Monkey as butlers’ help maimed US soldiers in Afghanistan lead a normal life

London, May 6 (ANI): American soldiers and officers who were physically disabled while fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq, are being given monkeys as butlers to perform their daily tasks.

The clever capuchins are trained to react to where a laser pen is shined. Provided by a charity, the primate pets help amputees and paralysed soldiers lead normal lives.

Wheelchair-bound Corporal Tim Jeffers, who lost both of his legs, his right eye and part of a hand in Iraq, said of his monkey butler: “He has changed my life and is my best friend.”

Jeffers is among dozens of US war veterans to get a trained primate called Webster, The Sun reports.

He said: “After six months in a military hospital I struggled with daily tasks like turning on a light switch or using a TV remote. But Webster changed all that. He leaps into action at the point of a laser pen and can fetch on command.

“Webster can operate a remote, get objects from a high shelf and open jars of peanut butter.”

The primates, which have been trained at a cost of 30,000 pounds each, are the brainchild of a charity called Helping Hands: Monkey Helpers For The Disabled.

A fund called The Paralysed Veterans of America now provides with much-needed grants.

South American capuchin monkeys were found to be the best primates to train and are also good-natured. Regular monitoring of the creatures ensures their own health and well-being. (ANI)

Navy makes changes after SIEV 36 inquiry

The Royal Australian Navy says operational changes are being made to ensure the SIEV 36 tragedy is not repeated.

The asylum seeker boat exploded near Ashmore Reef last year. Five asylum seekers were killed and dozens more were injured in the blast.

Crew from HMAS Albany provided treatment to 13 Afghan casualties in a makeshift burns unit on board their vessel.

The last of 51 commendations were today presented to Defence personnel who were involved in the rescue of asylum seekers.

Two patrol boat crews received a commendation, while Corporal Sharon Jagher received an individual gold commendation for her efforts on the day she described as the worst of her life.

A coronial inquiry found asylum seekers had lit petrol after being warned they would be returned to Indonesia.

But the inquiry also heard the incident could have been prevented if Defence personnel had properly searched the boat for petrol and matches and not agitated the asylum seekers by asking them to return to Indonesia.

Rear Admiral Tim Barrett says the coroner’s recommendations are being implemented despite claims to the contrary from the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre.

“Most if not all of those actions are either complete or are very much underway to being complete,” he said.

Defence crew commended for SIEV 36 rescue

Twenty defence personnel have received commendations for their bravery during a fatal boat explosion near Ashmore Reef last year.

The asylum seeker boat known as SIEV 36 exploded near Ashmore reef last year.

Five asylum seekers were killed and dozens more were injured in the blast.

Crew from HMAS Albany provided treatment to 13 Afghan casualties in a makeshift burns unit on board their vessel.

Today, Rear Admiral Tim Barrett praised their skill and compassion for human life.

Two patrol boat crews received a commendation, while Corporal Sharon Jagher received an individual gold commendation for her efforts on the day she described as the worst of her life.

Sniper kills guerrillas two-and-a-half km away

London, May 3 (IANS) A British Army sniper in Afghanistan has found a place in military history by shooting dead two Taliban guerrillas who were over two-and-a-half kilometers away.

Corporal Craig Harrison killed the two insurgents, who were armed with a machine gun, with consecutive bullets that were fired nearly 3,200 feet beyond the official range of his rifle.

His kills beat the previous record held by a Canadian soldier by 150 feet.

Harrison was so far away that the bullets took almost three seconds to reach their target.

The sniper fired at the Taliban guerrillas after his commander and Afghan soldiers were attacked during a patrol in Helmand in November last year.

His vehicle was further back on a ridge, with his sights trained on a Taliban compound.

‘We saw two insurgents running through its courtyard. They came forward carrying a machine gun and opened fire on the commander’s wagon. Conditions were perfect, no wind, mild weather, clear visibility.

‘The first round hit a machine gunner in the stomach. He went straight down and didn’t move. The second insurgent grabbed the weapon and my second shot hit him in the side,’ Harrison was quoted as saying.

Colombian rebels release hostage after 12 years

A Colombian soldier captured as a teenager by the country’s left-wing FARC rebels has been released after more than 12 years as a hostage.

Sergeant Pablo Moncayo was 19 when he was captured. He was a corporal at the time but was promoted while in captivity.

The Red Cross coordinated the handover that took place at a remote jungle location in the south of the country.

Sergeant Moncayo’s plight has received international media attention largely due to his father’s lobbying efforts in which he would wear chains to symbolise his son’s captivity.

But the rebels say no more hostages will be released until Colombian president Alvaro Uribe agrees to negotiate a prisoner exchange.

Mr Uribe has a hardline policy against the rebels, but says an exchange is possible if freed guerillas do not rejoin the FARC.

Grieving Gurkha given permission to stay in the UK

Kathmandu, May 14 (ANI): A grieving Gurkha veteran who watched his soldier son’s flag-draped coffin return from Afghanistan yesterday has been told he can stay in Britain.

Officials had earlier snubbed heartbroken Dhan Bahadur Pun’s request to settle here despite his family’s sacrifice and his own 16 years of impeccable service to this country. But after relentless pressure from The Sun, Home Secretary Jacqui Smith last night ruled that ailing, 63-year-old Dhan will be allowed to settle in the UK.

Dhan, his wife and children had been granted only short-stay visas to be at RAF Lyneham, Wilts, to see the coffin of Gurkha Corporal son Kumar, 31, flown back.

A suicide bomber in Helmand province killed Kumar. His coffin was carried from an RAF Hercules with those of three other servicemen who also died in Afghanistan last week.

Dhan believed he was condemned to go back to an old age of penury and pain in a small third-floor flat in Kathmandu.

But Smith told The Sun: “We owe this man and his family a huge debt of honour. Dhan Bahadur Pun will be granted right of settlement in the UK.”

Dhan served with the 6th Queen Elizabeth’s Own Gurkha Rifles from 1966 to 1982, fighting in Malaysia, Brunei and Cyprus. (ANI)

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)

Indian schoolgirl dies after torture by teacher

New Delhi – An 11-year-old girl died in New Delhi Friday after being tortured by her schoolteacher apparently for not doing her homework, news reports and officials said.

Shanno Khan fell unconscious soon after being punished at the government-run school in the Bawana area in Delhi on Wednesday and was admitted at a hospital.

Parents of the class-two student alleged that she slipped into a coma after her teacher banged her head and made her stand out in the sun for two hours.

Shanno was put on life-support but succumbed to the injuries on Friday afternoon, doctors said.

The NDTV network reported that Shanno was apparently brutally punished for not doing her homework. Other media reports said the teacher punished her as she had failed to recite the alphabet properly.

“Police have not yet registered a complaint in the matter. The teacher and the principal have been suspended by the authorities but this will not bring our daughter back,” Shanno’s father, Mohammed Ayub Khan, told reporters.

The incident sparked a furore in the Indian capital with the Federal Minister for Women and Child Development Renuka Chowdhury saying strict action will be taken against the school authorities. Corporal punishment is banned in India.

“What a terrible tragedy. How sad that an innocent child had to die like this. It is high time we take cognizance of such incidents,” she said.

The Delhi Commission for Protection of Child Rights chairman Amod Kanth told the IANS news agency that the panel was going to ask the school and education authorities for an explanation and for submitting a report on the issue.(dpa)

Punished by teacher, 11-year-old girl dies in hospital

New Delhi, Apr 17 (ANI): Shannoo Khan, who had slipped into coma after she was hit by her teacher and made to stand in the sun for over two hours, died at a hospital here on Friday.

Shannoo was undergoing treatment for “ventilatory failure” in the intensive care unit (ICU) of the Lok Nayak Hospital.

She was a student of Class two at the ND Primary School in Narela, North Delhi.

The incident allegedly occurred on Thursday when Shannoo failed to recite the English alphabet in class. Angered by this, the teacher allegedly hit Shannoo’s head against the table and made her stand in the sun for over two hours. Unable to stand the heat, Shannoo fainted and was found unconscious by her younger sister, who studies in the same school.

The girl then informed their mother, Rihanna, who rushed Shannoo to Maharshi Valmiki Hospital. Shannoo’s father, Ayub Khan, who works as a waiter in a catering company, was away in Haryana for work.

“Doctors at Maharshi Valmiki hospital told me that Shannoo’s condition was critical and she might not survive,” said Khan.

The 11-year-old was subsequently shifted to the pediatric ICU of the Lok Nayak Hospital on Thursday afternoon.

“She was brought to our hospital in a critical condition. We have examined the child and her blood pressure is very low due to which she remains in a state of shock. Her pulse is very weak too. She is on a ventilator and we can comment on her condition only tomorrow,” said Dr. A. P. Dubey, head of the department, pediatrics, Lok Nayak Hospital.

“The child was admitted in with severe seizure and her condition further deteriorated before she slipped into a coma. She was shifted to LNJP in critical condition,” said Dr. KK Deuri, medical superintendent of Maharshi Valmiki hospital. MCD officials, however, denied that the girl was punished and said she suffered from frequent seizures.

Earlier in the day, the Delhi Government and the Centre promised they would take strict action against those involved in the incident.

Union Minister for Women and Child Welfare Renuka Chowdhury promised justice would be done.

The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) has ordered an inquiry into the incident.

The principal and the teacher have been suspended.

The Chairman of the MCD Education Committee Prithiviraj Sahni had earlier said, “The girl has been detained for shortage of attendance. She has been irregular with her classes because of fits. On Wednesday too, she had fits, following which her parents were informed.”

Municipal Commissioner K. S. Mehra has asked the Director of Primary Education to conduct an inquiry and submit a report within three days.

The principal of the school has been identified as Dhanpati, while the teacher has been identified as Manju.

Police said they have confirmed that the child was punished at school. Atul Katiyar, DCP, (outer), said: “We have confirmed from various sources that the child did face corporal punishment and investigations are on. We will file an FIR only after we receive the medical reports.” (ANI)

Australian soldier killed in Afghanistan

Sydney – A second Australian soldier has been killed this week fighting Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan, the Defence Force announced Thursday.

The soldier was trying to defuse a roadside bomb when it exploded.

“We are devastated another soldier has been killed so soon after the death of Corporal Mathew Hopkins,” Defence Force chief Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston said.

Hopkins was killed on Monday in an exchange of fire with the Taliban.

Around 1,000 Australian soldiers are deployed in the southern province of Oruzgan, part of the 70,000-strong foreign force in Afghanistan.

Thursday’s casualty was the 10th since Australia joined the international forces in Afghanistan after the ouster of the Taliban in late 2001. (dpa)

Ex-SAS commander in Afghanistan condemns British Govt. for ‘unnecessary deaths’

London, Mar 7 (ANI): Former Special Air Service commander in Afghanistan has condemned the British government for the “unnecessary deaths” of four soldiers who were killed when their Snatch Land Rover hit a roadside bomb.

The Scotsman newspaper quoted Major Sebastian Morley as saying that the government has “blood on its hands”.

He claimed that the Whitehall officials and military commanders repeatedly ignored his warnings regarding the killings of the troops if they continued to use the “unsafe” vehicles.

The 40-year-old commander resigned after the deaths of Corporal Sarah Bryant, the first female soldier to die in Afghanistan, and three of her male colleagues when their Snatch hit an anti-tank mine in Helmand province in June.

Major Morley blamed Quentin Davies, the minister for defence equipment and support, for telling an “unacceptable lie” in the wake of the deaths, that commanders had a choice of vehicles to use. (ANI)