US Ku Klux Klan ex-leader ordered to leave Czech Republic

Prague – Czech police said Saturday they had released David Duke, former leader of US extremist group the Ku Klux Klan, and ordered him to leave the Czech Republic by midnight. On Friday, police charged Duke with the hate crime of supporting and promoting movements suppressing human rights.

Duke had planned to give talks this weekend in the capital as well as in the country’s second largest city of Brno. He is visiting the Czech Republic at the invitation of local neo-Nazis to publicize the translation of his 1998 memoir, My Awakening.

Contrary to earlier statements, the state attorney on Saturday decided against asking the court to keep Duke in custody, police spokesman Jan Mikulovsky told the German Press Agency dpa.

While police could have held Duke for 48 hours without court’s consent, they decided to release him as he had been already questioned, the spokesman said. Upon release, the Czech Republic’s immigration police ordered him to depart the country on Saturday.

Police said they charged Duke for allegedly denying the Holocaust in a translated book he had come to promote.

“In his book he is promoting views that show signs of denying the Holocaust,” Mikulovsky told dpa.

Denying that the systematic mass murder of Jews and other minorities by Nazi Germany took place is a hate crime in the Czech Republic punishable by up to three years in prison.

Earlier this week, Prague’s Charles University banned a lecture by Duke for a class on extremism. The university said it cancelled it out of a fear that it could have been attended by neo-Nazis.

Political activities of Czech far-right groups have been on a rise in recent months, including provocative marches through Roma ghettos.

Duke, 58, is a white supremacist and a supporter of racial segregation. Aside from being a former chief of the Ku Klux Klan, he had served as a lawmaker in the Louisiana’s House of Representative and unsuccessfully ran for US president. (dpa)

Sony invites wrath of Hindus by releasing “Hanuman: Boy Warrior”

Sony Corporation has inadvertently invited the wrath of many Hindu groups by releasing its new video console game “Hanuman: Boy Warrior” for its PlayStation2. The Hindus from many parts of the world are feeling hurt and angry that Sony has used the Hindu god as the protagonist in the video game.

Hindus have launched protest movements against Sony, demanding the immediate removal of the video game from the market. The US and Australia-based Hindu groups have started online protest campaign against Sony.

“Hindus in Australia and USA have started this movement and posted their requests on the web. Till this time, there has been no direct communication with the said groups and we haven’t received any intimation from them officially,” said SCEE (Sony Computer Entertainment Europe) PlayStation country manager Atindriya Bose.

The protesting Hindu groups are not only demanding the removal of the video game from the market, but are also seeking an apology from Sony. According to Rajan Zed, the president of Universal Society of Hinduism, Sony’s video game “trivializes the highly revered deity of Hinduism”. According to Vamsi Krishna of Sanatan Sanstha (Australia), it is “very disrespectful, disgraceful and an insult to all those devotees of Lord Hanuman and followers of Hindu dharma.”

Vamsi Krishna has stated that this video game should be removed from the market, with immediate effect, before it causes further unrest in the Hindu community worldwide and Sony should offer serious apology to the Hindus.

According to Bhavna Shinde of Forum for Hindu Awakening, the use of “sacred figure from Hinduism, namely, the Hindus’ revered Deity, Sree Hanuman, as a character in a video game is highly objectionable to us, Hindus worldwide.” She has demanded that Sony should “withdraw this video game, “Hanuman: Boy Warrior” at the earliest, and publish an apology to the Hindu community and Hanuman devotees worldwide.” She has requested the video game distributors and vendors to exclude “Hanuman: Boy Warrior”.

On the contrary, according to Bose, “Hanuman: Boy Warrior” is appealing to the Indian Hindu audiences. When Mr. Bose was asked that what was Sony planning to do in response to the Hindu protests, Bose replied, “Since we are not aware of their exact point of objection, we are in no position to comment on our plan of action. However, we are keeping a tab of the situation and hope to resolve it soon.”

“Hanuman: Boy Warrior” is the game owned by Sony Computer Entertainment Europe’s (SCEE). It is the first game that Sony has released in Hindi and English languages. It is available for Rs 499.

INTERVIEW-Iraq Sunni anti-Qaeda leader eyes Shi’ite alliance

* Welcomes steps by Iraqi prime minister

* Says Sunnis and Shi’ites must work together

By Mohammed Abbas

RAMADI, Iraq, April 12 (Reuters) – A senior leader in a Sunni Arab movement founded to combat al Qaeda in Iraq is edging away from the military activity of the past, towards a once unthinkable alliance with the country’s Shi’ite prime minister.

Sheikh Ahmed Abu Risha is head of the Awakening Conference, a political party born out of an armed movement that uprooted al Qaeda and other militants from Anbar province in western Iraq, once the deadliest place for U.S. forces in Iraq.

Abu Risha’s renunciation of armed struggle and steps toward working with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki could be a landmark in new political cooperation between Iraq’s majority Shi’ites and minority Sunnis after years of bloodshed.

“The prime minister’s initiatives have been positive,” said Abu Risha, who is considering an alliance with Maliki’s State of Law coalition, which like the Awakening Conference made major gains in provincial elections in January.

Such an alliance before parliamentary polls in December could add momentum to nationalist political sentiment in Iraq, which helped propel Maliki to victory over religious groups.

“If we want a unified Iraq, we must work in that direction, on unifying Sunnis and Shi’ites to build one country,” he said.

The sheikh, dressed in Arab head dress, robe and aviator sunglasses, fired a rifle into the air with one hand to herald his party’s confirmation as head of a new coalition dominating Anbar’s provincial council.

Abu Risha inherited the movement from his late brother, Sheikh Abdul Sattar, who from 2006 onwards rallied thousands of Sunni Arab supporters to take up arms against al Qaeda in Anbar.

The Sunni Arab militias, dubbed Awakening Councils or Majalis al Sahwa in Arabic, quickly found U.S. backing and spread across Iraq. The militiamen, who numbered up to 100,000, are credited with helping curb violence across Iraq. [See also IRAQ/AWAKENING (FACTBOX) ID:nL8203902]

Abu Risha says the time for militias has ended. “We are a political, not an armed, group,” he said, even as his supporters’ celebratory gunfire echoed across the countryside.

SAHWA TENSIONS

The Shi’ite-led government, keen to end the years of bloodshed which followed the U.S.-led invasion, wants to disarm militias, and has pledged to absorb a fifth of the Sahwa into its security forces and give others civilian jobs and training.

But the presence of many former Sunni insurgents among the Sahwa has led to tensions that recently erupted into violence after Iraqi forces arrested senior Sahwa members in Baghdad.

Abu Risha stressed that his party had nothing to do with the Sahwa militias that clashed with government forces in Baghdad.

“We are keen to ensure our name is not sullied,” he said.

Abu Risha also warned that al Qaeda may be trying to foment strife between the government and Sahwa militias and prevent other possible alliances with militia members.

“Al Qaeda sometimes pushes people to report on the Sahwa because they carried out operations against them,” he said.

“Al Qaeda’s aim is for no one to stand with the government in future.”

Despite its Shi’ite Islamist roots, Maliki’s nationalist, non-sectarian message played well in January’s polls, and Abu Risha now appears keen to embrace the same platform.

The Islamic Party, Iraq’s biggest Sunni Arab party, has dominated Anbar’s council for four years, but came in third in January’s polls. Abu Risha dismissed the party.

“It is a party of religion and dogma. We are about politics and economics,” he said. (Editing by Jonathan Wright)

Suicide bombing kills 9 in Iraq: Army

At least nine people were killed and another 23 wounded on Saturday when a suicide bomber struck the headquarters of a US-allied Sunni militia south of Baghdad, an Iraqi army officer said.

The bomber detonated his payload as an Iraqi army contingent was visiting the headquarters of the local Sahwa “Awakening” movement to pay salaries, Lieutenant Haidar al-Lami said.

He added that the killed and wounded included Sahwas and soldiers. The Sahwas, former Sunni insurgents who allied with US forces beginning in 2006 to drive out Al-Qaida in Iraq, have played a crucial role in improving security in the war-battered country.

Sundance Institute’s executive director resigns

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Ken Brecher has resigned as executive director of the Sundance Institute, which oversees the Sundance Film Festival, among other programs. He held the post for 14 years.

His move reflects a further changing of the guard at the Utah-based indie film organization, following Geoff Gilmore’s resignation as the festival’s director in February to become chief creative officer at Tribeca Enterprises, which oversees the Tribeca Film Festival.

Brecher’s resignation was announced Thursday by Wally Weisman, board chair of the Sundance Institute, and will become effective April 30. He will then segue into a new role as strategic adviser for the institute for the next two years.

Recruited by Robert Redford in 1966, Brechner has played a key role in the institute’s core programs. At the Feature Film Program, which encompasses various filmmaker labs, he advocated reaching out to filmmakers in the Middle East; he helped establish the Documentary Fund, which has supported such films as “Born Into Brothels,” “Iraq in Fragments” and “Trouble the Water”; he reconceived the Composers Lab and played a role in the creation of the Film Music Program; he oversaw the Sundance Theater Program, which has supported such plays as “Spring Awakening,” “Passing Strange,” “I Am My Own Wife” and “Grey Gardens”; and, at the festival itself, he encouraged the growth of the documentary and world cinema offerings and the New Frontier program.

Brecher also attracted major grants from the Ford Foundation, the Mellon Foundation, the Doris Duke Foundation, the Open Society Institute, the Annenberg Foundation and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, among others, to support the institute’s $26 million annual operating budget.

“Brecher’s efforts,” Weisman said, “will stand the institute in good stead in the years ahead.”

Said Brechner: “I have completed my work in building an outstanding leadership team. I could not be more confident that the institute is now poised for the next phase of its innovative work in supporting independent artists.”

The Sundance Institute said a search for Brecher’s successor will begin shortly.

Four rebel MLAs disqualified in Meghalaya State Assembly

Shillong, April 9 (ANI): Meghalaya Speaker B. M. Lanong on Thursday disqualified four MLAs who had withdrawn support to the Meghalaya Progressive Alliance (MPA) before the trust vote (March 17), which the Meghalaya Progressive Alliance (MPA) survived with the casting of vote by the Speaker.

Deputy Speaker and Nationalist Congress Party MLA Sanbor Shullai, the lone MLA of Khun Hynniewtrep National Awakening Movement (KHNAM) Paul Lyngdoh and independents Limison Sangma and Ismail Marak incurred disqualification under the 10th Schedule and thereby ceased to be members of the Meghalaya Legislative Assembly with immediate effect, Lanong said.

The four of the five rebel MLAs, who had deserted the MPA and reduced it to a minority from 32 to 27 members in the 60-member assembly.

The MPA, however, survived the trust vote on March 17 with the casting vote of the Speaker, who had invalidated the votes of the four rebel MLAs.

One of the rebel MLAs, Hill State Peoples Democratic Party’s Advisor Pariong, had gone mysteriously gone missing prior to the trust vote. But having skipped the Trust Vote, he resurfaced and later returned to the MPA.

President’s Rule was imposed in the state on March 19 after the Governor R S Mooshahary cited a ‘constitutional breakdown’.

The disqualification on Wednesday night comes as a blow to the Congress, which had last week staked claim to form the government, parading 31 MLAs, including the four rebel MLAs, before the Governor.

The Governor, “convinced at the Congress’ claim”, was understood to have recommended the Centre to revoke President’s Rule.

However, given Wednesday’s disqualification, Congress’ strength has now come down to 27.

The MPA too has 27 members, including the Speaker, with two of the legislators of the MPA-constituent United Democratic Party resigning from the party as well as assembly last week. (ANI)

Six car bombs kill 34 across Baghdad

Six car bombs exploded across Baghdad on Monday, killing at least 34 people and wounding scores, police said, after the arrests of Sunni Arab fighters raised tension in the Iraqi capital.

A blast at a popular market in the Shi’ite Muslim slum of Sadr City in east Baghdad killed at least 10 people and wounded 65. Another car bomb blew up next to a group of labourers queuing for work, killing six people and wounding 16.

Hours later, south Baghdad’s Um al-Maalif neighbourhood was shaken by two blasts in a market, killing 12 and wounding 25.

The latest attacks underscore the challenges Iraqi security forces face as U.S. combat troops prepare to withdraw by Aug. 31 2010, with all U.S. troops due to leave by the end of 2011.

Overall violence has fallen in Iraq to levels not seen since just after the 2003 U.S. invasion, but militants still carry out large-scale bombings, especially in the capital and the north.

Preventing all car bombs in the crowded streets of Baghdad — a sprawling maze of crumbling buildings and concrete walls, housing five million people — is all but impossible.

Two other blasts shook a market area of Husseiniya, on Baghdad’s northern outskirts, killing four, and a street in eastern Baghdad, apparently targeting the convoy of an Interior Ministry official, killing one of his guards and a bystander.

“The explosion caused major damage to buildings and they even hurt some children,” shopkeeper Abdul-Jabar Saad said of that attack, which he witnessed. “God damn these people.”

SUNNI GUARDS OR AL QAEDA?

The attacks followed a week of arrests in Baghdad by Iraq’s Shi’ite-led government of Sunni Arab fighters known as Awakening Councils, or Majalis al-Sahwa in Arabic.

The Iraqi government insists it is only detaining those wanted for grave crimes, but the fighters — many of them former insurgents — fear it is settling sectarian scores.

Analyst Kadhum al-Muqdadi, a Baghdad University professor, suggested the bombs might be a coordinated strike in response to the raids, one of which sparked clashes just over a week ago between Iraqi forces and supporters of an arrested Sahwa leader.

“Any security action carries the risk of a reaction,” he told Reuters. “These could be the work of Sahwas or just of opportunists exploiting this issue.”

The Sahwas first switched sides and joined with U.S. forces to battle Sunni Islamist al Qaeda in late 2006, manning checkpoints and conducting raids throughout the country.

Many have been killed in insurgent attacks.

The Iraqi government started taking control of them late last year, but mistrust runs deep. Some of the guards complain they have not been paid for two months, although Iraqi officials say that was an administrative glitch that has now been fixed.

Sheikh Hameed al-Hayyes, a founder of the Sahwa movement, said the bombings were unlikely to be the work of the guards.

“There were bombings in Baghdad before the arrests and after the arrests … these attacks were by al Qaeda,” he said.

Baghdad security spokesman Qassim al-Moussawi also said the attacks “carry the fingerprints of al-Qaeda-linked groups”.

Iraqi and U.S. officials say a small number of the 90,000-odd Sunni guards still have links to al Qaeda and other insurgents. But the government insists they are a minority.

“Al Qaeda is trying to infiltrate the Sahwa, but I think it will not succeed, because the Sahwa have seen their crimes and brutality,” said government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh.

Bomb attacks continue on an almost daily basis in Iraq, despite the sharp fall in overall violence. The last big bomb attack in Baghdad killed 20 people in a shopping district on March 26.

U.S. forces say fired on Sunni force in Baghdad

U.S. forces said on Friday they opened fire on a group of fighters who could belong to a Sunni Arab patrol unit, days after the arrest of members of another unit by Iraqi forces triggered a gun battle.

The incident could further heighten tensions with the Sunni forces, who number some 90,000 and whom the U.S. military had backed to steer Iraq’s Sunni Arabs away from an anti-U.S. insurgency.

The arrest of Adil al-Mashhadani, a Baghdad Sunni Arab force leader, started clashes last week between his supporters and Shi’ite-led government forces that killed three people.

The U.S. military said on Friday its planes had fired on four armed men seen planting a roadside bomb late on Thursday in the north Baghdad district of Taji, killing one of the men and wounding two others.

Initial investigations showed that at least one of the men was listed among the U.S.-backed Sunni fighters, who call themselves Awakening Councils — “Majalis al-Sahwa” in Arabic — but which the U.S. military calls “Sons of Iraq”.

“Hostile acts will be engaged. While we value our Sons of Iraq brothers, these men had broken faith with their fellow Sons of Iraq, the Iraqi people and us,” U.S. Major-General Daniel Bolger said in a statement.

In a separate incident, Iraqi police arrested Hussam Alwan, another Sahwa leader in the town of Moqtadiya, 80 km (50 miles) northeast of Baghdad, an Iraqi security source told Reuters. He declined to say for what charges Alwan was detained.

The Sahwa movement was started by Sunni Arab tribal sheikhs in western Anbar province who turned against al Qaeda in late 2006. The U.S. military backed them as a counter-insurgency tactic and the model was rolled out across Iraq.

Their programme has since last year been progressively handed over to the government, which has begun paying them.

The guards comprise many former insurgents, who are worried the government may arrest them. How Baghdad handles them is seen as a test of sectarian reconciliation in Iraq.

“It is a message to those taking the same path as (Mashhadani’s) gang has taken that they will face the same destiny,” Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki told Iraqi state TV on Thursday, referring to Mashhadani’s arrest.

Mashhadani was arrested on suspicion of links to bomb making-cells, kidnappings, extortion and al Qaeda.

Central Govt. advises imposition of president’s rule in Meghalaya

New Delhi, Mar 18 (ANI): A day after Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) led Meghalaya Progressive Alliance Government in Meghalaya narrowly survived a trust vote in the State Assembly, the Central Government on Wednesday recommended President’s rule in the state.

Briefing reporters here after a meeting of the Union Cabinet, Home Minister P. Chidambaram said: “The cabinet received a report from the (Meghalaya) governor (RS Mooshahary) on the events yesterday. He has stated that there’s a breakdown in the constitutional machinery and has recommended president’s rule. The report has been accepted and a recommendation made to the President.”

The NCP government in Meghalaya was degraded to a minority on March 11 after two MLAs from Khun Hynniewtrep National Awakening Movement (KHNAM) Limison Sangma and Ismail R Marak withdrew his support.

Concerned over the political situation in the state, Chief Minister Donkupar Roy said last week he does not want Meghalaya to face another election.

Blaming the Congress for the political crisis in the state, Roy said on March 16, “‘I fear that the Congress is eventually moving towards that direction, that is, political confusion and turmoil, paving the way for President’s Rule in the state. If this happened, that would be very unfortunate.” (ANI)

NCP-led Meghalaya outfit to face trust vote on March 17

Shillong, Mar 15 (ANI): The NCP led Meghalaya Progressive Alliance (MPA) government has to prove its strength on March 17, after three members of the alliance withdrew their support one by one.

Congress North East General Secretary In Charge Luizinho Faleiro submitted a memorandum to the Meghalaya Governor urging the dismissal of the MPA government as it has already lost its legal right to be heading the government.

The 12-month-old five-party ruling coalition of MPA now has 30 MLAs — NCP 15, UDP 10, Hill State Peoples Democratic Party 2, BJP 1 and two Independents.

The opposition led by Congress has support of 26 own members and two independents and one regional party member.

The party was reduced to a minority after a lone MLA from Khun Hynniewtrep National Awakening Movement (KHNAM) withdrew his support on March 11.

On March 9, two other independents, one of whom joined the alliance two weeks back, had also withdrawn support to the MPA.

The two independents are now in the Congress. (ANI)

MPA loses yet another minister

Shillong (Meghalaya), Mar 12 (ANI): The Nationalist Congress Party (NCP)-led Meghalaya Progressive Alliance (MPA) government lost another minister on Thursday as Chief Minister Donkupar Roy declared that he would seek a vote of confidence in the state assembly on 17th March.

Health and Family Welfare Minister, Advisor Pariong, belonging to coalition ally Hill State Peoples Democratic Party (HSPDP) resigned from the government earlier in the day.

Meanwhile, Congress leader D D Lapang said he would move a no-confidence motion against Speaker B M Lanong when the assembly session begins on 16th March.

He has alleged that the Speaker “has apparently threatened members who have quit the MPA, saying on record that they could be disqualified”.

Lapang is also demanding resignation of Roy from his post after the MPA lost its majority on Wednesday, after two independents from Khun Hynniewtrep National Awakening Movement (KHNAM) Limison Sangma and Ismail R Marak withdrew their support.

The two MLAs are now in Congress.

The coalition government’s strength has come down to 29 in a 60-member House. (ANI)