Migrants attacked in South Africa, five hurt

July 20 (Reuters) – South African residents have attacked migrants from African countries in a Johannesburg township, injuring at least five people and increasing concerns of a wave of xenophobia after the soccer World Cup.

Local media said four of those injured at Kya Sands were from Zimbabwe and Mozambique. The fifth was a South African who said his attackers refused to believe he was a local.

Tensions have long been building between South Africans and millions of foreign migrants they accuse of taking jobs and homes, but open animosity appeared to be put on hold during the World Cup as South Africa showed its best face to the world.

A spate of attacks on foreign workers in 2008 killed 62 people and damaged investor confidence. Another wave could wreck the positive image that Africa’s biggest economy was able to portray during the soccer tournament.

Running battles erupted late on Monday at Kya Sands after a robbery inside the township sparked anger between locals and foreigners, the Eye Witness News website said. It took police several hours to quell the unrest.

Eye Witness News said two men had deep cuts to their heads. One said he had been attacked with an axe. A woman was carried out on her husband’s back, saying she had failed to outrun a mob and had been kicked in the chest.

Foreign migrants are estimated to make up more than 10 percent of South Africa’s population of about 49 million. Many are Zimbabweans who fled economic collapse at home.

Gunmen, bombs target Iraq central bank

(Reuters) – Fifteen people were killed and dozens wounded Sunday when suicide bombers detonated at least one bomb at Iraq’s central bank and gunmen battled troops in what officials said may have been a raid on the vaults.

World

The attack occurred as bank employees were leaving work, sending a thick plume of smoke over Baghdad after the bank’s generator was set ablaze.

Security sources gave conflicting accounts of what actually happened, and some said the attackers had been disguised in military uniforms — a tactic not uncommon in Iraq.

Soldiers and police locked down Baghdad’s main arteries, with the capital on high alert for the first session of Iraq’s new parliament Monday after a March election that has yet to yield a government.

Troops came under fire from gunmen as they surrounded the bank in case the initial bombing was part of a plan to plunder stockpiles of Iraqi dinars and U.S. dollars, said Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi.

“It’s not clear to us whether this was a robbery or an attempt to cause destruction,” said Moussawi. “But we can definitely say they targeted the central bank.”

Interior Ministry sources said 15 people were killed and 45 wounded. Moussawi told state television there were also four suicide bombers and three gunmen, all of whom were killed. One Interior Ministry source said dozens of attackers in military uniforms were involved and most escaped.

A central bank official, who asked not to be identified, said security forces had ordered all employees and civilians to stay inside while helicopters hovered over the site.

“The security forces warned us that if anyone moves, they will shoot them,” the official said. “They let us out after they checked our badges.”

“This was a robbery,” he said.

RECENT ROBBERIES

Recent weeks have seen a spurt of deadly gold market robberies and attacks by suspected Sunni Islamist insurgents as tensions simmer following the inconclusive March election.

Many of the groups that took up arms after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein have turned to crime as the sectarian war and al Qaeda-led insurgency fade. Gunmen killed 14 people on May 25 in a raid on Baghdad goldsmiths and three on June 9 in an attack on a gold market in southern Basra.

The attackers did not gain entry to the central bank’s main building but were driven to the rooftops of neighboring buildings within its fortified compound, the bank official said.

Overall violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the height of sectarian bloodshed in 2006/07. But Sunni Islamist insurgents have sought to exploit the political uncertainty that followed the March 7 election through bombings and assassinations.

The number of civilians killed in violence each month has climbed slowly but steadily since the March vote.

A cross-sectarian alliance heavily backed by the once dominant Sunni minority won the most seats, but the main Shi’ite factions have agreed to form the largest unified bloc in parliament, potentially giving them the muscle to claim the right to form a government.

It is likely to still take weeks if not months for a deal on a government, potentially leaving Iraq rudderless as the U.S. military ends combat operations in August ahead of a full troop withdrawal by the end of 2011.

(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Michael Christie and Matthew Robinson; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Gunmen, bombs target Iraq central bank, killing 15

(Reuters) – Fifteen people were killed and dozens wounded Sunday when suicide bombers detonated at least one bomb at Iraq’s central bank and gunmen battled troops in what officials said may have been a raid on the vaults.

World

The attack occurred as bank employees were leaving work, sending a thick plume of smoke over Baghdad after the bank’s generator was set ablaze.

Security sources gave conflicting accounts of what actually happened, and some said the attackers had been disguised in military uniforms — a tactic not uncommon in Iraq.

Soldiers and police locked down Baghdad’s main arteries, with the capital on high alert for the first session of Iraq’s new parliament Monday after a March election that has yet to yield a government.

Troops came under fire from gunmen as they surrounded the bank in case the initial bombing was part of a plan to plunder stockpiles of Iraqi dinars and U.S. dollars, said Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi.

“It’s not clear to us whether this was a robbery or an attempt to cause destruction,” said Moussawi. “But we can definitely say they targeted the central bank.”

Interior Ministry sources said 15 people were killed and 45 wounded. Moussawi told state television there were also four suicide bombers and three gunmen, all of whom were killed. One Interior Ministry source said dozens of attackers in military uniforms were involved and most escaped.

A central bank official, who asked not to be identified, said security forces had ordered all employees and civilians to stay inside while helicopters hovered over the site.

“The security forces warned us that if anyone moves, they will shoot them,” the official said. “They let us out after they checked our badges.”

“This was a robbery,” he said.

RECENT ROBBERIES

Recent weeks have seen a spurt of deadly gold market robberies and attacks by suspected Sunni Islamist insurgents as tensions simmer following the inconclusive March election.

Many of the groups that took up arms after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein have turned to crime as the sectarian war and al Qaeda-led insurgency fade. Gunmen killed 14 people on May 25 in a raid on Baghdad goldsmiths and three on June 9 in an attack on a gold market in southern Basra.

The attackers did not gain entry to the central bank’s main building but were driven to the rooftops of neighboring buildings within its fortified compound, the bank official said.

Overall violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the height of sectarian bloodshed in 2006/07. But Sunni Islamist insurgents have sought to exploit the political uncertainty that followed the March 7 election through bombings and assassinations.

The number of civilians killed in violence each month has climbed slowly but steadily since the March vote.

A cross-sectarian alliance heavily backed by the once dominant Sunni minority won the most seats, but the main Shi’ite factions have agreed to form the largest unified bloc in parliament, potentially giving them the muscle to claim the right to form a government.

It is likely to still take weeks if not months for a deal on a government, potentially leaving Iraq rudderless as the U.S. military ends combat operations in August ahead of a full troop withdrawal by the end of 2011.

(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Michael Christie and Matthew Robinson; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Gunmen, bombs target Iraq central bank, killing 15

BAGHDAD, June 13 (Reuters) – Fifteen people were killed and dozens wounded on Sunday when suicide bombers detonated at least one bomb at Iraq’s central bank and gunmen battled troops in what officials said may have been a raid on the vaults.

The attack occurred as bank employees were leaving work, sending a thick plume of smoke over Baghdad after the bank’s generator was set ablaze.

Security sources gave conflicting accounts of what actually happened, and some said the attackers had been disguised in military uniforms — a tactic not uncommon in Iraq.

Soldiers and police locked down Baghdad’s main arteries, with the capital on high alert for the first session of Iraq’s new parliament on Monday after a March election that has yet to yield a government.

Troops came under fire from gunmen as they surrounded the bank in case the initial bombing was part of a plan to plunder stockpiles of Iraqi dinars and U.S. dollars, said Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi.

“It’s not clear to us whether this was a robbery or an attempt to cause destruction,” said Moussawi. “But we can definitely say they targeted the central bank.”

Interior Ministry sources said 15 people were killed and 45 wounded. Moussawi told state television there were also four suicide bombers and three gunmen, all of whom were killed. One Interior Ministry source said dozens of attackers in military uniforms were involved and most escaped.

A central bank official, who asked not to be identified, said security forces had ordered all employees and civilians to stay inside while helicopters hovered over the site.

“The security forces warned us that if anyone moves, they will shoot them,” the official said. “They let us out after they checked our badges.”

“This was a robbery,” he said.

RECENT ROBBERIES

Recent weeks have seen a spurt of deadly gold market robberies and attacks by suspected Sunni Islamist insurgents as tensions simmer following the inconclusive March election.

Many of the groups that took up arms after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein have turned to crime as the sectarian war and al Qaeda-led insurgency fade. Gunmen killed 14 people on May 25 in a raid on Baghdad goldsmiths and three on June 9 in an attack on a gold market in southern Basra.

The attackers did not gain entry to the central bank’s main building but were driven to the rooftops of neighbouring buildings within its fortified compound, the bank official said.

Overall violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the height of sectarian bloodshed in 2006/07. But Sunni Islamist insurgents have sought to exploit the political uncertainty that followed the March 7 election through bombings and assassinations.

The number of civilians killed in violence each month has climbed slowly but steadily since the March vote.

A cross-sectarian alliance heavily backed by the once dominant Sunni minority won the most seats, but the main Shi’ite factions have agreed to form the largest unified bloc in parliament, potentially giving them the muscle to claim the right to form a government.

It is likely to still take weeks if not months for a deal on a government, potentially leaving Iraq rudderless as the U.S. military ends combat operations in August ahead of a full troop withdrawal by the end of 2011. (Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Michael Christie and Matthew Robinson; Editing by Matthew Jones)

12 killed in bomb, gun battle at Iraq central bank

June 13 (Reuters) – At least 12 people were killed and 22 wounded on Sunday after a bomb attack on Iraq’s central bank and a subsequent gun battle between security forces and gunmen, officials said.

The attackers, who might have been attempting to rob the bank’s vaults, had ended up on the rooftops of some of the buildings within the Central Bank of Iraq’s compound, said a bank spokesman. (Reporting by Suadad al-Salhy; Writing by Michael Christie;

Gunmen attack Pakistan hospital in Lahore, kill 12

LAHORE, Pakistan, June 1 (Reuters) – At least three gunmen attacked a hospital in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore on Tuesday, killing 12 people and holding several hostage, a senior doctor told Reuters.

“They barged into the hospital building and opened indiscriminate fire,” said Javed Ikram, Chief Executive of Jinnah hospital.

He said at least 12 people were killed in the firing while some had been held hostage.

Dozens of people wounded in Friday’s attacks on two mosques of a minority religious community in the city were being treated in the hospital, which is a major institution in the city. More than 80 people were killed in those attacks.

“We have surrounded the hospital and an operation is underway,” senior city government official, Sajjad Bhutta, said.

A witness told Reuters that a police commando team had stormed into the hospital.

One hospital official, who declined to be identified, said the gunmen killed one of the attackers from Friday’s assault who was being treated in the Intensive Care Unit. (Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore, and Kamran Haider and Zeeshan Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Jon Boyle and Chris Allbritton)

Couple stoned to death in Andhra Pradesh

Hyderabad, May 27 (IANS) A couple, who had eloped and married, was stoned to death in what appears to be a case of honour killing in Andhra Pradesh’s Nizamabad district.

Irate residents of Krishnajivadi village rained stones on the couple after tying them to a pole, police said Thursday.

The macabre incident occurred late Wednesday night in Telangana region, about 250 km from here.

Sunkara Srinivas, 32, belonging to the Scheduled Caste (SC), and 22-year-old Swapna Reddy, belonging to an upper caste, had eloped and married six months ago.

Swapna’s family was against the alliance as Srinivas was from a lower caste and already married. He had two children from his first wife.

The newly married couple lived in Hyderabad for sometime as Srinivas was working as a computer operator in a private firm.

They returned to the village three days ago. Swapna’s relatives called the couple on the pretext of discussing some issues. Following an argument, they started thrashing Srinivas and when Swapna tried to protect him, they attacked her as well.

The couple was then tied to a pole and the attackers, numbering about 30, pelted stones on them leading to their death.

Police has registered a case and arrested three people.

Bombs kill two, wound 28 in Thai Muslim south

Two bombs exploded in quick succession in Thailand’s restive Muslim south on Wednesday, killing two people and wounding at least 28, police said.

The first bomb, hidden in a motorcycle, exploded near a car showroom in Yala province, 1,100 km (680 miles) south of Bangkok, police said. As rescue workers and bomb squads arrived at the scene, the second bomb exploded in a street 30 metres away.

More than 3,900 people, both Buddhists and Muslims, have been killed in six years of unrest in the largely Muslim, rubber-rich region bordering Malaysia.

Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat provinces were part of an independent sultanate known as Patani until annexed in 1909 by predominantly Buddhist Thailand.

The attackers, believed to be separatists, often target Buddhists and Muslims associated with the Thai state such as police officers, soldiers, government officials and teachers.

No credible group has claimed responsibility for attacks in the region, where a majority of the people speak a Malay dialect as their first language and have long complained of discrimination, especially in education and job opportunities.

(Reporting by Surapan Boonthanom in Yala and Panarat Thepgumpanat; Writing by Nopporn Wong-Anan; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Chinese police warns of crackdown on potential school attackers

New Delhi, May 15 (ANI): Police in China have warned that they will impose the law of the land �firmly� and �without hesitation� when dealing with anti-social elements like the men who brutally slashed elementary school children in two separate incidents.

Wu Heping, a spokesman for the Ministry of Public Security, told a press conference in Beijing that the killing of innocent children must be condemned by the whole society.

“If offenders dare to attempt such crimes again, the police will enforce the law firmly without hesitation, in line with the Criminal Law and police code of using guns and other weapons,” the Xinhua news agency quoted Wu as saying.

Schools have emerged as soft targets for such misanthropes and with a view to tighten security arrangements and fill in the gaps the police will be conducting a thorough inspection of schools nationwide. Especially in private schools and those in remote or rural areas.

In Beijing, police will patrol all schools ten minutes prior to the students� arrival and ten minutes before the final bell rings.

Addressing the social causes that might have generated the fury of the stabbers Wu said, “We will also work to help solve disputes, and provide psychological counselling for people suffering mental problems.� (ANI)

3 arrests in Times Square bomb probe

Investigators arrested three people linked to the suspect in the failed Times Square bombing during raids on Thursday in suburbs of New York, Boston and Philadelphia, but officials said there was no new threat.

The three arrested may have provided money to the accused bomber Faisal Shahzad, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said.

The Boston-area searches occurred at a house in Watertown, where two people were known to have been taken into custody, and at a gasoline station in affluent Brookline.

Federal agents could be seen carrying boxes, envelopes and a crowbar out of the multifamily building in Watertown, a working-class town with a large Middle-Eastern community.

Massachusetts authorities said the people had been under surveillance for some time but did not specify how long.

“These are people who are connected to Mr. Shahzad, we’re still trying to determine exactly what the nature of that connection was,” Holder told reporters in Washington.

“There’s at least a basis to believe that one of the things that they did was provide him with funds,” he said, calling the arrests a significant step.

He said investigators were looking into whether those arrested knew what the money would be used for. “That’s one of the things we’re going to be trying to determine,” he said.

A law enforcement source said the two people arrested near Boston were Pakistani.

The third arrest occurred in South Portland, Maine, according to local media.

Portland, Maine, was the site where two accused Sept. 11 attackers, one of them suspected mastermind Mohammed Atta, left to fly to Boston, where they hijacked one of the jetliners that crashed into the World Trade Center.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in New York and the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Washington said earlier that the three people were taken into custody for alleged immigration-related violations.

The New York searches occurred in the towns of Shirley and Centereach on suburban Long Island, while the searches in New Jersey took place in Cherry Hill and in Camden, not far from Philadelphia. The FBI said there were no arrests in New York or New Jersey.

NO KNOWN THREAT

Also on Thursday, President Barack Obama visited New York Police Department headquarters to thank officers involved in the Times Square case.

The searches follow the arrest of Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad, who was detained aboard a Dubai-bound jetliner two days after the car containing a crude bomb was found parked on May 1 in Times Square.

He has been charged with attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and trying to kill and maim people.

Shahzad has admitted to the failed plot and to receiving bomb-making training in a Taliban and al Qaeda stronghold in Pakistan, prosecutors said, but he claims to have acted alone.

Holder said the searches were “the product of evidence that has been gathered in the investigation since the attempted Times Square bombing and do not relate to any known immediate threat to the public or active plot against the United States.”

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the failed bombing attempt. If proven, it would be the group’s first act in the United States.

“We now believe that the Pakistan Taliban was responsible for the attempted attack,” Holder said.

Investigators are also looking at possible links to the Kashmiri Islamist group.

In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that despite its recent improved efforts, Pakistan must do more to fight against extremists on its soil.

“We think that there is more that has to be done and we do fear the consequences of a successful attack that can be traced back to Pakistan because we value a more comprehensive relationship,” she said at the U.S. Institute of Peace.

The Al Jazeera news agency, citing a tape provided by Taliban Pakistan, reported a statement from Taliban spokesman Azam Tariq as saying: “God willing, one of those days, a car like this will explode in America.

“And America will not be the only target but also all the countries which are allied with it. America and all its allies will burn,” the statement said.

(Additional reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky and Sue Pleming in Washington, Ros Krasny in Boston and Ross Colvin, Daniel Trotta, Michelle Nichols and Christine Kearney in New York; Editing by Philip Barbara)

Hillary’s statement on bin Laden an insult to Pak: JeI chief

Lahore, May 12 (ANI): Jamaat-e-Islami chief Syed Munawar Hasan has said that the allegations made by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton against Pakistan regarding Osama bin Laden and Taliban supremo Mullah Umar amount to a blatant insult to the government, people and the armed forces.

Clinton had accused that there were people in the Pakistani Government who knew the whereabouts of bin Laden and Mullah Omar, and asked Islamabad to increase cooperation to capture or kill all the attackers of 9/11.

In a statement on Tuesday, the JI chief stressed upon Islamabad to protest against Hilary’s statements and also announce pulling out of this “crusade” against al-Qaeda and the Taliban, telling Washington that “enough is enough.”

Syed Munawar Hasan said former US President George W Bush had blamed bin Laden for the 9/11 tragedy without any investigation and had announced that Osama would be captured soon, dead or alive.

He said the US, despite its latest technology and resources, had failed to get hold of bin Laden during the last nine years and was now putting the blame on Pakistan only to hide its embarrassment, The News reports.

He also said that Faisal Shahzad’s drama was also staged to intensify pressure on Islamabad.

He said even if Faisal Shahzad was involved in the Time Square plot, there was no reason to blame Pakistan for an individual’s act and issue threats on this count. (ANI)

Rapid social change led to kid-stabbing spree in China

Beijing, May 11 (IANS) Stress brought about by rapid social changes created tension and caused mental illness which led attackers in China stab over 60 schoolchildren in a string of knife attacks in less than two months, experts have said.

There has been five attacks against kindergarten and primary schoolchildren in China since late March, one of which caused eight deaths.

A mentally-unstable 41-year-old doctor, Zheng Minsheng, who stabbed eight schoolchildren to death in Fujian province’s Nanping Experimental Elementary School March 23, admitted in court that he ‘intentionally’ killed them. Zheng earlier said he wanted to stab more than 30 children.

Zheng had, however, asked the court to pay more attention to what prompted him to commit the crime rather than to the crime itself. He said he just wanted an ordinary life like others but failed. He felt his life was meaningless as he was not married, had been unsuccessful in relations with women, his family and in his career. He repeatedly told the judge he had been turned down by a woman and suffered unfair treatment from her wealthy family, which prompted him to carry out the attack.

In the second incident, 28 children were stabbed April 29 by a 47-year-old unemployed man at Zhongxin Kindergarten in Taixing city in Jiangsu province, while a day earlier, 16 primary school students were stabbed by a mentally-unstable 33-year-old man at the Leicheng First Primary School in Guangdong province’s Leizhou city.

In the third attack in as many days, a farmer from Shangzhuang village in Shandong province, immolated himself April 30 after viciously hitting five kindergarten children and a teacher with a hammer at a school in the province.

Joshua Miller, chair of the Social Welfare Policy and Services Sequence at Smith College, in Northampton, Massachusetts, said attacking children was a way stressed people call for attention and help.

‘The string of school attacks occur when society causes stress on people, like rapid social change, mass migrations, increasing disparities in wealth and weakening of traditions,’ Miller was quoted as saying this weekend by CNC World, Xinhua’s satellite news television channel.

‘People usually believe children are safe at school, while recent assaults violate the trust, frighten parents, and shake the heart of society,’ Miller said.

Meanwhile, Han Buxin, a research fellow with the Institute of Psychology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said the attacks reflected social conflicts.

‘People suffering from mental disorder could also attack people, but the suspects of recent cases made careful plans,’ Han said.

‘Psychological therapy could alleviate the social stress to some extent, but extending monitoring and treatment across the whole country would be unfeasible,’ he said.

According to a study done by Han, in China about three percent of the population were facing the challenge of mental disorders. ‘This number is too big for the government to handle,’ he said.

Han said people should be advised on how to release pressure, which could act as a precaution against stress-caused attacks.

Footballer shot dead in Mexico

Mexico City, May 8 (DPA) A 21-year-old footballer who was active in the second category of Mexican football was shot dead in an apparent hold-up in southern Mexico City, his club said.

Ademir Meza played for Pumas Morelos, the second team of Mexican football giants Pumas de la UNAM. He was shot dead late Thursday inside his car, on a Mexico City avenue.

Police said the defender had resisted an attempt by two people travelling in another vehicle to rob him.

The city’s Justice Ministry said Meza and a passenger had been followed by another vehicle, possibly a taxi, that tried to block their way in the Pedregal de Santo Domingo neighbourhood.

The authorities said one of the attackers had a firearm and shot the player. The paramedics deployed to deal with the emergency could not save Meza’s life. The person who was travelling with him was unhurt.

This is the second case of a shooting involving a football player in Mexico City this year.

Top striker Salvador Cabanas, a pillar of the America team in Mexico and of the Paraguay national team, was shot in the head at a bar in January. Cabanas was seriously injured but survived and is currently recovering in Argentina, although the bullet remains lodged in his head and his return to professional football is uncertain.

Prison warden shot dead in Guatemala

Guatemala City, May 7 (IANS/EFE) The warden of a maximum security prison in Guatemala’s Santa Rosa province has been gunned down by unidentified assailants, authorities said.

Mario Rene Zuniga, 29, who was appointed a year ago to run the El Boqueron prison, was enjoying a day off, when the attackers shot at him from outside his residence in Jutiapa city Wednesday, interior ministry officials said Thursday.

Zuniga died at the spot of a head wound, they said, adding that the motive for the murder was not known.

In July 2009, the then-deputy warden of El Boqueron, Luis Rene Ibanez, was also shot at while driving. The assailants were armed with AK-47 assault rifles.

El Boqueron prison holds more than 140 people awaiting trial including those involved in murder.

Pak Taliban supports Shahzad’s ‘noble’ work, but disowns him

Islamabad, May 7 (ANI): The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has denied having links with failed Times Square bombing plotter Faisal Shahzad, but said it supports his ‘noble job’ and that other Muslim youths should also follow him.

A self-proclaimed spokesperson of the TTP, Azam Tariq rejected reports regarding Shahzad being trained in bomb making by the Taliban.

“We have no connection with Faisal Shahzad.We don’t know him… we did not train him,” Tariq told The Daily Times over the telephone from an undisclosed location.

“This is a noble job and we pray that all the Muslim youths should follow Faisal Shahzad. But he is not part of our network,” he added.

Tariq also warned of terror strikes across the US and Europe, saying its attackers have already landed in those countries.

“We will be attacking in a new style against the United States and its allies. Our people have reached the US and other European countries and soon will be attacking,” he said.

The TTP had initially accepted the responsibility for the botched terror plot through a video posted on the internet. Soon after, another video emerged, which was said to be of the TTP’s chieftain Hakeemullah Mehsud, who warned of attacks on American soil.

Tariq, however, claimed that the Times Square bombing plot was actually a handiwork of the US and its associate countries, which he said was a part of a larger conspiracy against Muslims and Pashtuns.

“This was a plot hatched by the US and its allies to trap Muslim and Pukhtun (Pashtuns) youth in terrorist activities. This is a conspiracy of the US and its allies against Muslims and the Pukhtuns to defame them,” he said. (ANI)

Major Sandeep Unnikrishnan”s father hails Kasab”s death sentence

Bangalore, May 7 (ANI): K. Unnikrishnan, the father of late Major Sandeep Unnikrishnan who was martyred during the 26/11 Mumbai attack, has termed the death sentence awarded to Pakistani gunman Ajmal Amir Kasab, as a symbolic punishment and wished the sentence is executed at the earliest.

Major Sandeep, an officer of Indian Army and deputed to the National Security Guards, the crack commando outfit, died fighting militants outside the Taj Hotel in Mumbai.
“There is no question of satisfaction, but this is a symbolic punishment with a symbolic judgement. We can”t bring any victim back, that”s the tragic thing, and we definitely have to do much more, to at least to have…this is just the first step, second step should be to reduce the time,” said Unnikrishnan.

In Kakra Dubwal, an obscure village in Allahabad district, the family members and friends of Phool Chand, a taxi driver who was shot dead by the Mumbai attackers also welcomed the judgement.

However, Sanju Devi, the widow of Phool Chand said that she would be satisfied only when Kasab is hung.

“I will be satisfied only when I see that he (Kasab) is hanged,” she added.
Judge M L Tahiliyani awarded a death sentence to Kasab for waging war against India, murder, conspiracy to murder, and participating in an act of terror under Unlawful Activity Prevention Act (UAPA).

Judge Tahaliyani felt that Kasab”s crime fell under the judicial definition of “rarest of rare” cases.

Judge Tahiliyani also awarded a life term to Kasab on five other counts.

Judge Tahiliyani also felt that having Kasab alive could pose perpetual danger to the nation.

He also added that Kasab was a menace to society.

Immediately after pronouncement of the death sentence, Judge Tahaliyani sent his order for confirmation to the Bombay High Court.

The death penalty will not be implemented immediately as it has to be confirmed by the High Court.

Kasab has the option of appealing to higher courts, and can also file a mercy petition for the consideration of the President of India.

Earlier, Kasab was pronounced guilty on Monday and the prosecution and defence ended their arguments on the quantum of sentence to be handed out on Tuesday. (ANI)

Ex-FBI officer says US can expect more “unguided missiles” like Shahzad

New York, May 6 (ANI): A former FBI official has said that a shift in terrorist strategy, coupled with an imperfect system for detecting threats, will allow more “unguided missiles” like foiled Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad to carry out potentially disastrous attacks on American soil.

“What we”re starting to see more and more, the unguided missiles. By that I mean, they”re given some training in terrorism, and then they”re just told to go do something, without control, without anything else. And that”s kind of frightening,” Skip Brandon, a former assistant director of the FBI, told CBS” “The Early Show”.

Michigan Republican lawmaker Peter Hoekstra agreed with Brandaon’s assessment, saying that in the past it was always thought al Qaeda … wanted to do another attack against the United States, but having realized that this would be very hard to accomplish, they have resorted to using splinter groups to cause maximum damage.

Hoekstra also questioned whether the United States was using all the tools at its disposal to guard against these unassuming attackers.

“I think that there are certain tools that we should have available that we”re not using right now,” he said.

Both expressed surprise over Shahzad managing to board a Dubai-bound plane, even after he had been added to the federal no-fly list.

“Well, this is the question of the day. How could this happen?” Brandon said.

“This is not necessarily rocket science, and we”ve had a long time to work out all the glitches. It shouldn”t have happened. But, in the end, we also have to remember, that, in fact, it did work. Very close call on it, but it did work,” he added.

Brandon said the system ” has to be reviewed, and fine tuned.” (ANI)

Mumbai attack victims demand capital punishment for Kasab

Kakra Dubawal (Uttar Pradesh), May 5 (ANI): Family members of Phool Chand, the Mumbai taxi driver who was shot dead by the 26/11 attackers after they hired his cab to reach their targets, have said Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist must be given capital punishment.

Phool Chand”s vehicle was commandeered by the attackers after they entered Mumbai through the Arabian Sea on reaching their destination, they shot him dead.

“I would be satisfied only when the man who has killed my husband would be hanged,” said Sanju Devi, Phool Chand”s widow.

“We are satisfied to a certain extent, but we will be completely satisfied only when he will be given a death sentence and we will hear that he is dead,” said Subhash Prajapati, his brother.

Mumbai Special Court has fixed May 6 as the day to announce the quantum of punishment on Kasab.

Earlier, Mumbai Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam had formally demanded the death penalty for Kasab. Nikam said that Kasab wanted to inspire others to take part in fidayeen or suicide attacks.

He also called Kasab a killing machine manufactured in Pakistan.

On Monday, it pronounced a verdict in a courtroom at the Arthur Road Jail here. Judge M L Tahiliyani declared Kasab guilty of all 86 charges filed against him.

The charges against Kasab include waging war against India, murder, abetting to murder, attempt to murder, violation of the Arms Act, Explosives Act, the Unlawful Activity Prevention Act (UAPA) and others.

However, in an unexpected move, the court found two Indian co-accused– Faheem Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed – not guilty and said they must be acquitted of all charges due to lack of evidence.

For the first time in Indian judicial history, it was established in a court of law that Pakistan was involved in an act of terrorism and of waging war against India.
The court also said the DNA test conducted on the seven dead terrorists matched prints collected from the boat ”Kuber”.

It said the evidence proved that Additional Commissioner of Police Ashok Kamte had died of a bullet fired by terrorist Abu Ismail, while it was not established who killed Maharashtra ATS chief Hemant Karkare and encounter specialist Inspector Vijay Saluskar.

The trial, perhaps the fastest in a terror case in India, commenced on May 8, 2009.
Kasab along with nine other terrorists, who were killed during the gun battle with security forces in Mumbai have been charged with killing 166 people, including 25 foreigners. (ANI)

Pak hopes India responds positively to Kasab custody request

Pakistan on Wednesday contended that it wanted custody of Ajmal Kasab, the lone terrorist held during the Mumbai attacks, because of legal requirements and hoped that India would respond positively to its request for handing him over.

“That is a legal requirement… India is currently examining our request and we hope that they will get back with a positive response,” Pakistan Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit told reporters here when asked why his country has demanded handing over of Kasab.

Kasab, a Pakistani-national, was among 10 terrorists who struck in Mumbai on November 26, 2008. While nine of the attackers were killed, Kasab was caught during the gun-fight.

He is currently undergoing trial in Mumbai and the court will give verdict on May 3.

India has already indicated that it was not possible to hand him over as the legal processes against him were going on in the country.

On the possibility of meeting between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani, Basit said there was “confusion” in India.

“As our Foreign Minister has said time has come for India to make up its mind as to what kind of engagement it wants. It seems there is some confusion,” the Pakistani spokesman said.

He said, “India has to make up its mind because there are serious issues involved and this confusion will give advantage to forces which are against (normal relations) between the two countries”.

He added, “this (proposed) meeting was part of our roadmap which was given to India in New York by our Foreign Minister (Shah Mahmood Qureshi) to Indian External Affairs Minister (S M Krishna) and then again by our Foreign Secretary (Salman Bashir) to Indian Foreign Secretary (Nirupama Rao) on February 25 in New Delhi.

Queried about Pakistan’s stand when a meeting between the Prime Ministers takes place, Basit said both the countries have realised that there has to be a meaningful and constructive dialogue.

“… our Prime Minister’s effort will be to start such an engagement so that all the issues of terrorism and others are solved”.

Asked whether Krishna and Qureshi had a meeting here on sidelines of SAARC Foreign Ministers’ meeting, he said they did shake hands but there was no formal meeting between them.

“No formal or informal meeting happened,” he insisted when asked if there was an informal interaction.

On the arrest of an Indian diplomat posted in Islamabad on charges of spying for ISI, the Pakistan Foreign Office spokesman dubbed it as an “internal matter” about which his government has not been told anything officially.

He said the incident would have no bearing on SAARC activities.

Four policemen killed, six injured in suicide attack on check post in NWFP

Peshawar, Apr.28 (ANI): The Taliban continues to target security forces in the restive tribal areas of Pakistan, as four policemen were killed and six wounded in a suicide attack near the Pir Bala police checkpost in the North West Frontier Province’s (NWFP) Bannu District on Wednesday.

The attackers rammed their explosive laden vehicle into the police checkpost resulting in the death of four security officials, a senior police official in Peshawar, Liaquat Ali, said.

The injured policemen have been admitted to a local hospital. The death toll may rise as the condition of some of those injured is stated to be critical, hospital sources said.

The explosion was so powerful that is destroyed the check post completely. Several nearby buildings were also damaged in the blast, The News reports.

Last week, militants targeted an Army convoy in Dattakhel area of North Waziristan killing seven soldiers and injuring 25 others.

Six vehicles were destroyed in the attack, which was said to have been carried out by supporters of a powerful Taliban commander Maulvi Saddiq Noor.

Noor belongs to the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group, which had attacked a military convoy in Wecha Bibi area last year and killed 23 soldiers. (ANI)