Arizona murder prompts calls to tighten security

(Reuters) – The murder of a prominent Arizona rancher near the Mexican border is spurring charges that Washington is doing too little to stop Mexico’s raging drug war from spilling over into the United States.

U.S. | Mexico

Robert Krentz was shot last Saturday while working at his remote cattle ranch some 30 miles northeast of this city on the Arizona-Mexico border.

Investigators tracked the footprints of the suspected gunman about 20 miles south to the border with Mexico, prompting some authorities to blame smugglers or illegal immigrants for the killing.

“The ranchers have feared for their lives for a long time and they’ve told the people from Washington, but they don’t pay attention to us,” Michael Gomez, the mayor of Douglas, told Reuters.

“This continues to be a hot area for illegal crossings and they have to do something to stop it.”

Krentz, 58, was well liked and respected in southeastern Arizona, where his family’s ranch sprawled over 35,000 acres.

No arrests have been made and there is no clear motive or any named suspect, the Cochise County Sheriff’s Office said.

The killing comes amid ever-more brazen and brutal attacks by cartels in northern Mexico that are fighting for control of lucrative drug smuggling routes into the United States.

Last month, gunmen killed two Americans in Ciudad Juarez, south of El Paso, Texas, renewing fears in the United States that escalating violence may spill north over the border.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security expressed “outrage” on Thursday at Krentz’s murder and posted a $25,000 reward for “information leading to the arrest and prosecution of the individual or individuals responsible.”

A day earlier, Bill Richardson, the Democratic governor of the neighboring state of New Mexico, ordered National Guard troops to patrol the border with Mexico to “ensure the safety of New Mexico citizens.”

Arizona Governor Jan Brewer and Senator John McCain, both Republicans, have urged President Barack Obama’s administration to send National Guard troops to boost efforts to secure the border with Mexico in the wake of the killing.

RESIDENTS FEARFUL

Obama has pledged support for Mexican President Felipe Calderon’s battle against the drug cartels. Calderon has deployed tens of thousands of troops to try to halt the violence that has killed more than 19,000 people since he took office in late 2006.

The area in southern Arizona where Krentz was murdered lies on the edge of a furiously trafficked corridor for both drug and human smugglers.

Last year Border Patrol agents made more than 241,000 arrests in the sector south of Tucson, Arizona, and seized more than 60 tonnes of marijuana.

In the wake of the murder, authorities in Douglas — a ranching town of 15,000 people over the border from Agua Prieta, Mexico — have added to calls on Washington to beef up security to protect isolated residents.

Gomez wrote to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano this week, urging her to send National Guard troops to tighten security along the border.

Without additional security, residents in Douglas said Krentz’s murder left many angry and fearful for their own safety.

“Rob was very highly respected and well thought of throughout the county, especially by his neighbors,” said Lynn Kartchner, the owner of a gun store that has done brisk business in the five days since the killing. “If they can get Rob, they can get anyone.” (Editing by John O’Callaghan)

Arizona murder prompts calls to tighten security

(Reuters) – The murder of a prominent Arizona rancher near the Mexican border is spurring charges that Washington is doing too little to stop Mexico’s raging drug war from spilling over into the United States.

U.S. | Mexico

Robert Krentz was shot last Saturday while working at his remote cattle ranch some 30 miles northeast of this city on the Arizona-Mexico border.

Investigators tracked the footprints of the suspected gunman about 20 miles south to the border with Mexico, prompting some authorities to blame smugglers or illegal immigrants for the killing.

“The ranchers have feared for their lives for a long time and they’ve told the people from Washington, but they don’t pay attention to us,” Michael Gomez, the mayor of Douglas, told Reuters.

“This continues to be a hot area for illegal crossings and they have to do something to stop it.”

Krentz, 58, was well liked and respected in southeastern Arizona, where his family’s ranch sprawled over 35,000 acres.

No arrests have been made and there is no clear motive or any named suspect, the Cochise County Sheriff’s Office said.

The killing comes amid ever-more brazen and brutal attacks by cartels in northern Mexico that are fighting for control of lucrative drug smuggling routes into the United States.

Last month, gunmen killed two Americans in Ciudad Juarez, south of El Paso, Texas, renewing fears in the United States that escalating violence may spill north over the border.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security expressed “outrage” on Thursday at Krentz’s murder and posted a $25,000 reward for “information leading to the arrest and prosecution of the individual or individuals responsible.”

A day earlier, Bill Richardson, the Democratic governor of the neighboring state of New Mexico, ordered National Guard troops to patrol the border with Mexico to “ensure the safety of New Mexico citizens.”

Arizona Governor Jan Brewer and Senator John McCain, both Republicans, have urged President Barack Obama’s administration to send National Guard troops to boost efforts to secure the border with Mexico in the wake of the killing.

RESIDENTS FEARFUL

Obama has pledged support for Mexican President Felipe Calderon’s battle against the drug cartels. Calderon has deployed tens of thousands of troops to try to halt the violence that has killed more than 19,000 people since he took office in late 2006.

The area in southern Arizona where Krentz was murdered lies on the edge of a furiously trafficked corridor for both drug and human smugglers.

Last year Border Patrol agents made more than 241,000 arrests in the sector south of Tucson, Arizona, and seized more than 60 tonnes of marijuana.

In the wake of the murder, authorities in Douglas — a ranching town of 15,000 people over the border from Agua Prieta, Mexico — have added to calls on Washington to beef up security to protect isolated residents.

Gomez wrote to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano this week, urging her to send National Guard troops to tighten security along the border.

Without additional security, residents in Douglas said Krentz’s murder left many angry and fearful for their own safety.

“Rob was very highly respected and well thought of throughout the county, especially by his neighbors,” said Lynn Kartchner, the owner of a gun store that has done brisk business in the five days since the killing. “If they can get Rob, they can get anyone.” (Editing by John O’Callaghan)

Hitmen kill 10 youths in Mexico’s drug-hit north

Suspected drug hitmen killed a carload of children and teenagers in northern Mexico in the latest of a rash of attacks on minors that have angered the public as drug gang violence spins out of control.

Ten youngsters aged from eight to 21 died on Sunday when gunmen opened fire and lobbed explosives at their pick-up truck after it sped through an improvised roadblock on an isolated highway in Durango state, in Mexico’s “Golden Triangle” drug-producing region, the attorney general’s office in Durango said.

Mexico’s drug cartels are growing ever more brazen, and a spate of brutal attacks in recent weeks, including the murder of two Americans, are worrying Mexicans along with tourists, foreign investors and the United States, which sent a high-level delegation to Mexico City last week.

Mexican soldiers on Monday captured a suspect linked to the fatal shooting this month of an American employee of the U.S. consulate in the border city of Ciudad Juarez, her U.S. husband and the Mexican husband of a fellow consulate worker.

Interior Minister Fernando Gomez Mont said on Monday the rampant violence only showed the importance of keeping up the pressure with the government’s army-led assault on drug traffickers. He waved off the idea of backing down.

“If some people think that events like those of the weekend where criminals slay youngsters in this cowardly way, if faced with these events Mexico is going to back off, they are mistaken,” Gomez Mont told a news conference.

Nearly 19,000 people have been killed since President Felipe Calderon took office in late 2006 and deployed tens of thousands of troops to drug hot spots across the country, sparking new turf wars between rival cartels.

But the conservative president’s anti-drugs strategy has been criticized following several brutal attacks on youths in the violent region along the U.S.-Mexico border.

In January, suspected drug cartel gunmen burst into a high school birthday party in the border city of Ciudad Juarez and killed 15 people, mostly minors, sparking angry protests from relatives and other city residents sick of daily violence.

Several of Sunday’s victims were related.

Gomez Mont said drug violence in Durango state was being driven by a violent turf war between the local Sinaloa alliance and the Zetas, the former armed wing of the rival Gulf cartel that is now trying to run its own smuggling operation.

Criminal gangs are known to sometimes set up military-style roadblocks to snag targets, and the northern business city of Monterrey was hit this month by a series of road barricades erected by armed men believed to be linked to drug gangs.

(Writing by Mica Rosenberg; Editing by Catherine Bremer and Cynthia Osterman)

Australia on internet enemy watchlist

A top media rights watchdog has listed Australia along with Iran and North Korea in a report published on countries that pose a threat of internet censorship.

Paris-based media rights group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) put Australia and South Korea on its list of countries “under surveillance” in its Internet Enemies report.

Australia was listed for the Federal Government’s plan to block access to websites featuring material such as rape, drug use, bestiality and child sex abuse. Critics say the plan is a misguided measure that will harm civil liberties.

In South Korea, the RSF report added, “draconian laws are creating too many specific restrictions on web users by challenging their anonymity and promoting self-censorship.”

“These countries are worrying us because they have measures that could have repercussions for freedom of expression on the internet,” RSF secretary general Jean-Francois Julliard said at an internet rights award ceremony.

Russia and Turkey were also added to the watchlist, which is a category below RSF’s top “Enemies of the Internet”, the countries it considers the 12 worst web freedom violators.

These include Saudi Arabia, Burma, China, North Korea, Iran and Vietnam.

“The world’s largest netizen prison is in China, which is far out ahead of other countries with 72 detainees, followed by Vietnam and then by Iran, which have all launched waves of brutal attacks on websites in recent months,” RSF’s report said.

A senior manager of US internet giant Google, David Drummond, said there was an “alarming trend” of government interference in online freedom, not only in countries that are judged to have poor human rights records.

He cited Australia’s plans as an example, saying that there “the wide scope of content prohibited could include socially and politically controversial material.”

The Australian case “is an example of where these benign intentions can result in the spectre of true censorship,” he added, speaking at Thursday’s ceremony.

“Here in Europe, even in France, at this very moment, some are tempted by this slippery path of network filtering.”

- AFP

Australia observes zero tolerance on racial attacks, says delegation

Mumbai, July 9 (ANI): An Australian delegation, which is on a visit to India, has said that Australia has no tolerance for racist attacks and that overseas students should take precautions to keep themselves safe.

Interacting with reporters here on Wednesday, Paul Evans, Assistant Commissioner for Victoria Police, said Australia has no tolerance for racial attacks and some of the offenders who have been detained would be dealt with severely.

“The Australian Government got no tolerance for racist attacks. We have got no tolerance for racism. We had racial discrimination legislation for a long time. I know that students are going to be safe in Australia and safe if they take right precautions and take care. We have caught offenders. They would be put before the courts and they would be dealt with severely,” Evans said.

Arun Sharma, an Indian-origin member of the Australian delegation, said the attacks were not racial, but attacks by some opportunistic children with criminal minds.

“These are not racial attacks. These are opportunity attacks. There are two to three areas in Melbourne where during late night some children with criminal mind carried out these attacks. These are not racial attacks,” he said.

A high-level delegation from Canberra, led by Colin Walters from the Australian Department of Education, is in India. The delegation met Indian officials in New Delhi on Monday.

The delegation will also visit Ahmedabad, Hyderabad, Chennai, Bangalore, Chandigarh and Kolkata.

Australia has come under intense pressure in the Indian media after a series of recent brutal attacks on students in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide.

More than 1,400 students and other immigrants have reportedly been victims of racial abuse Down Under.

The issue strained diplomatic relations and led to urgent talks between Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. (ANI)

Australian lawmakers visit Dharamsala to meet Dalai Lama

Dharamsala, July 2 (ANI): A group of Australian lawmakers arrived here to meet the exiled Tibetan leader, the Dalai Lama and representatives of Tibet’s government-in-exile.

The six-member delegation comprises the Labour lawmakers Michael Danby and Melissa Parke, Liberal lawmaker Peter Slipper, Independent Senator Nick Xenophon and Greens Senators Scott Ludlam and Sarah Hanson-Young.

The delegation, due to stay in Dharamshala till July 6, is accompanied by a handful of lawyers, journalists and activists.

“They are coming here to meet Dalai Lama and also to be introduced to the democratic structure of the Tibetans-in-exile. We would also take this opportunity to brief them more about the situation inside Tibet and they are expressing their support on the Tibetan cause,” said Dolma Garry, deputy speaker of Tibetan parliament-in-exile.

Meanwhile, the Australian lawmakers apologised for the alleged racial attacks on Indian students in their country.

“We are strongly in support of persons of India and other international students in Australia and we feel disgusted. That’s why it is very important that we should have a response. The Prime Minister is sitting with the state governments to make sure that our response is such that Indian students continue to feel safe in our country,” said Peter Slipper, a Liberal Australian lawmaker.

Australia has been under intense fire in the Indian media after a series of brutal attacks on students in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide last month. By Akhilesh Bharti (ANI)

Interpol says seven countries link found in Mumbai attacks

Islamabad, Mar 8 (ANI): Interpol Secretary General Ronald K Noble has said that links of seven different countries are found in the Mumbai terror attacks that killed more than 170 people.

“Interpol and Pakistan are cooperating with each other to investigate into the Mumbai terrorist attacks, links of the seven different countries are found during the investigation. We are trying to help expose the terrorists wherever they are hiding,” The Nation quoted Noble, as saying.

During his three-day stay in Islamabad Ronald met Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani, Interior Advisor Rehman Malik and the DG Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) Tariq Khosa.

Ronald who himself remained top US law enforcer at various positions including Chief of Staff of the Criminal Division, United States Department of Justice said that Pakistan was cooperating with the Interpol firmly.

He showed his confidence in the investigations of the Mumbai attacks being carried out by the Pakistani Federal Investigation Agency (FIA).

When asked whether Pakistan had sought the handing over of Ajmal Kasab the only alive actor of the brutal attacks at Mumbai currently under Indian custody, Noble did not reply saying, “This is the most difficult question to answer.”

Noble added that Pakistan was providing the Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) to the Interpol, which would be checked by the global data of the 187 countries maintained by the Interpol.

He said that Pakistan understood that unless terrorists-related information was compared against Interpol’s global database and shared among its global network, an international terrorist investigation can never be considered complete and all countries, which are not provided with this vital information, remain at risk. (ANI)