Drug-linked violence shakes Jamaica capital, 31 dead

Jamaican soldiers and police skirmished on Tuesday with armed supporters of a fugitive alleged drug lord facing US extradition in the third day of violence that has killed 31 people, mostly young civilians.

The sound of intermittent gunfire echoed through parts of the Caribbean tourist island’s capital Kingston, as members of the security forces carried out door-to-door searches for Christopher “Dudus” Coke, 42. The United States is seeking his extradition on drugs and gun-running charges.

Police spokesman Karl Angell said 26 civilians were killed and 25 injured in the teeming Tivoli Gardens slum of West Kingston, Coke’s “garrison” stronghold, where US prosecutors say he commands an army of young gunmen.

Many were killed when heavily armed soldiers and police stormed the slum on Monday hunting for Coke. The dead included three members of the security forces.

Angell said police had detained more than 200 people and seized firearms.

US prosecutors have described Coke as the leader of the “Shower Posse,” which murdered hundreds of people by showering them with bullets during the cocaine wars of the 1980s.

Prime Minister Bruce Golding, who declared a state of emergency in two Kingston parishes on Sunday, defended the tough security operation launched in Tivoli Gardens.

“We are facing a crisis … The measures are extraordinary, but they are extraordinary responses to extraordinary actions taken by some,” Golding told parliament. He said the limited state of emergency would remain in force for one month.

Two of the dead civilians were shot dead by suspected supporters of Coke in Spanish Town, 14 miles west of Kingston, late on Monday, authorities said.

The sharply increased death toll followed reports from residents of numerous civilian casualties during Monday’s assault on Tivoli Gardens. Residents complained on Tuesday of being “roughed up” and kept inside their homes by soldiers.

“We are hungry, we have no food and we cannot go outside,” one woman told Reuters by telephone. “Some of us are desperate. Whenever we try to go outside our homes, the soldiers chase us back in and tell us to stay inside,” she said.

“UNDER SIEGE BY CRIMINALS”

Some of the residents had reported military helicopters dropped explosives on the ramshackle slum district on Monday.

Information Minister Daryl Vaz denied this but said the government was determined to fight crime, which has in the past damaged Jamaica’s position as a popular vacation destination for US and European visitors.

“This country is under siege by criminals and the time has come where it is going to be dealt with and this government is prepared to deal with it,” Vaz said.

The violence erupted when suspected gangland supporters of Coke shot up or set fire to five police stations and staged carjackings and looting sprees in downtown Kingston on Sunday.

The unrest, which also disrupted flights in and out of Kingston airport, prompted the US State Department to warn Americans against travel to the city and surrounding areas.

Some business leaders have complained of a sharp hit to tourism. But officials said the violence had had no impact so far on the island’s bauxite, sugar and banana production.

The United States requested Coke’s extradition in August last year but Jamaica initially refused, alleging that evidence against him had been gathered through illegal wiretaps.

An arrest warrant to begin extradition proceedings against Coke was finally issued last week. He was indicted in Manhattan in 2009 on charges of conspiracy to traffic in drugs and guns, charges that carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

He is accused of running a vast smuggling ring that exports cocaine and marijuana to New York and sends guns back to Jamaica. The US indictment alleges that Coke has controlled Tivoli Gardens since the early 1990s and describes the neighborhood as a “garrison” community guarded by armed men who erect barricades and act at his direction.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the United States still hoped to have Coke turned over.

“We filed the extradition request with Jamaica last year and the government has recently decided to arrest him. Obviously they would have to go through a legal process to evaluate whether extradition is appropriate under Jamaican law,” he said.

Drug-linked violence shakes Jamaica capital, 31 dead

Jamaican soldiers and police skirmished on Tuesday with armed supporters of a fugitive alleged drug lord facing U.S. extradition in the third day of violence that has killed 31 people, mostly young civilians.

The sound of intermittent gunfire echoed through parts of the Caribbean tourist island’s capital Kingston, as members of the security forces carried out door-to-door searches for Christopher “Dudus” Coke, 42. The United States is seeking his extradition on drugs and gun-running charges.

Police spokesman Karl Angell said 26 civilians were killed and 25 injured in the teeming Tivoli Gardens slum of West Kingston, Coke’s “garrison” stronghold, where U.S. prosecutors say he commands an army of young gunmen.

Many were killed when heavily armed soldiers and police stormed the slum on Monday hunting for Coke. The dead included three members of the security forces.

Angell said police had detained more than 200 people and seized firearms.

U.S. prosecutors have described Coke as the leader of the “Shower Posse,” which murdered hundreds of people by showering them with bullets during the cocaine wars of the 1980s.

Prime Minister Bruce Golding, who declared a state of emergency in two Kingston parishes on Sunday, defended the tough security operation launched in Tivoli Gardens.

“We are facing a crisis … The measures are extraordinary, but they are extraordinary responses to extraordinary actions taken by some,” Golding told parliament. He said the limited state of emergency would remain in force for one month.

Two of the dead civilians were shot dead by suspected supporters of Coke in Spanish Town, 14 miles (22 km) west of Kingston, late on Monday, authorities said.

The sharply increased death toll followed reports from residents of numerous civilian casualties during Monday’s assault on Tivoli Gardens. Residents complained on Tuesday of being “roughed up” and kept inside their homes by soldiers.

“We are hungry, we have no food and we cannot go outside,” one woman told Reuters by telephone. “Some of us are desperate. Whenever we try to go outside our homes, the soldiers chase us back in and tell us to stay inside,” she said.

“UNDER SIEGE BY CRIMINALS”

Some of the residents had reported military helicopters dropped explosives on the ramshackle slum district on Monday.

Information Minister Daryl Vaz denied this but said the government was determined to fight crime, which has in the past damaged Jamaica’s position as a popular vacation destination for U.S. and European visitors.

“This country is under siege by criminals and the time has come where it is going to be dealt with and this government is prepared to deal with it,” Vaz said.

The violence erupted when suspected gangland supporters of Coke shot up or set fire to five police stations and staged carjackings and looting sprees in downtown Kingston on Sunday.

The unrest, which also disrupted flights in and out of Kingston airport, prompted the U.S. State Department to warn Americans against travel to the city and surrounding areas.

Some business leaders have complained of a sharp hit to tourism. But officials said the violence had had no impact so far on the island’s bauxite, sugar and banana production.

The United States requested Coke’s extradition in August last year but Jamaica initially refused, alleging that evidence against him had been gathered through illegal wiretaps.

An arrest warrant to begin extradition proceedings against Coke was finally issued last week. He was indicted in Manhattan in 2009 on charges of conspiracy to traffic in drugs and guns, charges that carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

He is accused of running a vast smuggling ring that exports cocaine and marijuana to New York and sends guns back to Jamaica. The U.S. indictment alleges that Coke has controlled Tivoli Gardens since the early 1990s and describes the neighborhood as a “garrison” community guarded by armed men who erect barricades and act at his direction.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the United States still hoped to have Coke turned over.

“We filed the extradition request with Jamaica last year and the government has recently decided to arrest him. Obviously they would have to go through a legal process to evaluate whether extradition is appropriate under Jamaican law,” he said.

(Additional reporting by Andy Quinn and Jane Sutton; Writing by Pascal Fletcher and Tom Brown; Editing by Jackie Frank)

Brit court blasts ‘democratic’ Pak for being subservient to military, intelligence

London, May 21 (ANI): A British court has lambasted Pakistan, saying that despite restoration of democracy in the country, the decision making the in the country remains dominated by the military and intelligence agencies.

Justice Mitting of the Special Immigration Appeal Commission (SIAC) of the London High Court in his judgement in the case concerning deportation of the Pakistani students arrested last year on terror charges during operation ‘Pathway’, criticised both the civilian and military set-up of Pakistan and also the Supreme Court.

There is a long and well-documented history of disappearances, illegal detention and of the torture and ill treatment of those detained, usually to produce information, a confession or compliance, the 22-page long judgement said.

“In 2009, there were 90 suicide bombings and 3000 killed. Anyone, such as Abid Naseer, suspected of belonging to either would be at risk at the hands of the ISI,” The Nation quoted the verdict, as saying.

“A recent Presidential Ordinance of October 2009, Pakistan permits those suspected of terrorism to be detained for upto 90 days without judicial oversight or the right of access to a court. Pakistan has signed, but not ratified the United Nations Convention against torture,” it added.

It may be noted that 12 Pakistani students were detained in April last year in raids across north-west Britain for planning terror attacks on Easter.

British authorities had failed to prove any charges against the detained men, but some were deported back to Pakistan.

Earlier this week, the SIAC had upheld the appeal against extradition, which was moved by two of the detained students named Abid Naseer and Ahmad Faraz Khan.

The British authorities had failed to bring up charges against any of the arrested men, but had decided to deport them for being a ‘security risk’.

Two of the arrested men Abdul Wahab Khan, and Tariq Ur Rehman, have already returned to Pakistan after their appeals against exclusion were rejected. (ANI)

Now a Brit actress claims Polanski sexually assaulted her when she was 16

London, May 15 (ANI): British actress Charlotte Lewis has alleged that Roman Polanski sexually assaulted her when she was 16.

The director is currently fighting to avoid extradition to the US on child sex charges in another case.

Lewis, who appeared in Polanski’s 1986 film Pirates, appeared at a press conference in Los Angeles to claim that she was abused by Polanski “in the worst possible way” at his home in Paris in 1982, while he was a fugitive from his 1977 rape trial in the US.

She claimed that the director “forced himself upon me” in his apartment in Paris.

Allred said that her client was “ready to testify under oath if and when that is necessary”.

Lewis, who read from a prepared statement, said that she had travelled from London to give a statement to prosecutors in Los Angeles and inform that the 1977 alleged rape is not the only incident that Polanski’s lawyers have claimed he was involved in.

“I am also a victim of Roman Polanski. He sexually abused me in the worst possible way when I was just 16 years old, four years after he fled the United States to avoid sentencing for his crimes.

“Mr Polanski knew I was only 16 years old when he met me and forced himself upon me in his apartment in Paris. He took advantage of me and I have lived with the effects of his behavior ever since it occurred,” The Times quoted her as saying.

She added that she wanted him to “get what he deserves” but refrained from mentioning details of the incident or the effect it had had on her life.

Polanski pleaded guilty in 1978 to unlawful sexual intercourse with Samantha Geimer but he fled the country before sentencing.

Polanski was taken into custody in Switzerland in September on a US warrant and remains there under house arrest at his home in Gstaad on 4.5-million-dollar bail. (ANI)

Indian man on Interpol list arrested in US

An Indian man, who is on an Interpol list after he was sentenced in absentia to serve four imprisonment in the UK for smuggling cigarettes, has been arrested at the city’s O’Hare International Airport as he was about to board a flight to India.

Anis Gulamras Vohora, 39, was on an “Interpol lookout” list and was stopped by Chicago Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers as he was boarding a flight to India over the weekend, the CBP said in a statement here.

He was arrested by CBP officers pending confirmation of extradition to the United Kingdom, where in October 2008, he was sentenced to serve four years in prison.

Vohora was turned over by CBP to the US Marshal’s Service on Monday for extradition to the UK.

It is unknown at this time if Vohora will be facing additional charges upon return to England.

“This apprehension is the direct result of that vigilance and attention to detail in apprehending Vohora and bringing him to justice,” said David Murphy, CBP director of field operations in Chicago.

Arrested along with three other men in August 2006 in the United Kingdom, Vohora was accused of seizing almost one million illicit cigarettes and 35 pounds of tobacco.

The operation led investigators to a residential house owned by Vohora’s business partner, where they uncovered extensive hand written ledgers detailing the organisation’s purchase and sale of more than 27 million smuggled cigarettes and four tons of hand rolling tobacco between November 2005 and August 2006.

The loss of revenue to the United Kingdom is estimated at around USD six million.

In November 2007, Vohora failed to appear at his trial and a bench warrant was issued.

In October 2008, a British judge found Vohora guilty in abstentia and sentenced him to serve four years in a British prison.

Pak court dismisses plea against extradition of Taliban No.2

Islamabad, May 12 (ANI): The possible extradition of 12 Afghan Taliban militants, including Taliban No.2 Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, arrested by Pakistan has benn stalled after the Lahore High Court dismissed petitions regarding the extradition.

Chief Justice Khawaja Muhammad Sharif on Tuesday rejected the plea of petitioner’s lawyer Tariq Asad, stating that the petitioner, Khalid Khawaja, was now dead.

He said a fresh petition needed to be filed for the case to proceed, the Daily Times reports.

Khawaja was kidnapped and later killed by the Afghan Taliban.

The kidnappers had linked his release with the withdrawal of petitions pending in the Lahore High Court regarding their arrested men.

Khawaja had challenged the possible extradition of Mullah Baradar, Mullah Abdul Salam, Maulvi Kabir, Mullah Muhammad, Ameer Muawiya, Tayyab Agha, Hakeemuddin Mehsud, Mullah Tayyab Popalzai, Abdul Qayum Zakir, Musa and Mohtasim Agha and others. (ANI)

Sarah Ferguson in £20K legal battle

London, May 10 (ANI): Sarah Ferguson is facing a 20,000-pound lawsuit for failing to stop a controversial book from hitting bookstores.

Journalist Chris Rogers interviewed Ferguson for Under Cover, a book about orphanages, and the royal had even planned to write the tome”s preface, based on her experience at a Turkish orphanage for a TV documentary in 2009.

However, her expose triggered controversy when Turkish officials demanded Ferguson”s extradition for violating laws by filming minors at the home, and the royal filed legal documents to try and stall the publication of Rogers” book, reports the Daily Star.

Rogers and Ferguson made an out-of-court settlement last December, but her lawyers apparently did not lodge the necessary paperwork in London”s High Court.

Now Rogers has submitted a bid to recoup his legal fees and court costs, reports the Mail on Sunday. (ANI)

Pak’s latest flip-flop, says it never demanded Kasab’s extradition

Islamabad, May 7 (ANI): In yet another flip-flop, Pakistan has denied asking India to handover the lone November 2008 Mumbai attacker Ajmal Amir Kasab to it.

Talking to reporters after a special anti-terror court in Mumbai awarded death sentence to Kasab, Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit said Islamabad had never asked for his extradition.

When asked about Kasab’s death penalty, Basit said Pakistan maintains that it was important to bring the perpetrators of the dastardly act to justice.

“Pakistan has strongly condemned the horrific attack. It’s important that the culprits are brought to justice,” The Daily Times quoted Basit, as saying.

“We would appreciate that our legal experts go through the detailed judgement,” he added.

It is worth mentioning here that days ago Pakistan had handed over six dossiers to India regarding developments made in the 26/11 probe and sought the extradition of Kasab, and Fahim Ansari, an Indian accused of conducting recce of places targeted by terrorists.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik had also said India should give Pakistan access to Kasab to facilitate the trial of seven terrorists arrested in the country in connection with the Mumbai attacks.

“Kasab’s statement is of paramount importance in the Mumbai attack case… it is an important document for the court and we need it,” Malik had said earlier.

During a meeting with Indian High Commissioner to Pakistan Sharat Sabharwal last month, Malik had stressed that Kasab should be extradited to Pakistan after his trial in India is over, as his statement would prove to be of great importance in the prosecution of the seven suspects, including Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi. (ANI)

Roman Polanski breaks his silence on American extradition demands

London, May 3 (ANI): Polish filmmaker Roman Polanski has spoken about extradition demands by the US over a 33-year-old under-age sex case.

The 76-year-old Oscar winner said that America”s main purpose was to serve him “on a platter to the media.”

Polanski is under house arrest in his Swiss alpine chalet. He laid out his case against extradition on an online magazine run by one of his staunchest supporters, French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy, reports The Daily Express.

“I have had my share of dramas and joys as we all have, and I am not going to try to ask you to pity my lot in life,” he wrote. “I ask only to be treated fairly like anyone else,” Polanski said.

He has claimed that the case charged against him is unjustified and full with problems. Each argument begins with the phrase: “I can remain silent no longer.”

Polanski also complains that Los Angeles County district attorney Steve Cooley, “who is handling this case and has requested the extradition, is himself campaigning for election and needs media publicity!”

Mr Cooley is running for the California attorney general post.

Sandi Gibbons, District attorney”s spokeswoman said the office “will withhold comment until the Swiss make a decision on his fugitive status.”

Swiss government is deciding whether to extradite Polanski to Los Angeles for having sex in 1977 with a 13-year-old girl or not.

Polanski was arrested seven months ago when he arrived in Zurich to receive a lifetime achievement award at a film festival. (ANI)

Ousted Kyrgyz President Bakiyev charged with organizing mass murder

Bishkek (Kyrgyzstan), Apr 28(ANI): Three weeks after ousting President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, the interim Kyrgyzstan government has charged him with organizing mass murder linked with the country’s bloody unrest earlier this month.

Kyrgyz interim Deputy Prime Minister Azimbek Beknazarov said the interim government has adopted a legislation accusing Bakiyev of organizing mass murder and abusing power.

He said the legislation has also removed Bakiyev’s presidential immunity, and insisted the interim government would make a formal request for his extradition from Belarus to stand trial back home.

“A decree approving the extradition had been adopted by the interim government and the request would be sent to Minsk,” the Xinhua news agency quoted Beknazarov, as saying.

At least 85 people were killed in the protests that overthrew Bakiyev, whose security forces fired on the protesters as they stormed government buildings in Bishkek.

The interim government says Bakiyev ordered the police and soldiers to shoot.

After fleeing Bishkek, Bakiyev took refuge in his hometown of Osh and tried to regroup, but after being shot at, agreed to an internationally brokered deal to resign and go into exile. (ANI)

Purulia arms drop case: CBI Director hopeful about Danish national”s extradition

Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh), Apr 27 (ANI): Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) Director Ashwani Kumar has said he is hopeful about securing the extradition of Danish national Kim Davy, the prime accused in the 1995 Purulia arms drop case.

Kumar noted that certain legal formalities are to be completed for the custody of Kim Davy.

“We are trying for his (Kim Davy”s) extradition since 2002 and Denmark government has agreed for it. Diplomacy has also agreed. Only the legal process remains since Kim Davy has filed an application in a court there that he doesn”t want to be extradited. India has given them all the guarantees but now we”ll have to fight the case because Kim Davy also has his rights and he doesn”t want the extradition,” said Ashwani Kumar.

“Thus, we will have to fight the case and hire a lawyer. We”ll fight the case and we have good evidence and government of Denmark is with us and I am sure we”ll be able to get him soon,” he added.

The Interpol had recently informed the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) that the Denmark authorities have decided to extradite Purulia arms drop case mastermind Kim Davy aka Neils Holck to India.

CBI spokesperson Harsh Bhal had said the Interpol would facilitate the extradition of Davy to India after receipt of documents formally from the Danish authorities though diplomatic channels.

The CBI accused Davy as the person behind arms drop near Anand Marg ashram in West Bengal”s Purulia District.

On April 9, the Danish Police apprehended Davy.

The CBI said Davy has demanded that the legality of the decision should be tried by the Danish courts.

The CBI also accused Davy for conspiring to procure a huge quantity of arms and ammunition and to traffic it illegally into Indian territory for the purpose of waging war against India.

In course of investigation, the CBI had revealed that the aircraft AN-26 having call sign YLLDB had flown over the sky at West Bengal”s Jhalda Police Station on the night of 17 and 18 December 1995, while it was coming from Varanasi to Calcutta and dropped huge quantity of arms and ammunition.

The immigration authorities at the Sahara International Airport in Mumbai, where it was forcefully landed on 22 December 1995, detained the crewmembers of the aircraft– Peter Bleach and five other Latavian citizens– Alexender Klichin, Igor Moskvitine, Oleg Gaidach, Evgueni Antimenko and Igor Timmerman.

Davy, who was said to be in the aircraft managed to escape from the airport.

The investigators recovered several articles such as arms, ammunition, laptop and brief case of Davy, G.P.S. flight data recorder, Cockpit Voice Recorder, Velocity height gravity recorder from the aircraft.

On conclusion of trial, all the six accused persons were sentenced to undergo rigorous imprisonment for life and to pay a fine of Rs. 25,000/- each under section 121A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and for violating Explosives Substances Act, 1908. (ANI)

Talks with Pakistan are not ruled out: Krishna

Onboard special aircraft: External Affairs Minister S M Krishna on Monday said a bilateral meeting between India and Pakistan cannot be ruled out during the XVIth SAARC Summit to be held in Thimphu, Bhutan.

“I am not ruling it out,” Krishna said when asked if the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, would meet with his Pakistan counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani.

Krishna also said that Islamabad’s request for handing over 26/11 gunman Ajmal Kasab could not be entertained till the trial is completed.

The verdict against Kasab by a special court in Mumbai is expected on May 3.

Pointing out that Kasab’s trial was at an advanced stage in India, Krishna said it was going on in full steam.

“We have to complete our legal formalities first and then we can examine Pakistan’s request for the same,” he said, adding,”the matter will be examined in consultation with other ministries and departments.”

Pakistan has asked that three Indian officials, including two magistrates and an investigator, to be allowed to travel to Pakistan to testify that they had recorded Kasab’s statement so that authorities could proceed further and make the case stronger.

on Sunday, Pakistan handed over six dossiers to India regarding developments made in the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks probe and sought the extradition of Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving gunman, and Fahim Ansari, an Indian accused of conducting recce of places targeted by terrorists.

The dossiers were handed over to India’s Deputy Indian High Commissioner, Rahul Kulshreshth, by the Foreign Office (FO) officials here.

The dossiers comprise answers to questions raised by New Delhi in connection with the ghastly attacks. Pakistan has also sought more information regarding the incident from India through the dossiers, The News reports

While India has been pressing Pakistan to prosecute the Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) founder leader Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who is considered as the mastermind of the 26/11 carnage, Islamabad says New Delhi has not provided enough evidence against the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief.

Earlier, while talking to media persons following his meeting with Indian High Commissioner Sharat Sabharwal, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said: “India has only provided leads against him (Saeed) and not sufficient evidences.”

He said Pakistan has taken stern action against Saeed and his organisation, the JuD, and sealed its offices and bank accounts.

JuD’s website and various publications have also been banned, he added.

Malik said authorities are keeping a close vigil on the JuD, the front face of the banned terror outfit the LeT, but added that action can not be taken unless there is evidence about its involvement in questionable activities.

He also said that India should to give Pakistan access to Kasab to facilitate the trial of seven terrorists arrested in the country in connection with the Mumbai attacks.

” Kasab’s statement is of paramount importance in the Mumbai attack case… it is an important document for the court and we need it,” Malik said.

According to sources privy to the meeting between Malik and Sabharwal, the Interior Minister stressed that Kasab should be extradited to Pakistan after his trial in India is over, as his statement would prove to be of great importance in the prosecution of the seven suspects, including Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi. By Ravi Shankar (ANI)

Polanski’s lawyer orders Swiss authorities to release the director

London, April 26 (ANI): Film director Roman Polanski’s lawyer has ordered the Swiss authorities to release the embattled director from house arrest in the country.

Polanski, 76, has been confined to his Swiss estate since December (09) following his September (09) arrest in Zurich stemming from a three-decade old sex crime in America.

And the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office wants Polanski to return to California to be sentenced for having unlawful sex with a 13-year-old girl at a party in 1977.

L.A. officials on April 22 ruled that Polanski cannot be sentenced in absentia, but his lawyer Herve Temime is now insisting Swiss officials release the Oscar winner from house arrest immediately.

“It is up to the Swiss authorities to tell the truth and give back Roman Polanski his freedom once and for all, regardless of the roar and unbearable pressure of an ill-informed public,” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

In February (10), Swiss authorities stated they would not make a decision on the extradition of Polanski to the U.S. until all avenues of appeal are exhausted. (ANI)

Talks with Pakistan are not ruled out: Krishna

Onboard special aircraft: External Affairs Minister S M Krishna on Monday said a bilateral meeting between India and Pakistan cannot be ruled out during the XVIth SAARC Summit to be held in Thimphu, Bhutan.

“I am not ruling it out,” Krishna said when asked if the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, would meet with his Pakistan counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani.

Krishna also said that Islamabad’s request for handing over 26/11 gunman Ajmal Kasab could not be entertained till the trial is completed.

The verdict against Kasab by a special court in Mumbai is expected on May 3.

Pointing out that Kasab”s trial was at an advanced stage in India, Krishna said it was going on in full steam.

“We have to complete our legal formalities first and then we can examine Pakistan”s request for the same,” he said, adding,”the matter will be examined in consultation with other ministries and departments.”

Pakistan has asked that three Indian officials, including two magistrates and an investigator, to be allowed to travel to Pakistan to testify that they had recorded Kasab”s statement so that authorities could proceed further and make the case stronger.

on Sunday, Pakistan handed over six dossiers to India regarding developments made in the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks probe and sought the extradition of Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving gunman, and Fahim Ansari, an Indian accused of conducting recce of places targeted by terrorists.

The dossiers were handed over to India”s Deputy Indian High Commissioner, Rahul Kulshreshth, by the Foreign Office (FO) officials here.

The dossiers comprise answers to questions raised by New Delhi in connection with the ghastly attacks. Pakistan has also sought more information regarding the incident from India through the dossiers, The News reports

While India has been pressing Pakistan to prosecute the Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) founder leader Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who is considered as the mastermind of the 26/11 carnage, Islamabad says New Delhi has not provided enough evidence against the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief.

Earlier, while talking to media persons following his meeting with Indian High Commissioner Sharat Sabharwal, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said: “India has only provided leads against him (Saeed) and not sufficient evidences.”

He said Pakistan has taken stern action against Saeed and his organisation, the JuD, and sealed its offices and bank accounts.

JuD’s website and various publications have also been banned, he added.

Malik said authorities are keeping a close vigil on the JuD, the front face of the banned terror outfit the LeT, but added that action can not be taken unless there is evidence about its involvement in questionable activities.

He also said that India should to give Pakistan access to Kasab to facilitate the trial of seven terrorists arrested in the country in connection with the Mumbai attacks.

“ Kasab’s statement is of paramount importance in the Mumbai attack case… it is an important document for the court and we need it,” Malik said.

According to sources privy to the meeting between Malik and Sabharwal, the Interior Minister stressed that Kasab should be extradited to Pakistan after his trial in India is over, as his statement would prove to be of great importance in the prosecution of the seven suspects, including Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi. (ANI)

US, India holding discussions on access to Headley

The US and Indian authorities are holding discussions on providing New Delhi access to LeT operative David Coleman Headley who has confessed to his role in the Mumbai terror attacks and agreed to be interrogated by foreign agencies.

“Those discussions (of providing Indian investigators access to Headley) are going on between our government and the Indian government at this time. It is part of the plea agreement that Headley would cooperate with Indian authorities,” Pakistani-American Headley’s lawyer John Theis said.

Theis would not comment on how much more time it would take before Indian investigators are finally given a date to quiz Headley and said “those kind of discussions will happen without the media knowing the specifics of time and place”.

Theis said he is not part of the discussions going on between the US and Indian governments but expects to be present when Headley is quizzed.

“I would expect to be present anytime that my client is interviewed by law enforcement officials, be it from India, US or any other country,” he said.

Theis refused to give any more details.

Headley had last month pleaded guilty to plotting the Mumbai attacks and avoided the death penalty and extradition to India, Pakistan and Denmark by agreeing to be interrogated by foreign agencies on US soil.

The US has said it is working “at the highest level” to provide India access to Headley, who had scouted targets for the 26/11 Mumbai attacks during his several trips to India.

US President Barack Obama had assured Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during latter’s recent visit to US that India would get access to Headley.

Singh had raised the issue with Obama when the two leaders met in Washington last week on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit.

India has for long been asking that its investigators be allowed to quiz Headley directly to unravel the entire conspiracy behind the attacks.

Kidnapped ex-ISI official’s wife accuses CIA of ‘picking up’ her husband

London, Apr.21 (ANI): The wife of former Inter-State Intelligence (ISI) official, Khalid Khwaja, who was kidnapped along with his former colleague and a British filmmaker from North Waziristan earlier this month, has alleged that her husband has been picked on the Central Investigation Agency’s (CIA) directives.

Shamama Khalid rejected the notion that the Taliban has abducted Khawaja, saying she did not believe her husband had been captured by insurgents.

“We heard some groups there are supported by the CIA. My husband is against this American war so maybe the Americans want to remove him from the fray,” The Daily Telegraph quoted Shamama, as saying.

It is pertinent to mention here that on Monday a group calling itself the ‘Asian Tigers’ released videos of Khawaja and others who were kidnapped, saying that they were in the Taliban’s custody.

However, the United States has rubbished Shamama’s allegations, terming them as baseless.

“If the allegation is that the US was involved in the abduction of these individuals, then I can say that is baseless and patently untrue,” a US Embassy official said in Islamabad.

Khwaja’s former colleague Colonel Imam is credited for creating the Taliban in the 1990s.

It is said that both Colonel Imam and Khawaja, worked with the mujahideen resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, in the 1980s.

Since retiring from the ISI, Khawaja had turned into a human rights campaigner. He has defended Al-Qaeda suspects and filed petitions against extradition of the Taliban’s second man in command Mullah Baradar to Afghanistan. (ANI)

UPDATE 1-Seven appear in UK court on insider dealing charge

LONDON, April 14 (Reuters) – Seven men charged with running an insider trading ring with information gleaned from the London printers of Swiss bank UBS (UBSN.VX)(UBS.N) and UK brokerage Cazenove (JPM.N) appeared in a British court on Wednesday.

Mitesh Shah, Neten Shah, Paresh Shah, Bijal Shah, Truptesh Patel, Ali Mustafa and Pardip Saini are alleged to have used confidential information to trade in 12 UK-listed firms over two years, including media group Reuters during its 2007 takeover by Thomson Corp (TRI.TO) (TRI.N) of Canada.

It is the largest insider dealing case to be brought before court by the Financial Services Authority (FSA), which is attempting to crack down on market abuse and has grabbed the headlines over the last month with high-profile arrests.

The men, aged between 29 and 47 years old, spoke only to give their names, addresses and dates of birth before the case was referred to a higher Crown court for a preliminary hearing on April 22. Apart from 29-year-old Mustafa, who was dressed in a leather jacket and walked with a swagger, the men were soberly dressed and impassive.

The FSA, which is seeking the extradition of an eighth suspect linked to the so-called “printer” ring, last month charged the men with 13 counts of insider dealing it alleges netted them 2.5 million pounds ($3.8 million). Mitesh Shah was also charged with spread betting to launder proceeds. [ID:nLDE6300OX]

Lawyers in the case contacted by Reuters declined to comment on whether four of the defendants were related or how they would plead. Michael Potts, a partner at law firm Byrne and Partners representing Paresh Shah, said only his client was Indian.

The defendants, who face up to seven years in jail if found guilty, have been granted bail. Under the bail conditions, they have surrendered their passports and need to notify the FSA 48 hours before any plans to change address.

SILENCING CRITICS

The FSA, whose enforcement wing has more than doubled to 450 staff since 2005 after hiring a bevy of criminal lawyers and specialist staff, is on a quest to silence critics who accuse it of failing to prosecute senior employees at top institutions.

The regulator has brought three successful criminal cases to date, including a case against Malcolm “Streaky” Calvert, a former partner at Cazenove, who was jailed for 21 months last month in its most high-profile victory to date.

That conviction was closely followed in March by the dramatic arrests of seven insider dealing suspects, including a managing director at Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), the head of sales trading at Exane, part-owned by France’s BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA), and a trader at hedge fund Moore Capital. [ID:nLDE62N1WU]

Although the FSA’s most recent figures show unusual share price movements in around 29 percent of takeover announcements, insider dealing cases remain notoriously lengthy, painstaking and tough to nail.

In the Calvert case, the prison sentence fell well short of the seven year maximum term for insider dealing — and two accomplices walked free.

The FSA was unable to identify Calvert’s “primary insider” and source of share tips while the other accomplice, Bertie Hatcher, a friend who bought stock shortly before takeovers were announced, turned informant in return for a fine. [ID:nLDE62A1HW] ($1=.6511 Pound) (Additional reporting by Kylie MacLellan; editing by Karen Foster)

Seven insider dealing suspects head for UK court

(Reuters) – Seven men charged with running an insider trading ring with information gleaned from the London printers of Swiss bank UBS AG and UK brokerage Cazenove will appear in a British court on Wednesday.

Mitesh Shah, Neten Shah, Paresh Shah, Bijal Shah, Truptesh Patel, Ali Mustafa and Pardip Saini are alleged to have used confidential information to trade in 12 UK-listed firms over two years, including in media group Reuters during its 2007 takeover by Thomson Corp of Canada.

It is the largest insider dealing racket to be brought before court by the Financial Services Authority (FSA), which has grabbed the headlines over the last month with high-profile arrests as it cracks down on market abuse.

The hearing will be largely procedural, and the men are only expected to be asked to give their names, addresses and dates of birth before the case is referred to a higher court.

The FSA, which is seeking the extradition of an eighth suspect linked to the so-called “printer” ring, last month charged the men with 13 counts of insider dealing that it says unlawfully netted them 2.5 million pounds ($3.84 million).

Mitesh Shah has also been charged with placing spread bets to launder proceeds.

The regulator has brought three successful criminal cases against insider dealers to date. Its most high-profile victory was against Malcolm “Streaky” Calvert, a former partner at Cazenove, who was jailed for 21 months.

That conviction was closely followed by last month’s dramatic arrests of seven insider dealing suspects, including a managing director at Deutsche Bank, the head of sales trading at Exane, part-owned by France’s BNP Paribas, and a London-based trader at U.S. hedge fund Moore Capital.

($1=.6511 Pound)

(Reporting by Kirstin Ridley, editing by Will Waterman)

Serbia seeks extradition of suspected Nazi from U.S.

(Reuters) – A Serbian court Friday issued an international arrest warrant for a naturalized U.S. citizen suspected of committing genocide as a Nazi officer in Belgrade during World War Two.

Barack Obama

“Peter Egner, 88, is wanted on charges of killing 17,000 civilians, mainly Jews, Roma and political opponents between 1941 and 1943, during the German occupation,” Zorica Ristic, spokeswoman for the Belgrade higher court, told Reuters.

Egner, an ethnic German born in Yugoslavia, entered the United States in 1960 and became a citizen in 1966.

The U.S. Justice Department has asked a federal court to revoke his U.S. citizenship based on evidence of his role in a Nazi mobile killing unit that participated in the mass murder of more than 17,000 Serbian civilians.

Belgrade was occupied by German forces from April 1941 until October 1944. More than half a million Serb civilians were killed during World War Two.

(Reporting by Aleksandar Vasovic; Writing by Maja Zuvela)

Serbia seeks extradition of suspected Nazi from U.S.

BELGRADE, April 2 (Reuters) – A Serbian court on Friday issued an international arrest warrant for a naturalised U.S. citizen suspected of committing genocide as a Nazi officer in Belgrade during World War Two.

“Peter Egner, 88, is wanted on charges of killing 17,000 civilians, mainly Jews, Roma and political opponents between 1941 and 1943, during the German occupation,” Zorica Ristic, spokeswoman for the Belgrade higher court, told Reuters.

Egner, an ethnic German born in Yugoslavia, entered the United States in 1960 and became a citizen in 1966.

The U.S. Justice Department has asked a federal court to revoke his U.S. citizenship based on evidence of his role in a Nazi mobile killing unit that participated in the mass murder of more than 17,000 Serbian civilians.

Belgrade was occupied by German forces from April 1941 until October 1944. More than half a million Serb civilians were killed during World War Two. (Reporting by Aleksandar Vasovic; Writing by Maja Zuvela)