preacher and worshippers at a Sikh temple in Vienna on Sunday.

Local authorities and witnesses initially said the assailants were from two feuding families, but later said, it involved members of several rival Sikh temples in Vienna who had been at odds for several years.

According the Vienna police, it all started when six people burst into the temple in Vienna’s Rudolfsheim district during a religious service and attacked the preacher and other worshippers. One of the assailants was firing a gun and others wielding knives. In the ensuing violence, at least 11 people suffered gunshot and stab wounds before the assailants were subdued. (ANI)

Gas attack on Athens Muslim prayer centre injures three

Athens- At least three people were hospitalized in Athens Saturday morning with breathing problems after unknown assailants ignited a gas canister and threw it through the window of a store that doubles as a prayer centre for Muslim immigrants.

Media reports said none of the injured was in mortal danger.

The attack came a day after serious clashes between Muslim protesters and Greek police. Those clashes were prompted by Muslim allegations of police brutality and charges of desecrating the Koran. (dpa)

Ten people killed in separate incidents in Assam

Guwahati, May 19 (ANI): At least ten people were killed in two separate incidents in Karbi Anglong and North Cachar Hills Districts of Assam on Tuesday.

In Karbi Anglong, six National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) militants were killed in an encounter with the Army at Donphat village in Howraghat area.

A huge cache of arms was recovered from them.

In N. C. Hills district, unidentified gunmen waylaid a vehicle at Nirimbanglo, forced its passengers to disembark and fired at them, killing four persons on the spot.

The assailants escaped after committing the crime. (ANI)

Suspected militants kill five persons in Manipur

Bishnupur (Manipur), May 12 (ANI): Suspected militants killed five people, all outsiders, in Manipur on Monday.
The bodies of the victims were found inside the Keibul Lamjao National Park in Bishnupur district where the security forces had conducted a flush-out operation in April.

Acting on reports that some armed persons had taken nine non-Manipuri people inside Loktak Lake area, a team of media persons and villagers conducted a search operation in the marshy area and discovered the bodies.

Reportedly, the team discovered the bodies floating on biomass.

According to the search party, out of the five victims, only one had bullet wounds, while the rest had been hacked to death by the assailants.

The incident created a panic among the residents who fled the area fearing violence.

“We heard the sound of gunshots. As we had faced such incidents before, out of fear, we decided to flee from this place to a safer area to save our lives. We had suffered a lot. When asked from where the sound of gunshots came, we were told that it came from the northern side. We also heard five to six rounds of gunshots,” said Bembem Devi, a resident.

It is believed that the assailants had abducted nine persons and brought them to the park. All nine are feared dead though the bodies of only five have been discovered so far. The search continues to flush out more bodies from the area.

Although no group has come forth to take the responsibility for the incident, the police suspects complicity of a militant group. The killings are latest in the spate of attacks on non-Manipuri residents in the state.

Earlier, five migrant labourers were killed in separate incidents between February and March in Manipur this year. These attacks have forced many labourers to flee the state. (ANI)

Gunmen kill 44 at Turkish village wedding party

Ankara (Turkey), May 5 (ANI): Unidentified gunmen killed 44 persons attending a wedding party in a village on Monday.

Reports from the village of Sultankoy in Turkey’s south eastern Mardin Province, quoted acting governor Ahmet Ferhat Ozen as saying that:”The assailants, wearing masks, stormed a building in the village of Sultankoy, some 20 km (12 miles) from Mardin, and opened fire on wedding guests.”

Hospital officials said that apart from the 44 killed, at least 17 others were injured.

Ozen said the number of dead could rise. Ambulances rushed the injured to Mardin and local residents were called in to the hospital to donate blood.

Television broadcasters said there had been a blood feud in the village in recent years. State-run news agency Anatolian reported the daughter of the village chief, called a muhtar, was being married when the attack occured.

Meanwhile, Turkish Interior Minister Besir Atalay said on Tuesday morning that preliminary evidence indicated that an attack on a wedding party, which claimed the lives of at least 45 people, was not the work of terrorists. (ANI)

One injured in Mumbai subway firing

Mumbai, Apr.25 (ANI): One person was injured during a firing incident near the Dahisar subway in Mumbai.

Police said that the injured person has been admitted to hospital, and added that he could have been a victim of an attempted robbery.

The assailants fled from the scene soon after the shootout. (ANI)

Gunmen kill eight in Mexico

Mexico City, April 20 (EFE) Eight law enforcement officials, including two federal police officers and two prison guards, were killed in an attack on a police convoy in western Mexico, authorities said Sunday.

According to the public safety secretariat, the assailants opened fired Saturday on the police convoy transporting an important drug suspect to a prison in the coastal state of Nayarit.

The gunmen were trying to free nine inmates, including Jeronimo Gamez Garcia, a top leader of the Beltran Leyva drug cartel, officials said.

Garcia, who is suspected of being the logistics and finance chief of the criminal organization run by the Beltran Leyva family, and was in charge of buying cocaine from Colombia’s Valle del Norte drug cartel. He was arrested in January.

Mexico has been plagued in recent years by drug-related violence, with powerful cartels battling each other and the security forces, as rival gangs vie for control of lucrative smuggling and distribution routes.

Armed groups linked to Mexico’s drug cartels murdered around 1,500 people in 2006 and 2,700 people in 2007, with the 2008 death toll soaring to more than 6,000.

So far this year, more than 1,750 people have died.

Family of six killed in the southern Philippines

Manila – A family of six, including four children, was shot dead by unidentified gunmen who burned their house in a southern Philippine city in a bid to hide the crime, a regional police chief said Tuesday. Chief Superintendent Danilo Empredrad said the attack occurred before dawn Sunday while the family was asleep inside the house on the outskirts of Gingoog City in Agusan del Norte province, 795 kilometres south of Manila.

Empredad said the assailants barged into the house and shot the victims before burning the house.

A few days before the killing, the victims had evacuated their house amid ongoing clashes between government troops and communist rebels in adjacent villages, investigators said. (dpa)

Congress protests MP lawmaker’s murder, blames opposition

Gwalior, Apr 14 (ANI): The Congress party on Tuesday called for a shutdown in Bhind and Datia districts of Madhya Pradesh to protest the murder of lawmaker Makhan Singh Jatav the previous night.

Congress leaders are blaming the opposition for the murder and have demanded a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) inquiry in the matter.

Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan, however, has urged the party not to politicise the killing.

Jatav, who represented the Gohad Assembly, was shot in the head by an unidentified assailant while returning from Cheheta village in Bhind District.He had gone there to address an election rally.

He was declared brought dead at the hospital.

Arvind Kumar, Inspector General of Police, Chambal, said: “He was sitting in the rear when some people came to talk to him. One of them shot the MLA from close range. By the time the police arrived, they fled.”

Meanwhile, Congress leader Jyotiraditya Scindia expressed grief over the Jatav’s death.

Scindia, who is contesting from the Shivpuri constituency in the state, said that all efforts would be taken to nab the assailants.

“My heart goes out to the family of the deceased. For the first time, such a sad incident has occurred in the area and we must condemn the act. I have talked to the DGP (Director General of Police) and have asked him to investigate the matter and to bring the perpetrators of this crime to book. Justice must be served to the family of the deceased,” said Scindia. (ANI)

UN condemns murder of Afghan legislator by Taliban

Kabul – The United Nations office in Afghanistan Monday condemned the assassination of a woman provincial legislator in southern Afghanistan by Taliban militants. Sitara Achikzai, who was aged in her 50s, was shot dead Sunday afternoon by Taliban fighters riding on motorbikes outside her home in Kandahar city, the capital of Kandahar province.

The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan “condemns in the strongest possible terms the vicious and deliberate killing of the provincial legislator Sitara Achikzai,” Nilab Mubarez, a UN spokeswoman told a press conference Monday.

“Those responsible for this callous act have clearly shown their disrespect for the true Afghan traditions and there is no justification for such a cowardly act,” she said.

“Achikzai was a committed and brave woman who served in her country without fear in one of the most volatile areas of Afghanistan,” Mubarez added.

A dual Afghan-German citizen, Achikzai spent years in exile in Germany with her family and returned to Afghanistan following the ouster of the Taliban’s ultra-Islamic regime in late 2001.

Achikzai and her husband, a doctor and university lecturer, came back to Afghanistan to work in Kandahar province, while their son and daughter live in Germany.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack and said “the enemies of Afghan people should know that they can not stop the process of peace and stability in the country by killing of those who truly serve this country and want it to stand on its own feet.”

Karzai ordered the security forces in Kandahar province to arrest the assailants and bring them to justice.

Taliban spokesman Qari Mohammad Yousif Ahmadi took responsibility for the attack, saying their fighters killed Achikzai while she was returning to her home in Mullah Alam Akhan area of Kandahar city.

Ahmadi did not give any reason for the assassination.

The Taliban had banned women from going to schools or to work outside their homes when they ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to late 2001.

Taliban militants were responsible for the murder of a top female police officer in Kandahar province last year and were also blamed for the assassination of the head of the provincial women’s affairs department in Kandahar city in 2006. (dpa)

Real estate executive killed because of old enmity: Cops

Gurgaon police said on Wednesday that the 28-year-old real estate firm executive had been killed as part of a well-hatched conspiracy. Parveen Chawla, assistant manager (marketing) with Jones Lang LaSalle Meghraj, was probably shot dead and his body dumped into his WagonR car and parked at Sector 29 well before 10pm on Monday, when two beat constables spotted it, Gurgaon police commissioner S.S. Deswal told HT. “So far we have not been able to reach any motive behind the murder of Parveen as it looks to be an act to settle an old enmity.

Our investigations reveal the assailants had been chasing him for long. He had stopped for drinks with friend Ajit Rathee at Machaan, a roadside eatery on Golf Course Road, around half past nine,” Deswal said.

Both left for their Sector 5 homes in Sector 5 in their respective cars, Chawla following Rathee. Chawla’s car disappeared in South City, Rathee had said.

“The murder took place between 9.30 and 10 pm,” Deswal said. He was overpowered, pushed to the front passenger’s seat, and possibly shot in the neck and shoulder from behind while being driven to a secluded place, as there were bloodstains on the front passenger seat.

He was possibly moved to the rear seat later, where he was shot again in the chest. The rear seat had many bloodstains.

He was possibly thrashed, as his body had bruises all over. His attackers also tried to strangle him with a piece of cloth.

The four bullets were fired from a 9mm pistol. Deswal ruled out ransom and robbery as motives behind Chawla’s murder.

An attacker, who had snatched the executive’s cellphone while he was talking to his fianc and #233;e, had demanded a ransom of Rs 50 lakh. Even Chawla’s father had been told to deposit the ransom amount in Rajasthan after he called.

Police on Wednesday also questioned Chawla’s fianc and #233;e, who was also his colleague. His cellphone was also recovered from under the seat of the car.

The police had earlier suspected the attackers of taking Chawla’s cellphone.