Beckham rallies England squad to win World Cup for Brit soldiers in Afghanistan

London, May 26(ANI): England footballer David Beckham has called on Fabio Capello’s men to secure World Cup glory in South Africa to honour the British soldiers serving in Afghanistan.

Beckham, who was recently in Afghanistan for a surprise visit to boost the morale of thousands of British troops serving in the country, delivered a dressing room speech to his England team-mates before Monday’s friendly 3-1 victory over Mexico.

England captain Rio Ferdinand said that Beckham told the squad to be inspired by the troops in Afghanistan.

“Becks came in the changing room and he was talking about his trip. He told us about the experience he had going over there and what is was really like. He said the lads do a great job for us,” The Mirror quoted Ferdinand, as saying.

“It is great that we are getting support from the boys in Afghanistan. With them being so far away they probably think we don”t really care about what is going on, but we do,” he added.

Earlier, Beckham, who is recovering from an Achilles-tendon injury, had spoken about his respect for the armed forces.

“I have nothing, but admiration for these young men and women and it makes me very proud to be British,” Beckham said.

Britain has around 10,000 troops in Afghanistan as part of an international force, largely fighting the Taliban. (ANI)

UK army’s chief bomb officer resigns over Afghanistan

The British Army’s top bomb disposal officer has resigned, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) said in a statement on Monday.

The MoD said Colonel Bob Seddon, who held the post of Principal Ammunition Technical Officer (PATO), would step down in January.

The Sun newspaper said Seddon was quitting over concerns that a shortage of trained bomb disposal experts was putting troops in Afghanistan under strain.

“I am very concerned over the pressures they are facing in Afghanistan,” the paper quoted Seddon as saying in a BBC documentary to be broadcast later on Monday.

“We’ve broadened our training and selection but it will take time before these measures come into play. The existing cohort are going to be under pressure,” Seddon said.

Britain’s new Foreign Secretary William Hague and other senior ministers were in Afghanistan at the weekend to get a first-hand look at the situation in the country.

The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government formed after the May 6 election says its top foreign policy priority is the strategy for Afghanistan, where Britain has 9,500 troops battling Taliban insurgents.

Some 285 British soldiers have died in Afghanistan since 2001, when the NATO mission there was launched and Britain has struggled to turn the tide on an insurgency in the restive southern Helmand province, where most of its troops are deployed.

“We can confirm that the current PATO has resigned and will leave his post and the Army in January next year,” an Army spokesman said in the statement.

“The Army remains committed to the counter IED (improvised explosive devise) effort which is the number one priority in Afghanistan,” the spokesman said.

(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Afghan soldier opens fire, wounds 1 NATO soldier

KABUL, April 11 (Reuters) – An Afghan soldier opened fire on NATO troops, lightly wounding one alliance soldier, the international force in Afghanistan said on Sunday, the latest in a string of attacks by rogue Afghan forces.

Major Marcin Walczak, a spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force, said the Afghan soldier fled after opening fire on a group of NATO and other Afghan troops in Ghazni province, southwest of Kabul, late on Saturday.

NATO did not identify the nationality of the wounded soldier. The NATO-led force in Ghazni is mainly manned by Polish troops.

A Taliban spokesman using the name Zabihullah Mujahid said the Afghan attacker had joined the insurgent movement after witnessing “brutalities against Afghans”, and the man he had wounded was Polish.

NATO forces have been attacked several times in the past by rogue Afghan security force members. In each case, the Taliban have claimed to be behind the attacks and that members of the group have infiltrated Afghan security forces.

In November, an Afghan police trainee killed five British soldiers at a checkpoint. In December, an Afghan soldier killed and American and wounded two Italians at a joint base. (Editing by Alex Richardson) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Prince Charles becomes ‘only royal in living memory’ to visit war-torn Kabul

London, Mar. 26 (ANI): After paying his first visit to Afghanistan, Prince Charles has become the most senior member of the royal family to travel to the war-torn country since the conflict began in 2001.

Sky News quoted Clarence House as saying that Prince Charles spent two days in Afghanistan, visiting Kabul and various military bases.

Charles, who is a Commander in Chief of 10 regiments, spent the night with soldiers at Camp Bastion in Helmand Province, after becoming the “the only royal in living memory” to visit Kabul.

He reportedly told British soldiers stationed in Afghanistan: “We owe a huge amount to all of you operating in a remarkable team.”

He also met civilians involved in reconstruction efforts in Kabul.

He discussed the reintroduction of stability with tribal, religious leaders and senior government ministers.

During the tour, the Prince wore an armoured jacket with goggles and a helmet. He was also given a chance to try out British troops” mine clearance equipment.

Prince Charles’ visit comes almost two years after his son, Prince Harry, returned from frontline duty.

“As a parent, you worry the whole time. I think, if you are out here, you are getting on with everything and it”s not the same. But for everyone left behind it”s ghastly,” Charles said.

While Charles couldn’t meet Afghan President Hamid Karzai during his trip, he met General Stanley McChrystal, the commander of US and NATO troops, and Afghan District Governor Gulab Mangal. (ANI)

“They made us the poorest of the poor” say UK Gurkhas

London, Mar 22(ANI): Veterans of the Gurkha community in the UK have said that the men who once served the Queen and country proudly are now the “poorest of the poor” in Nepal.

Gyanraj Rai, member of the United British Gurkhas Ex-Servicemen’s Association (UBGEA), said that the community has been shattered into angry divisions, punctuated by accusations and counter-accusations.

Gurkhas, who retired before 1997 when the regiments relocated to the UK from Hong Kong, were granted the right to settle in the UK last summer, but their pension remains around 20 percent of other British soldiers.

“They made us the bravest of the brave, then they made us the poorest of the poor. They sent us home almost barefoot. Thousands of veterans have died of malnutrition and lack of medication,” The Independent quoted Rai, as saying.

“They would rather stay in Nepal, but they are penniless so they are borrowing money, selling their cows and buffaloes to come here,” he added.

Former Sgt Gajindra Rai, who came to Britain three weeks ago, said that the Gurkha Army Ex-Servicemen”s Association (GAESO) in Nepal had charged him 900 pounds, including the visa fee, for advice.

“They talked about lots of benefits and housing, but I have found nothing. I am very angry. I feel very betrayed to have been given the wrong information,” he added. (ANI)

New ‘Taliban killer’ sights for British troopers on Afghanistan frontier

London, Sep 9(ANI): After reports of British soldiers facing weapons’ shortage in the Afghanistan frontier, a range of new thermal weapons’ sights has been launched to enable soldiers to dominate the battlefield in Afghanistan.

According to reports, the British Ministry of Defence will buy almost 11,000 new sights for 150 million pounds, allowing the Army to equip 95 infantry companies of more than 100 men.

As part of the Ministry of Defence’s Future Integrated Soldier Technology (Fist) programme troops have been issued with a small glass prism-like sight, which project a red laser dot. It would help a soldier to quickly align the red dot on an enemy who is very close and hit him with guaranteed accuracy.

“This means the infantryman can pick up the enemy coming in. At night the enemy’s field craft has to be pretty adept because he has to remain in dead ground all the way up to your position and that is hard yards. This will allow us to dominate the night,” The Telegraph quoted Col Bill Pointing, a former battalion commander in charge of the project, as saying.

“This will allow the infantry to operate quicker, better, at longer range, at night and in difficult weather conditions,” he added.

It will provide improved protection, day and night surveillance and target acquisition, and assistance with navigation, command and control and battle preparation.

The new thermal weapons’ sights would also allow soldiers to conduct surveillance and engage targets in all weather and light levels, including zero light where normal night sights would be rendered ineffective.

“There is a considerable improvement in terms of us infantry engaging the Taliban at very close quarters in the villages of Afghanistan, especially at night time. It will help us to put very effective fire into them,” said Cpl Ciaran Hanna of the Irish Guards. (ANI)

‘British troops face risk of massive mental health problems’

London, Aug. 26 (ANI): British soldiers are faced with massive mental health problems due to drastic working conditions and out of date support techniques, a former Special Air Service soldier has revealed.

Ex-trooper Bob Paxman, 41, has broken the SAS vow of silence to reveal the risk soldiers face fighting post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“The military have got a massive problem on their hands and they haven’t faced up to it yet. It can be anything from flashbacks, nightmares, depression or self-medication with drugs or alcohol,” said Paxman, who has set up a charity to help those suffering in silence.

His newly registered charity, Talking2Minds, uses cognitive, neuro-linguistic and time line therapies.

“It’s a huge problem and we are getting a lot of telephone calls each week from the tri-services and the blue light services,” Sky News quoted him, as saying.

Critics claim the Ministry of Defence has not provided the support troops need, especially with increasing work loads post-9/11 with action in Iraq and Afghanistan.

PTSD experts estimate one in five troops being affected and Paxman believes the military’s method of treating troops is decades out of date.

“They have certain types of counselling but these processes are basically based in the 1960s,” Paxman, who left the service after 11 years in 2000, said.

The Ministry of Defence denies their facilities are outmoded.

An MoD spokesman told Sky News Online: “The MoD takes the mental welfare of all our personnel extremely seriously and extensive measures are in place to prevent and treat mental health concerns.

For elite Special Forces soldiers revealing problems might mean being sidelined permanently.

“The worst fear everyone in the SAS has is that they’d get binned form the unit if they said something – and they probably would,” Paxman said (ANI)

US CENTCOM chief says Brit soldiers are the world’s best

London, Aug.21 (ANI): U.S. CENTCOM chief General David Petraeus has described British troops as the world’s best, as they spectacularly hunted down al-Qaeda bombers for him while he led the victorious surge in Iraq.

Recalling their valour, General Petraeus said British soldiers often rented taxis, removed body armour and drove through Baghdad to get their man.

The Sun quoted General Petraeus as saying: “They would use extraordinary skill. And your conventional forces demonstrate the same capacity. I have always been impressed by the courage, capacity for independent action, skill and exceptional will of your soldiers. It’s what sets forces in the UK – and I’d argue the US and a handful of other countries – apart from all others in the world.”
“22 SAS are absolutely spectacular. We felt privileged to have them in Iraq. Brits should be very proud of all their forces and take special pride in their special forces,” he added.
Passing through London, the General also praised the outnumbered UK forces holding off the Taliban in Helmand.

He said: “British troops have been in a very tough place and they have done exceedingly well.”

He said he had asked former British SAS commander Lt. Gen. Graeme Lamb to go to Kabul to advise new NATO boss General Stanley McChrystal on how to win over Taliban defectors.

In a message to all Brits, he said: “It’s absolutely natural for those putting their lives on the line to ask, is this worth it?
“It is. It is enormously important we achieve our objective in Afghanistan, and ensure it does not again become a sanctuary for al-Qaeda and other extremists that have carried out attacks on your streets,” he added.

The general, who has served with the British military since 2001, admitted it was a mistake to go boozing with Brit soldiers.
He said: “I could never hold my own with them, especially not Scottish paratroopers. That was a losing proposition.” (ANI)

Another British soldier killed in Afghanistan, toll 196

London, Aug. 9 (ANI): A British soldier, from the 2nd Battalion the Mercian Regiment, was killed by an explosion in Helmand Province of Afghanistan, taking the death toll in Afghanistan since 2001 to 196.

According to reports, the soldier was on foot patrol at the time, and was killed by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED).

“Each and every loss that we sustain in Helmand sends reverberations throughout the brigade. Today, we mourn the loss of a soldier who died working to make Afghanistan a better place. He was prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice, displaying bravery that was second to none,” The Telegraph quoted Lieutenant Colonel Mark Wenham, spokesman for Task Force Helmand, as saying.

“Our thoughts are with his family and we offer them our deepest and heartfelt condolences at this tragic time,” he added.

Already five British soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan this month, it follows the record 22 fatalities in July.

The death comes two days after three Paras, Corporal Kevin Mulligan, Lance Corporal Dale Hopkins and Private Kyle Adams, were killed in southern Afghanistan.

The three were working with special forces at the time, and were carrying out a routine security patrol with Afghan forces.

A fourth member of the patrol injured in Thursday’s blast remained in a critical condition. (ANI)

Brit soldiers ‘made Iraqis dance like Jacko

London, July 14 (ANI): British soldiers manipulated the cries of pain of Iraqi prisoners and made them dance like Michael Jackson, an inquiry into the death of Baha Mousa has heard.

The men claim they were also verbally abused, burned, stamped and urinated on and forced to lie face down over full latrines during the time they were held by the Queen’s Lancashire Regiment in Basra in September 2003.

One of those detained, hotel worker Baha Mousa, 26, died from 93 separate injuries inflicted on him over a 36-hour period while other prisoners examined by a doctor suffered “extensive and serious” injuries.

Much of their treatment was meted out in a bid to soften the men up for interrogation.

An inquiry into the abuse which opened in London on Monday heard that it may have provided extremists with a “rallying cry” to incite further attacks on UK forces in the war torn country.

According to Gerard Elias QC, the Counsel to the Inquiry, it also undermined the sacrifices made by other members of the Armed Forces working to improve security and rebuild the infrastructure following the fall of dictator Saddam Hussein.

The men were held in custody for as long as 56 hours, during which time conditioning techniques such as hooding and the use of stress techniques, outlawed in 1972 as a result of abuse in Northern Ireland, were used on them.

The Baha Mousa Inquiry is expected to last into next year and will hear evidence from soldiers involved as well as the detainees. (ANI)

‘Brown neglected Afghanistan military operation’

Washington, July 13 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been accused of “the ultimate dereliction of duty” in his handling of the military operations in Afghanistan.

The shadow defence secretary, Liam Fox, criticized Brown for “catastrophically” under-equipping the armed forces, which was evident from the deaths of 15 British soldiers in Afghanistan this month.

“Brown is now resorting to spin rather than confronting the life-threatening reality that the troops faced. For this Government to have sent our young people into battle without adequate equipment and protection is the ultimate dereliction of duty,” The Telegraph quoted Fox, as saying.

The Conservatives accused Brown of attempting to cover up the fact that British troops do not have enough helicopters, which has forced them to travel by road and left them vulnerable to the Taliban’s road-side bombs.

Lord King, the former Defence Secretary, said: “Where there really is a shortage, a really critical shortage, is helicopters. There are serious worries that troops were dying as a result of the shortage.”

In April, the Treasury had blocked on financial grounds an attempt by the Ministry of Defence to match a US troop “surge” with a permanent deployment of thousands more British soldiers.

Pressed yesterday on whether the Government could increase numbers on the ground, both Bob Ainsworth, the Defence Secretary, and Lord Drayson would said: “We keep the numbers of troops under review”

Colonel Bob Stewart, the UN commander in Bosnia, said that the British fatalities were the results of Gordon Brown’s failure to support the Armed Forces.

“We do not have enough manpower, ammunition or equipment,” Col Stewart said. “It’s grossly inadequate. If this is how we handle a vital interest, God help us when it’s not vital.

“The Government tells us that our presence in Afghanistan is in the vital interests of this country but I have never seen our interests so poorly defended.” (ANI)

UK hate preacher converts 11-year-old Christian boy to Islam

London, June 29 (ANI): Britain’s controversial Muslim cleric Anjem Choudary has converted an 11-year-old Christian schoolboy to Islam at a road show.

A film shows Sean, 11, vowing to follow the religion by repeating words in Arabic.

Sean, whose face is obscured by a coat hood and has been blacked out, is coached through the ceremony by hate preacher Choudary.

Standing next to him, he says: “This young man here wants to become a Muslim. This is not the first time a young man has discovered the truth. Come forward to think about Islam.”

Choudary, a follower of exiled hate-preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed, recites words for him to repeat.

The ceremony was filmed at a demonstration by Choudary’s Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama’ah group in Birmingham city centre earlier this month.

Choudary defended the boy’s “reversion” to Islam.

“The boy told us he wanted to become a Muslim and, of course, some ­people are intellectually more mature than they are physically. I don’t see there is any harm in this,” he said.

Choudary, 42, was one of the masterminds behind sick protests at the homecoming parade of British soldiers from Afghanistan in Luton back in March.

He branded British troops “murderers.”

The preacher also calls for fundamentalist Sharia law in Britain and warns of the dangers of eternal “hellfire” for non-Muslims. (ANI)

Britain confirms two servicemen killed in Afghanistan

London – Two British soldiers serving in Afghanistan have died within hours of each other, taking to 163 the number of servicemen who have lost their lives in the conflict, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) said Thursday.

It confirmed that an elite Royal Marine died in hospital in Britain late Wednesday after being flown home for treatment for injuries sustained in a blast near Lashkar Gah in Helmand Province last Friday.

On Thursday, a soldier was killed in an explosion near Garmsir in Helmand, the MoD said. (dpa)

UK not to ask family of Gurkha soldier killed in action to leave the country

London, May 10 (ANI): The Home Office has said it would not ask the family of any British Gurkha soldier killed in action to leave the United Kingdom, after reports appeared that widow of a hero Gurkha killed in Afghanistan was told she has no right to stay in Britain.

Under the rules Parbati Pun and her two young children would have no automatic right to remain and would have to apply for new residency visas, but the Home Office said it would not ask the widow to leave.

The death of Corporal Kumar Purja Pun, 30, from the Royal Gurkha Rifles, has given the campaign to allow Gurkhas to stay a new purpose, The Times reported.

Kumar, who had been in Afghanistan for just a month, was on patrol in the market town of Gereshk when a suicide motorbike bomber struck. As the soldier got out of his his Vixen Snatch vehicle, the jihadist raced towards him, blowing himself up as soon as he got close enough.

Kumar and military policeman Sgt Ben Ross, standing next to him, were killed instantly. The blast injured 30 Afghans and three other troops. Two more British soldiers in Afghanistan died in separate attacks within hours of the bombing.

Kumar, a corporal praised by Army top brass for his bravery and professionalism, joined the Army in 1996 when he was 17.

The attack happened on Thursday, the same day that Joanna Lumley, the actress and daughter of a British officer with the Gurkhas, confronted Immigration Minister Phil Woolas in front of television cameras and gave him a dressing-down about the government’s refusal to allow more Gurkhas to stay.

Lumley said Pun’s death showed the Gurkhas were giving up their lives for Britain and deserved the right to settle here.

“It just goes to show the Gurkhas are at the centre of the army and are willing to fight for the British and give up their lives for this country,” she said.

“That is why we have to give the veteran Gurkhas the right of a second homeland and it proves how brave the Gurkhas are,” Lumley added. (ANI)

Jackman jumps off newspaper building for charity

Washington, Apr 17 (ANI): Hollywood actor Hugh Jackman, who is known for is heroic image in his action flicks, turned a real life hero when he jumped off a London Newspaper building to raise money for a charity.

The ‘X Men’ actor jumped off the headquarters of fellow Aussie Rupert Murdoch’s News International building to raise money for The Sun’s Help for Heroes campaign, which aids British soldiers wounded in conflict, reports Contactmusic.

The News International building is the home of newspapers The Sun, The Times and the News of the World.

Jackman was also joined in the abseil stunt by newspaper bosses Rebekah Wade, Dominic Mohan and Murdoch’s media mogul son James. (ANI)

Brown not to surrender sovereignty of Falkland Islands to Argentina

London, Mar 28 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has warned that he will not surrender the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands ahead of talks with Argentinean premier Cristina Kirchner, who was elected with a pledge to regain the islands from British occupation.

Brown will today hold his first meeting with Kirchner at a conference in Chile, The Telegraph reported.

British officials are also concerned over a looming diplomatic dispute concerning rights to potentially valuable oil supplies, which may lie under the ocean near the Falkland Islands.

However, speaking ahead of talks with the Argentineans, Brown made it clear that he would not negotiate over the islands’ sovereignty.

“There is nothing to discuss from our side. The essential principle has always been that the islands should determine the issue of sovereignty for themselves. Let us be clear our first priority will always be the needs and the wishes of the islanders. They are a proud and strong community that has my total support and respect,” he said.

Veterans of the Falklands War, in which more than 250 British soldiers died, welcomed the Prime Minister’s stance.

Derek Cole, the chief executive of the Falklands Veterans Foundation, said: “There should not be any discussion of the sovereignty. The Falklands should stay British, that’s what the veterans want and that’s what the islanders want.”

Brown is planning to push the Argentineans to allow flights from the Falklands to land in Argentina – or cross the country’s airspace. The issue is a major concern for the islands’ 3,000 residents who have to fly around the tip of Argentina to land in Chile.

There are also ongoing issues about who owns the maritime territory to the south of the Falklands. Both Britain and Argentina have staked claims to the area, which may contain valuable oil supplies.

The negotiations with Argentina will take place at today’s Progressive Governance conference near Santiago in Chile. It is the first visit of a serving Prime Minister to Chile, which assisted Britain in the Falklands war. (ANI)

ROUNDUP: Northern Ireland terror suspects freed after court ruling

London – Investigations into the recent murders of two soldiers and a police officer in Northern Ireland were thrown into disarray Wednesday when six men were freed from police custody after winning a legal challenge against their detention.

However Colin Duffy, one of the suspects and a former member of the now inactive Irish Republican Army (IRA) paramilitary group, was immediately re-arrested, his lawyers said.

The suspects were released from custody at Antrim police station, north of Belfast, within an hour of a High Court ruling that described their prolonged detention as “unlawful.”

With coats draped over their heads, they were driven away at high speed from the police station where they had been held since March 14.

Four of the detainees, including Duffy, were held in connection with the murder of two British soldiers on March 7, and two were suspected of the killing of the police officer two days later.

The deadly attacks marked a chilling return of terrorist violence to the province which had enjoyed a period of stability since the signing of the 1998 peace agreement.

The court ruling and the subsequent release of the suspects mark a setback for the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), but also for the British government whose controversial anti-terror legislation, allowing the detention of suspects for 28 days without charge, has been widely criticized.

Northern Ireland’s Lord Chief Justice, Brian Kerr, ruled that an extension of their detention, granted by a county court judge over the last weekend, was “unlawful.”

Two IRA splinter groups, the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA, which oppose the peace agreement and the disbanding of the IRA, have claimed responsibility for the recent killings.

Two British soldiers in their early 20s were gunned down outside Massereene barracks, near Belfast, on March 7, and Stephen Carroll, a 48-year-old police officer, was killed with a shot to his head while answering a call for help in the southern town of Craigavon two days later.

Two men, a 17-year-old local youth and a 37-year-old former Sinn Fein councillor, have been charged in connection with the Carroll murder. Both have denied the charges.

Wednesday’s court ruling was welcomed by Gerry Adams, the president of Sinn Fein, a party with previously close links with the IRA which has, however, renounced violence and is now in a power-sharing regional government with Protestants in Northern Ireland.

“Detaining people for periods extending beyond human rights best practice is simply not acceptable and must not happen in the future,” Adams said Wednesday.

Paul Goggings, the state secretary responsible for policing and justice in Northern Ireland, said the High Court ruling related to a “technical matter” and the attacks remained subject to a “strong and ongoing police investigation.” (dpa)

ROUNDUP: Teenager denies police murder in Northern Ireland

London – A teenager accused of the murder of a police officer in Northern Ireland just over a fortnight ago was armed with an assault rifle and more than 25 bullets, a court was told Tuesday.

The 17-year-old boy became the first person to be charged late Monday in connection with the recent upsurge of terrorist violence in the province in which the police officer and two British soldiers were killed.

The teenager, who was remanded in custody, has also been accused of being a member of the Continuity IRA, a banned dissident offshoot of the now dissolved Irish Republican Army (IRA).

He denied all the charges and was remanded in custody following his appearance at the Magistrate’s Court in Lisburn, south of Belfast.

The Continuity IRA claimed responsibility for the killing of police constable Stephen Carroll, in the town of Craigavon, on March 9.

His murder followed the killing of two British soldiers 48 hours earlier at Massereene barracks, north of Belfast, in what were the first acts of terrorist violence in Northern Ireland since the signing of the 1998 peace agreement.

Three men and a woman remain in custody over the Carroll murder, but two suspects were released without charge late Monday. Four men are held in connection with the murder of the two soldiers.

Human rights groups in Britain and Northern Ireland have criticized the prolonged detention of the suspects without charge. Under British law, suspects be held without charge for up to 28 days.

The High Court in Belfast Tuesday granted permission to six of those still held to challenge their prolonged detention without being charged.

Gerry Adams, the President of Sinn Fein, the pro-Irish Republican Party which previously had close links with the IRA, has likened the extended detention of the suspects to the period of direct British rule over the province and the controversial policy of “internment without trial.”

People were currently being held for periods “extending beyond human rights best practice,” said Adams. “This is not acceptable. They should either be charged now or released.” (dpa)

17-year-old charged in slaying of Northern Ireland police officer

London – A 17-year-old boy was scheduled to appear in court Tuesday on a murder charge in the slaying of a police officer earlier this month in County Armagh, a Police Service of Northern Ireland spokeswoman said.

The youth was charged late Monday in the killing of Constable Stephen Carroll. He faces additional charges of membership in the banned Continuity IRA, possession of a firearm with intent and collecting information likely to be of use to terrorists.

The officer suffered a fatal gunshot while responding a call about a brick thrown through a window.

Four other suspects remain jailed for questioning in the police officer’s slaying. Earlier Monday, two men, aged 27 and 31, were released without charge in the case.

Four suspects are jailed in the killings of two British soldiers killed in North Ireland in a shooting two days before the Armagh attack. (dpa)

UK Tory leaders react angrily to exiled hate preacher’s Islamic rant

London, Mar.21 (ANI): Leaders of Britain’s Conservative (Tory) Party have expressed anger at the Gordon Brown Government for allowing exiled hate preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed to address an anti-West public meeting here.

The fundamentalist cleric came out of hiding to issue a chilling warning that Britain should prepare for a September 11,2001 style atrocity.

Speaking from his home in Lebanon, Bakri, who was kicked out of Britain four years ago, gave his support to fanatics who abused brave British soldiers in a vile attack during their homecoming parade in Luton last week.

Addressing a meeting held at an east London hotel by telephone, he said British troops had declared war on Islam and must suffer the consequences – along with innocent civilians.

“You want to declare war against us, we will declare Islam against you,” he said.

“It is time for you to wake up before it is too late. If you put pressure on Muslims and push them underground, people will come and rise and retaliate against you,” he added.

Despite the highly incendiary nature of the remarks, Scotland Yard last night refused to take any action against the organisers of the meeting.

Conservative MP Patrick Mercer, the chairman of the Commons counter terrorism sub committee, said it was time the Government acted to stop such activities taking place.Surely those who accept and broadcast these telephone calls are guilty of the crime of incitement. The Government must stop soft- pedalling with this and stamp the laws of the country on them, Mercer was quoted, as saying.

Former Conservative Home Secretary Ann Widdecombe said: “These people should be prosecuted for incitement. It is quite disgraceful. If I was to hold a meeting like this and make these kinds of comments about members of the Muslim community I would be prosecuted. The Government has failed to acts on these matters for a very long time and I am afraid that the law has now become quite toothless.”

Bakri’s rant was broadcast on loudspeakers to ringleaders of the shameful protest at the welcome home march in Luton for the 2nd Battalion Royal Anglian Regiment. The extremists, including Bakri’s right-hand man Anjem Choudary, who wants Britain to be governed by Sharia law, urged Muslims to continue to insult British soldiers and attack “evil” democracy – no matter what the consequences. (ANI)