Yemen language schools near-empty after militant student

(Reuters) – When Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab enrolled in an Arabic course in Yemen last year, few who met him could have guessed what this withdrawn young man was really up to, nor the devastating impact he would leave behind.

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Staff at the now-deserted language center where he studied are still reeling from the actions of the Nigerian, suspected of trying to blow up a U.S.-bound plane in December, just weeks after leaving the Arabian peninsula country.

Adil Badi, a teacher at the Sanaa Institute for the Arabic Language, said radical Muslims such as Abdulmutallab, a student from a wealthy family who had no criminal record, had used the Arabic courses on offer in Yemen as a pretext for entering the country to meet fellow militants there.

“They had something else to do in Yemen but their excuse was to study Arabic,” Badi said.

Prized for the purity of its dialect and cheap living costs, Yemen was long a popular destination for students of Arabic. But over the years, a number of foreign militants have arrived in Yemen in the guise of Arabic students, only to join al Qaeda training camps.

Sherif Mobley, a U.S. citizen currently being held in Yemen on suspicion of belonging to al Qaeda, also first came to the country as a student of Arabic at a language institute, before attending a university run by prominent hardline Muslim cleric Sheikh Abdul-Majid al-Zindani, officials say.

Abdulmutallab was on his second visit to Yemen when he enrolled at the center in August 2009. When his visa expired in September, he disappeared for around two months, during which officials believe he moved to al Qaeda’s main hideout there.

Four months after the attempted bombing, an al Qaeda video showed Abdulmutallab attending a militant training camp in the desert and also showed footage of him in an apparent martyr’s farewell.

During this time, the former engineering student also met Anwar al-Awlaki, a radical U.S.-born preacher who is wanted dead or alive by Washington.

“His goals and objectives came prior to Yemen,” said Sabri Saleem, president of the Yemen College of Middle Eastern Studies, one of Sanaa’s oldest Arabic language schools. “He just came to implement.”

VISA BAN

Yemen has a long history with al Qaeda, whose resurgent regional wing has its base in the impoverished country and continues to attract Islamist militants from abroad.

Saleem’s institute keeps close tabs on its students, screening academic records, keeping track of their movements while they are in the country, and making them sign a declaration that they would adhere to the centre’s rules.

Of the 9,000 students who have passed through his school over the past two decades, Saleem said only one of them was radical, and that was John Walker Lindh.

Dubbed the “American Taliban,” Lindh was captured in 2001 during the Afghanistan war and jailed under a U.S. plea deal for 20 years for fighting alongside the Taliban.

The Yemeni government has made it clear that it does not believe Abdulmutallab was radicalized in Yemen, but that this happened in London, where he was a student.

But in the immediate aftermath of the attempted bombing, it banned visas issued at arrival in the airport.

Foreign Minister Abubakr al-Qirbi told Reuters that Yemen had also begun to screen individuals applying for tourist visas from its embassies abroad.

That U.S. and many European citizens could previously obtain visas at the airport had turned out to be a major security problem for the government, he said.

“That’s how some of these extremist groups managed to get into the country,” the minister said.

BAD FOR BUSINESS

While security concerns have kept potential students away for several years now, language schools say that enrolments have fallen sharply in the months since the failed plane attack, particularly as the government tightens visa restrictions.

Pictures displayed in the reception of the Sanaa Institute for the Arabic Language tell of better times. One shows a class listening attentively to the teacher, while in another a group of students poses in the now-empty garden outside.

“We are on the verge of bankruptcy,” said Badi, adding that he had only two students left, one from South Korea and the other from the United States.

Belman Sihombing, a chef from Indonesia who came to study Arabic with his wife and daughter, said his family only managed to obtain their visas with help from the school’s director.

“The visa was a problem from my embassy in my country. They wouldn’t give it to us because of the Nigerian trying to bomb the United States, so all embassies don’t give visas,” he said.

Saleem said recent events had hit his institution badly too.

This summer, Saleem’s center, which is accredited with over 100 universities across the world, will host 32 students, compared to 85 last year and 230 students in 2008, he said.

Concern over security in Yemen, which is also facing rising violence between government forces and separatists in the south and has just ended a bloody round of fighting with northern rebels, has long been an issue for his business.

“It was really building up, but the Nigerian was the worst case,” he said. “If I didn’t own the building we are in, then we would have closed by now.”

(Editing by Lin Noueihed)

Indian murderer in Scotland jail wants to go home

LONDON: Indian citizen Roshan Dantis, who has been jailed for life in Scotland for brutally murdering a Nepali student and extorting money from her husband, wants to be transferred to a prison in Goa.

Dantis, 30, was imprisoned for life in January, and must serve at least 24 years in jail before being considered for deportation. He is lodged in the Barlinnie prison in Glasgow.

The police in Glasgow described Dantis as “one of the most dangerous murderers Scotland has known.”

Dantis has asked his representative, legal company Beltrami Berlow, to lodge an application with the Scottish Government to have him transferred to Goa. He is reportedly keen to meet his mother, who cannot travel to Scotland.

Britain signed an agreement with India in 2005 to allow citizens convicted here to serve their sentence in their native country.

Dantis’s solicitor, Matthew Berlow, said: “We’re exploring the possibility of my client being transferred to a prison in India. I cannot comment further at present.”

The sensational case involved Indian engineering student Dantis, and his close friend, Nepali student Nagendra Shah, 32, and Shah’s wife, Khusbu Shah, 23. The Shahs married in Nepal before arriving in Glasgow in 2008.

Violence leads to closure of Tamil Nadu”s Annamalai University

Chidambaram (Tamil Nadu), Mar 5 (ANI): The Annamalai University at Chidambaram in Tamil Nadu has been closed indefinitely due to violence on the campus following the death of some students.

“There was an instance of vandalism in the name of a students protest at the Examination Building and Raja Muthiah Medical College Hospital. Hooligan elements attacked the doctors and many others, including waiting patients, injuring the legs of a couple of doctors. All these developments have forced us to ask nearly 8500 students to vacate their hostels since the university is closed for the time being. Necessary arrangements have been made for the students to return to their homes, in cooperation with the railways,” said Dr. M Ramanathan, Vice Chancellor of Annamalai University, here on Thursday.

Consequent to the suspension of the classes and closure of academic institutions, the varsity authorities have asked the students to vacate their respective hostels.

Tension had gripped the university campus since Sunday, when Gautam Kumar, an engineering student hailing from Ranchi, allegedly died due to lack of proper treatment, after his two-wheeler collided with a truck.

Following his death, some of students went to meet Dr. M Ramanathan, Vice Chancellor of the University, to complain about the lack of proper medicare for Kumar.

The students were prevented from meeting Dr. Ramanathan and brutally chased away by the police deployed in the campus.

In the melee, some students drowned in a canal.

The three dead students were identified as Sumit Kumar of Jharkhand and Mohammad Sarfaraz and Ashish Rajan Kumar.

Kumar was from Jharkhand, while Sarfaraz and Ashish were from Bihar. (ANI)

Iranian youth recounts how he was raped, beaten for questioning Ahmadinejad’s victory

Tehran, Sep. 11 (ANI): A teenaged engineering student has revealed that he was locked up, beaten and raped multiple times for daring to protest against President Ahmadinejad’s disputed re-election.

“When I first participated in the protests I was not demonstrating against the Leader or the Islamic Republic. I was protesting Ahmadinejad’s cheating. But today, I say ‘Death to Khamenei’, and having been raped by his henchmen I also say ‘Death to the Dogs of Khamenei,” Times Online quoted Ardeshir, 19, as saying.

Ardeshir recounts that after being arrested he was driven to an apartment building 90 minutes away that was clearly an unofficial detention centre.

“A Basiji called Mahmoud urinated on my face, saying that this would teach me not to oppose the divine wishes of the Great Leader of the Revolution. ‘We have been sent to re-educate you, you spoilt Western piece of shit.

“Another Basiji came up and raped me. At this point I felt that I was not me. I seemed to have shut down and separated from my body. Why these people who claim to be the most religious in our society can do such things?” report quoted him, as saying.

A hospital report confirms he suffered anal damage. He has temporarily abandoned his studies temporarily and seeks solace by playing the santur, an Iranian instrument.

“He has extreme feelings of self-hatred resulting from a sense that he will never be clean again, and from shame over the repeated rapes,” his psychologist says.

Ardeshir – not his real name – is one of scores of detainees who have been raped and tortured by their jailers in the past three months in what appears to be a systematic attempt to break their will, the report concludes. (ANI)

‘India is a good study destination for Malaysian students’

Kuala Lumpur, June 21 (ANI): Deputy Minister in the Malaysian Prime Minister’s Department, S.K. Devamany, has said that India can be a good option for Malaysian students who want to study abroad, and vice-versa.

“Instead of travelling afar to Europe, students from India can come to Malaysia, where the cost of living is lower. The same applies to Malaysian students who are looking for alternative education options,” he said.

Students, who are interested, can visit the two-day India Education Fair at the Mid Valley Exhibition Centre, Kuala Lumpur.

Twenty-six colleges and universities from India are participating in the exhibition.

Scholarships and subsidies are also available to students, depending on their academic qualifications.

Launching the fair, Devamany said the event aimed to have Malaysian students look at study options in India, the Government also looked forward to have more overseas private colleges build their campuses here.

India offers a wide variety of courses, including engineering, applied science, pharmacy, medicine and dentistry.

Industry player Dr C. Vijayakumar said: “An engineering student spends about 20,000 dollars on tuition fees per year to study in Europe. But it only costs about 5,000 dollars (RM17,500) to further one’s study in India,” he said. (ANI)

Attempt of shoe hurling at Manmohan Singh is an insult to the democracy’, says BJP

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New Delhi/Rae Bareli, Apr 27 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has termed the incident of shoe hurling at Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh as an insult to the democracy./pp
We say there should be no politics on the issue. The one who has done this has committed an insult to the democracy. It should be strongly condemned, said BJP spokesperson Sidharth Nath Singh./pp
Meanwhile, Congress President Sonia Gandhi’s daughter Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said that such acts were not part of Indian culture./pp
When there is a problem, there are ways of dealing with it. /pp
There are both right and wrong ways to express dissatisfaction. I believe this is not the right way. This is not our culture. Our country’s culture is non-violence. So, shoe hurling is not ours, she said in Rae Bareli. /pp
On Sunday, a young engineer in his early twenties threw a shoe at Dr. Singh while he was addressing an election rally in Ahmedabad. The shoe, however, missed its mark. /pp
The offender identified as Hitesh Chauhan was sitting in the first row during the rally when he hurled his shoe./pp
During enquiry from Hitesh, it was learnt that he was an engineering student and a resident of Bapu Nagar area of the city, and threw the shoe to secure publicity. /pp
Prime Minister has advised not to lodge any First Information Report with the police against Hitesh and forgave him. /pp
On April 7, an accredited journalist in New Delhi had expressed his protest over CBI giving clean chit to Congress leader Jagdish Tytler in anti-Sikh riots of 1984, by hurling a shoe at Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram.
Congress leader Naveen Jindal also became a victim of a similar incident when an agitated school teacher hurled a shoe towards him during a rally. /pp
In another such incident, a party member hurled his wooden footwear at Bharatiya Janata Party’s primeministerial candidate L.K. Advani during a rally in Madhya Pradesh’s Katni town. (ANI)/p

UP gangster arrested for AMU student’s murder

NEW DELHI: The special operation squad of the crime branch on Thursday evening finally managed to arrest 25-year-old Mohammad Rahees from near
Siddharth Extension. Rahees had been on the run ever since a special CBI court declared him a proclaimed offender in a murder he allegedly committed inside the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) campus.

Once an informer of the UP police, Rahees had reportedly been booked for 10 different crimes, including under the dreaded Gangsters Act by the UP police.

Rahees, an illiterate, hails from Khurja in the Bulandshahr district of UP, and spent his early years travelling between Khurja and Surat, Gujarat, where his father had a job. “He came to Delhi in 2001 and settled near the Okhla sabzi mandi. However, he was booked by the police the same year after he picked a fight. Then, he came in contact with local criminals and graduated to bigger crimes,” said a senior crime branch official.

In 2002, Rahees dared to break inside a house in the Welcome area and rob a woman at gunpoint. He was arrested and spent the next one-and-a-half-year in jail. After his release, Rahees set up his own petty gang in UP.

“All this while, he kept a low profile. He did not get into police record books though his name cropped up in at least three incidents of heinous crimes. A year later, he shifted to the AMU campus with help from one Saheed, who stayed on campus. Saheed, who had not studied beyond class VIII, was from Rahees’ village, but had not been involved in any major crime till then,” added the officer. Rahees was residing at Suleman Hall in AMU.

On April 25, 2007, Rahees and his associate murdered a final year BTech petro-chemical engineering student Kauser Salik Mazhar when he resisted his motorcycle being jacked. He was shot inside the campus leading to a furore lasting over three days. The case was handed over to the CBI.

After questioning over 250 witnesses, the agency narrowed down on Rahees and a CBI court declared him a proclaimed offender. However, Rahees remained out of the agency’s reach. On March 18, he along with his associate shot two businessmen at Secunderabad for a contract of Rs 50,000, but could not collect the entire amount as the police managed to arrest him.

Meanwhile, AMU authorities said they were relieved that Rahees has been caught. “Since the murder in 2007 we have taken a number of steps to stop such incidents from repeating. We have re-allotted the hostels and thrown out outsiders. Vigilance has been increased and there is restricted entry for outsiders,” said Rahat Abra, PRO, Aligarh Muslim University.

ACP (crime) Satyendra Garg said: “We have informed the UP police and CBI about the arrest. Now, the court will decide which agency is to be given his remand.”

Voter card is just an identity proof for many

New Delhi, April 2 (IANS) Even as a large number of people, especially young first-time voters, are looking forward to casting their ballot, there are quite a few who are content to use their voter card just as a proof of identity.

‘I got my voter I-card made because it works as an identity proof in many places. I have no interest in politics and I’m not going to vote. I think choosing a leader in today’s political scene is like choosing bad from worse,’ Kanika Vanvari, a Delhi College of Engineering student, told IANS.

‘After listening to Varun Gandhi’s hate speech and nomination of criminals by political parties, I don’t want to vote. I think people should abstain from voting and teach these politicians a lesson,’ said another student, Teena Jha.

‘I am happy enough to have my voter ID as an identity proof during identity verification in different institutes or while renting a house or getting an internet connection. It is better than having to vote for a candidate you don’t really believe in.’

Similarly, for Sarita Devi, who works as a domestic maid, getting her voter I-card this time has come as a huge relief – not because she wants to exercise her franchise but because having an identity proof makes life more convenient.

‘My husband and I migrated from Darbhanga (Bihar) to Delhi six years ago. But without any identity and residential proof things have been very difficult. Sometimes they ask for identity proof in the homes that I go to work in and I don’t have anything to show. Even getting a mobile phone connection is difficult. So getting this voter ID is a boon,’ she said.

But when asked if she will use her card to vote this time, Sarita Devi sounded hesitant.

‘I don’t know. I have no idea about politics and whom should I vote for? In any case, whether it is a new government or new leader, for the poor things hardly change. If they did, I would not be working here. They (politicians) all make empty promises.’

No wonder then that one of the primary concerns of Delhi chief electoral officer Satbir Silas Bedi is to motivate people, especially those who are already registered in the electoral rolls, to come out and vote.

‘One of the most pressing problems is that people who are registered and have valid voter I-cards don’t cast their votes. They use the I-card for all other purposes, as an identity proof in airports, to get phone connections, but not for what it’s meant,’ Bedi told IANS.

Bedi said that in the Delhi assembly elections in November last year, of the 10.6 million people eligible to vote, four million did not. Of those four million, 2.5 million had valid voter I-cards.

But there are many people like Vandana Khavadiya, a final year journalism student, who believe that each vote counts.

‘Even though I think politics is a dirty game, I can’t ignore my responsibilities as a citizen. I will make sure that I vote since this is the first time for me. Each vote counts. My voter I-card is just not an official document I use for availing myself of different services but is primarily meant for exercising my right to choose my own leader,’ Khavadiya said.

Bangalore students develop a racing car

Bangalore, Feb 17 (ANI): The mechanical engineering students in Bangalore have taken their passion a step ahead by developing a racing car.

Team HAYA, a group of automobile enthusiasts from the Department of Mechanical Engineering of People’s Education Society Institute of Technology (PESIT), built the Formula car named PM408.

The car became the first-ever racing car to be displayed in the recently held Aero India-2009.

The People’s Education Society Institute of Technology (PESIT) funded the car, after the management of the college was sure about the feasibility of the whole project.

“First of all we did research and built a wooden prototype of the car and showed it to the college. Thereafter they (the college student) asked us to build a prototype to show them that we are capable of doing something like this. They later decided that they will let us do this project and also funded the whole project,” said Abhishek Fernandes, one of the students who developed the car.

This high technology car has semi-automatic gear shifting mechanism besides having a horizontal geometry, inspired from the Formula one car. Honda City engine is the only thing which has been fitted in from outside while rest of the parts have been made in-house by the college students.

Mohith Bafna, another mechanical engineering student claims that the PM408 is technologically a level above any other car in the country as of now.

Bafna also informed that the racing car is going to Italy to race with cars from forty other universities.

The car has a maximum speed of 200 kilometers per hour and has the capacity to accelerate from 0-100 kilometers in little less than 3.5 seconds.

Meanwhile, team HAYA is all set to take part in Formula Society of Automotive Engineers (FSAE) Italy 2009.

Narain Karthikeyan became India’s first Formula One driver in 2005 when he raced for the now defunct Jordan team. His win gave a boost to the interest in motor racing in the country.

India will host its first Formula One grand prix in 2010. By Shweta DC(ANI)

Lunar rock-like material may be used to build future Moon colonies

Washington, Jan 10 (ANI): Students from the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech in the US have made highly durable bricks composed of a lunar rock-like material, which one day might be used to build dwellings in colonies on the moon.

The invention won the In-Situ Lunar Resource Utilization materials and construction category award from the Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems (PISCES).

The team of students, under the advisement of Kathryn Logan, a professor in the materials science and engineering department, designed the brick as a potential building tool for future colonies on the moon.

Initially designed to construct a dome, the building material is composed of a lunar rock-like material mixed with powdered aluminum that can be molded into any shape.

Design work on the early-development lunar bricks was based on previous work by the College of Engineering student team’s adviser Kathryn Logan, a professor of materials science and engineering and the Virginia Tech Langley Professor at the National Institute of Aerospace in Hampton, Virginia.

Logan’s prior research entailed mixing powdered aluminum and ceramic materials to form armor plating for tanks funded through a Department of Defense contract.

“I theorized that if I could do this kind of reaction to make armor, then I could use a similar type of reaction to make construction materials for the moon,” Logan said.

Since actual lunar rock, known as regolith, is scarce, the students used volcanic ash from a deposit on Earth along with various minerals and basaltic glass, similar to rock on the lunar surface, according to Eric Faierson, a doctoral student who led the Virginia Tech team.

During initial experiments, the simulated regolith and aluminum powder were mixed and placed inside a shallow aluminum foil crucible.

A wire was inserted into the mixture, which was then heated to 2,700 degrees Fahrenheit triggering a reaction called self-propagating high-temperature synthesis (SHS), according to Logan.

The reaction caused the material to form a solid brick. A ceramic crucible was used in later experiments to form complex curved surfaces.

Once the student team had created a brick, they found that it was almost as strong as concrete under various pressure tests.

According to Faierson, one-square inch of the brick could withstand the gradual application of 2,450 pounds.

This strength would enable it to withstand an environment where gravity is a fraction of the pull on Earth. (ANI)