Japanese probe returns with unique asteroid dust

SYDNEY, June 14 (Reuters) – A Japanese space probe has landed in the Australian outback after a seven-year voyage to an asteroid, safely returning a capsule containing a unique sample of dust, Japanese mission controllers said on Monday.

The Hayabusa probe blazed a spectacular trail over Australia before slamming into the desert at around midnight local time, ending a journey to the near-Earth asteroid Itokawa that began in 2003.

A spokesman for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) told Reuters the first image available indicated the capsule carrying the precious cargo had survived.

After sunrise, Australian defence officials flew local Aboriginal elders to the site by helicopter to verify that no sacred sites had been damaged. A defence spokesman said the indigenous leaders had cleared the way for the capsule to be recovered later on Monday.

Hayabusa, which means falcon in Japanese, landed on the irregularly shaped asteroid in 2005 and scientists think it managed to pick up a small sample of material. If successful, it would be the first time a spacecraft has brought such a sample back to Earth, other than from our own Moon.

Scientists hope it could unlock secrets of the solar system’s formation and shed light on the risk to Earth from asteroid impacts.

NASA scientist Paul Abell, who monitored the return, said Hayabusa was significant from in terms planetary defence, bearing in mind an asteroid impact is thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs.

Knowing the physical characteristics of near-Earth asteroids would be useful “in case we see something coming at us in the future”, he said. As leftover matter from the building of the solar system, he added, asteroids could also tell us about its formation and possibly the origins of life.

“It has actually gone really well. It is a very significant event,” he told Reuters.

SAMPLE LOOKS SAFE

JAXA spokesman Makoto Miwada told Reuters on Monday that the first photo of the capsule, with a diameter of just 40 cm (15.75 inches) and a height of just 20 cm (7.874 inches), was very encouraging.

“We have only one photo and it looks very safe,” he said.

Much of the probe burned up spectacularly in the atmosphere, as planned, forming a spectacular fireball and the capsule could clearly be seen separating, witnesses said.

“It was like a shooting star with a starburst behind it. It was fantastic,” one witness told Reuters.

Teams from NASA were deployed to watch the 500-kg (1,100-lb) craft’s return to the Woomera weapons testing range in South Australia state. A long stretch of central Australia’s main north-south Stuart Highway was closed for safety reasons.

The asteroid Itokawa is an irregularly shaped object measuring just over 500 metres (yards) at its longest.

Planetary scientist Trevor Ireland told Reuters the dust sample could shed light on the “missing link” between asteroids and meteorites that fall to Earth.

Analysis of the capsule’s contents will be carried out in Japan and is expected to take at least six months.

(Editing by Jeremy Laurence; Sydney Newsroom +612 6273 2730)

Black Widow surrenders weapons in Assam

Guwahati, Sep 16 (ANI): Over 170 guerillas of the Dima Halam Daogah (Jewel) (DHDJ) or Black Widow have commenced surrendering their weapons from Wednesday.

Earlier on Sunday, nearly 193 rebels of the DHDJ had surrendered their weapons well ahead of the deadline given by Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram.

Chidambaram had asked the banned ultras to surrender weapons before September 15.

The DHD (J) is responsible for creating terror in the North Cachar Hill District of Assam for last six years, during which over 300 people have been killed.

Among those who surrendered arms were Daniel Dimasa, Daku Dimasa, David Dimasa and Nalo Dimasa who were considered as hardcore militants.

According to the new rules for facilitating peace talks with the militant organization, an outfit has to first abjure violence by depositing weapons and stay away from extortion by moving to designated camps. Only its top leadership will be allowed to sit for talks.

Defence spokesman, Col.R Kalia, said those who have deposited weapons have been kept in two temporary camps at Kapuchera and Jatinga under heavy escort by troops of the Red Shield Division of the Army.

A formal surrender ceremony would be held at Haflong later in the month in the presence of the State Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi, sources said.

The breakaway group of the DHD (J) led by James Dimasa are still undecided on joining the peace process.

According to Additional Director General (Special Branch) Khagen Sarmah, all the cadres of the outfit are expected to surrender their weapons in the next couple of days.

The government has adopted a multi-dimensional strategy in North Cachar Hills with strong deployment of security forces.

The brigade headquarters of the Army at Haflong has coordinating all the efforts.

Till now 373 insurgents have come over-ground depositing 136 weapons including AK series weapons, M16 rifles, INSAS rifles, rocket launchers, grenades and wireless sets, sources said. (ANI)

Army foils infiltration bid near LoC; two militants killed

Srinagar, Aug 23 (ANI): Indian Army on Sunday foiled an infiltration bid by a group of heavily armed militants and killed two of them in Kupwara district of Jammu and Kashmir at Sonapindi near the Line of Control.

According to the Defense spokesperson, the militants had sneaked into this side in the wee hours. But they were confronted by troops guarding the border at Sonapindi near the Line of Control, defence spokesman said.

The two militants were killed during the security personnel’s retaliation as after militants opened fire at them. (ANI)

US, South Korea raise surveillance level over North Korea

US, South Korea raise surveillance level over North KoreaSeoul – South Korea and the United States Thursday ramped up their surveillance over North Korea, as Pyongyang nullified its truce with Seoul and threatened war.

The armed forces of both countries upped surveillance to the penultimate level of a five-state surveillance scale for the first time since North Korea’s first nuclear test in October 2006, the South Korean Yonhap news agency reported, quoting a Defence Ministry official.

“Additional intelligence assets, including personnel, will be deployed while reconnaissance operations over North Korea will increase,” defence spokesman Won Tae Jae said.

He added that the five-stage combat alert remained locked at level four.

North Korea on Monday tested a nuclear device and on Wednesday nixed a truce with South Korea, saying it felt no longer bound by the armistice that followed the Korean War (1950-53).

The Stalinist state also threatened it could no longer guarantee the safety of US and South Korean vessels at the western inter-Korean sea border in the Yellow Sea.

The US-led United Nations Command in South Korea meanwhile rejected Pyongyang’s claim it is no longer bound by the truce.

“The armistice remains in force and is binding on all signatories, including North Korea,” it said in a statement.

“The armistice has served as the legal basis for the ceasefire in Korea for over 55 years. … The UN Command will adhere to the terms of the armistice and the mechanisms that support it,” it said.

The US has 28,500 troops stationed in South Korea as a deterrent.

North Korea’s nuclear test was unanimously condemned by the UN Security Council, which is debating further sanctions against the country.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Wednesday that North Korea will face consequences for detonating a nuclear device and for the “belligerent” threats issued against neighbouring countries.(dpa)

Tamil rebels make conflicting claims over rebel leader’s death

Colombo – Tamil rebels have made conflicting claims over the reported death of their leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, with one saying that he was still alive and another confirming his death.

A day after Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the head of the Department of International Relations of the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), issued a statement confirming the rebel leader’s death in fighting in northern Sri Lanka last Monday, another powerful group within the rebel movement contradicted the claim.

The Intelligence Department of the rebels told the pro-rebel Tamilnet website that the LTTE leadership was safe and will re-emerge when the right time comes.

The Department for Diaspora Affairs of the LTTE said it would not comment without explicit authorization from the LTTE leadership on the reported death, the Tamilnet website said.

Other pro-rebel Tamil language websites also have refrained from carrying any statement by Pathmanathan.

However, in a statement Pathmanathan said that Prabhakaran had attained martyrdom and that they have declared a week of mourning.

His statement also called on Tamils worldwide to “restrain from harmful acts to themselves or anyone else in this hour of extreme grief.”

Reports from various parts of the world with Tamil communities indicate that no mass mournings have been organized.

Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan government has said that it had retained some specimens of Prabhakaran’s body to carry out a DNA test if necessary.

Defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella said the government is prepared to conduct a DNA test but the defence establishment has no doubts that he is dead.

Prabhakaran’s body has been cremated and the ashes thrown into the sea.

Earlier the government released pictures of Prabhakaran’s body after he was reported to have been killed in a gun battle on May 17 in northern Sri Lanka. The military crushed the rebels and declared victory, ending a conflict lasting over 25 years.(dpa)

Infiltration bid foiled, three militants killed in Kashmir

Srinagar, May 22 (IANS) Three militants were killed Friday when army troops foiled an infiltration bid in the Tangdhar sector at the Line of Control (LoC) in north Kashmir, officials said.

Troops detected and challenged a group of infiltrators at the LoC in Kupwara district as soon as they crossed the border in the Tangdhar sector, a defence spokesman said here.

“The infiltrating terrorists opened fire at the surrounding troops. The fire was returned, triggering a gun battle in which three militants have been eliminated,” Lt. Col Uma Maheshwar told IANS here.

“Troops are still busy searching the area,” he added.

Arms and ammunition were recovered from the site of the gun battle.

The identity of the slain guerrillas is being ascertained, Maheshwar added.

Two soldiers killed in Kashmir gunfight

Srinagar, April 6 (IANS) Two Indian Army soldiers were killed in a gunfight with guerrillas in a forest area in Kashmir Monday, the state police said.

The army and Special Operations Group (SOG) of the Jammu and Kashmir police launched a search operation in Maidanpora forest, around 120 km from here, in the frontier Kupwara district Saturday.

The security forces came under a heavy fire from the hiding militants, which was retaliated. The gunfight continues, in which two armymen were injured.

‘(The) encounter is on and two army troopers identified as Naik Vipin Thakur and Kamaljit Singh, who were critically wounded, succumbed to their injuries while being shifted to an army base hospital in Srinagar,’ a defence spokesman said.

Violence in the Kashmir Valley, particularly in its north close to the border with Pakistan, has escalated ahead of the Lok Sabha polls.

Last month, the army intercepted a group of infiltrators in the Shamsbhari mountain range of the district. At least 17 guerrillas and eight army troopers were killed in the six-day long battle in the mountain range.

State police chief Kuldeep Khuda has said Taliban guerrillas have moved closer to the border and may try to disrupt the Lok Sabha polls in the state.

Soldier, militant killed in north Kashmir gunfight

Srinagar, April 3 (IANS) A soldier and a militant were killed in a gunfight in Kupwara district in north Kashmir Friday, a police official said.

A joint team of army troops and police jointly surrounded Zoni Reshi Chopan village in the district, 110 km from here, on a specific information about presence of militants there.

According to the official, the holed-up militants fired at the security forces during the search operations, forcing the army-police team to retaliate. A soldier was killed in the initial firing while the body of a militant has also been recovered from the site so far, he said.

The area was still cordoned-off by the security forces, who were searching it, the official added.

Last month, the army had killed 17 militants after intercepting a group of infiltrators and a ‘reception party’ of the Lashkar-e-Taiba outfit in the Shamsbari mountain range in the district.

Troops are still busy searching the area for ‘any remnants of the group’, a defence spokesman here said.

India protests to Pakistan over border firing

New Delhi – India Saturday alleged that Pakistani troops violated a ceasefire agreement and fired at frontline Indian positions in the northern Jammu and Kashmir state leaving a soldier wounded.

Pakistani forces fired at Indian troops in the Uri sector 70 kilometres west of state capital Srinagar overnight, the PTI news agency reported.

It was the first “major ceasefire violation” since relations between the nuclear-capable neighbours sunk to a new low after November 2008 Mumbai attacks which Delhi said were carried out by Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba group.

A defence spokesman told PTI that the Pakistani troops fired between 1,500 to 2,000 rounds at the Indian posts along the Line of Control (LoC) between 10 pm on Friday night and 3 am on Saturday morning.

The LoC is a de facto border dividing the disputed Kashmir region into two parts, one administered by India and the other by Pakistan.

Indian troops retaliated to the “unprovoked firing” by the Pakistani side but an Indian soldier was injured in the shoot-out, the report said.

The NDTV network reported that Indian army officials at the local level lodged a protest with their Pakistani counterparts on Saturday.

Officials told the news channel that Pakistani forces had resorted to firing to provide cover to Muslim militants to infiltrate into the troubled Indian region where a separatist insurgency that has claimed over 40,000 lives since late eighties.

There have been at least two encounters with militants near the border regions since Friday, the NDTV report said.

India says militants trained and supported by Pakistan regularly infiltrate into its part of Kashmir to launch major attacks. Pakistan, however, denies the charge and calls Kashmiri militants freedom fighters.

India and Pakistan announced a ceasefire on the borders of the two countries in 2003.

New Delhi has been voicing concern over the ceasefire violations on the border from time to time.

Indian army officials have claimed that there have been 34 incidents of ceasefire violation on the LoC last year. (dpa)

Prince Harry under fire for racist ‘Paki’ jibe video

London, January 11 (ANI): Prince Harry has sparked fury after a home video containing his racist remarks against fellow comrades emerged.

The third in line to the throne, who is honing his flying skills to become a pilot of the meanest attack machine in the British Army, was said to have invited trouble as he called an Asian officer “our little Paki friend”.

The royal, in a light-hearted manner, apparently told another cadet, who was wearing a camouflage veil off duty,”F*** me,you look like a raghead”- a nasty term to refer to an Arab.

It was alleged that Harry further went on to poke fun at the Queen as he enacted a mobile conversation while other cadets sat in the audience.

“Send my love to the corgis. I’ve got to go, got to go, bye. God Save You . . . yeah, that’s great,” News of the World quoted him as saying.

The 24-year-old also gagged about his pubic hair with one of the squad while giving orders about a forthcoming exercise in the 2006 video diary – just a year after Harry apologised for wearing a Nazi swastika at a fancy dress party.

While Clarence House issued a statement apologising for Harry’s behaviour, adding, “there is no question that he was in any way seeking to insult his friend,” the offensive commentary has evoked serious response.

The Ministry of Defence spokesman said: “This sort of language is not acceptable in a modern army.”

“The Army takes all allegations of inappropriate behaviour very seriously and all substantive allegations are investigated.”

And a spokesman for the Muslim Council of Great Britain said:

“It beggars belief that Prince Harry did not realise just how crude and offensive such a remark is.

“The army is looking to recruit from minority communities and this kind of remark will not help the impression that the army is one of the last refuges of prejudice towards minorities.”

Tory MP and former army officer Patrick Mercer added: “Whatever the context, this fine young officer has made a serious error of judgement that will cause great offence.

“It is unforgivable.” (ANI)