Myanmar’s Suu Kyi appeals sentence again

Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi has lodged an appeal with Myanmar’s top court, seeking to overturn a guilty verdict for her breach of a draconian security law last year, her lawyer said on Tuesday.

Her legal team submitted the appeal on Monday to a special three-judge panel of the Supreme Court and hopes to have the 18-month extension to her house arrest term scrapped on the grounds that the Aug. 11 verdict was unlawful.

“This is our last opportunity to appeal,” lawyer Nyann Win told reporters. “She’s innocent. We may not get the verdict we want, but it’s important that we maintain the focus of the international community.”

Lawyers for Suu Kyi, who has spent 15 of the last 21 years in detention because of her fight for democracy in the army-ruled country, say the law protecting the country against “subversive elements” is obsolete.

The legislation formed part of the 1974 constitution but was omitted from the latest charter, promulgated in 2008.

The ruling enraged the international community, which accused the ruling generals of using trumped-up charges to sideline Suu Kyi, the sole symbol of Myanmar’s democratic struggle, from this year’s elections.

The court ruled Suu Kyi breached her house arrest conditions by harbouring American intruder John Yettaw for two days after he swam to her lakeside home to tell her he had been sent by god to protect her from “terrorists”.

Yettaw was sentenced to seven years’ hard labour but was deported five days later after a visit by U.S. Senator Jim Webb, one of the few Westerners who have successfully engaged with the reclusive generals.

Even if the court agrees to hear her appeal, it is unlikely Suu Kyi will be freed because of her popularity and mesmerising influence on the Burmese people.

Regardless of the appeal, Suu Kyi is unable to run in the election. Her National League for Democracy party is boycotting the vote and even if she were to sign up to a new party, her criminal record and marriage to a foreigner prevent her from running.

(Reporting by Aung Hla Tun; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Army ready for any challenges from enemies, especially China: Army Chief

New Delhi, Apr.01 (ANI): New Chief of Army Staff General Vijay Kumar Singh on Thursday assured the country that it is safe from any threat, and said the Army is well prepared to tackle any challenges from its enemies, especially China.

General Singh (59), a third generation officer of the Rajput Regiment, took charge as the 24th Indian Chief of the Army Staff from General Deepak Kapoor on Wednesday.

“I like to assure the countrymen that our army is ready to face up to any challenge. We intend ensuring that our core values, rich traditions and professionalism gets a boost,” the Army Chief told reporters after inspecting a Guard of Honour on the South Block lawns on Thursday.

Commenting on the preparation of the Army vis-à-vis their Chinese counterparts, General Singh said: “For any challenges that are against us, we are very well prepared and preparation is an ongoing process and, to that extent, we will ensure that our training methodology becomes more practical, keeping all challenges in mind.”

The Army Chief also said he would focus his attention on improving the “internal health” of the force to weed out corruption.

General Singh as the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of the Kolkata-based Eastern Command had ordered an inquiry into the Sukna land case and recommended strict action against four generals allegedly involved.

Commissioned into 2 Rajput in June 1970, General Singh is a veteran of many battles. He participated in the 1971 Bangladesh war and saw action in “Operation Pawan” in Sri Lanka, for which he was awarded the Yudh Seva Medal. (ANI)

Q+A – What do we know about Myanmar’s election?

Myanmar’s top generals will attend the annual Armed Forces Day parade on Saturday for the final time as the country’s leaders as the military prepares to hand over power to an elected civilian government.

The parade will be led by reclusive junta strongman Than Shwe, who says the military top brass will become civilians after this year’s long-awaited election. Few, however, believe the military will really transfer power.

WHY IS MYANMAR HOLDING ELECTIONS?

Sanctions have crippled the resource-rich country, which was the world’s top rice exporter when it won independence from Britain in 1948 after more than 120 years of colonial rule.

Although Asian trade is picking up, particularly with China, the regime’s refusal to release political prisoners and halt human rights abuses have made it a pariah in the West.

Analysts say Myanmar wants to join the global economy and attract investment. The generals know they must give up power — nominally at least — to achieve this, but they appear to believe the military is the only institution capable of running the country.

WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE POLLS?

No date has been set for the elections but the generals have unveiled laws governing how the vote will be conducted and who can stand. An election commission comprising people “prominent and of good reputation” has been appointed.

Analysts and Western diplomats believe the junta is holding out on a date to try to get rebellious ethnic groups to take part in the process in an effort to show the country is united. The participation of the big ethnic groups is unlikely.

There is wide speculation the vote will take place sometime in October on a date deemed auspicious to the notoriously superstitious generals.

WHO WILL HOLD POWER?

A constitution approved in a disputed 2008 referendum stipulates Myanmar will be run by an elected civilian government, but key ministries such as justice, defence and the interior will be under the control of the military, which will also be granted a quarter of the 440 seats in parliament.

The army commander will remain the country’s most powerful figure, senior to an elected president, able to appoint key ministers and with authority to assume power “in times of emergency”.

Than Shwe has said his inner circle of army generals will fade from the political scene, but analysts expect them or their proxies to continue to pull the strings.

Than Shwe and Maung Aye, another ageing strongman, will probably retire and hand power to army proteges who will ensure they are insulated from any future recriminations. Junta number three Thura Shwe Mann, 62, is widely tipped to take the top post.

WHY IS AUNG SAN SUU KYI SIDELINED?

The hugely popular Suu Kyi, daughter of independence hero Aung San, remains the biggest threat to the military. Her National League for Democracy (NLD) party won the 1990 poll in a landslide, a result the regime ignored and recently annulled.

Because of her rousing speeches, ability to mobilise pro-democracy activists and popular appeal among more than a dozen armed ethnic groups who deeply resent the Burmese generals, the junta has kept her in detention for 15 of the past 21 years.

It is unlikely she will be freed before the polls, for fear of her influence on the public.

Detained or not, she is unable to run because her late husband was a foreigner, and because of the British citizenship of her children and her criminal record.

WHO WILL BE ALLOWED TO TAKE PART?

The junta recognises 10 political parties. The NLD, the National Unity Party and the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy were the top three in the 1990 polls. The NLD plans to announce on March 29 if it will run or not.

There are divisions inside the NLD between those who reject the constitution and modernisers who believe a boycott could render the NLD a spent force. Suu Kyi said on March 23 she wouldn’t dream of registering the NLD for the elections, although she also said the decision was not hers to make.

The junta will probably have its own nominee parties fronted by cronies and civilian proxies. With more than 2,000 political activists in prison — and barred from running even if released — the polls will inevitably be far from inclusive.

Two new parties have registered so far, both of them seen as close to the junta. They are the 88 Generation Students of the Union of Myanmar (GSUM) and the Union of Myanmar National Political Force (UMNPF).

WILL THE WEST MAINTAIN SANCTIONS?

Due to the junta’s refusal to free political prisoners and the restrictive election laws, the West is unlikely to lift sanctions, even if the vote is deemed free and fair.

But many pro-democracy advocates say sanctions have been counterproductive, serving only to impoverish the people and make the junta more hidebound. An election that brings change without a full transition to democracy would sharpen the debate over whether sanctions should be removed.

Engagement by Asian neighbours, especially on trade, has done nothing to loosen the junta’s grip on power.

(Editing by Alan Raybould and David Fox)

Myanmar junta prepares for final salute

An ostentatious parade by Myanmar’s ruling generals on Saturday is being cast by the junta as a swansong, but the military looks set to remain the dominant political force even after handing power to a civilian government after elections later this year.

The annual Army Day parade in the new capital of Naypyitaw will no doubt feature nationalist speeches on economic potential and democratic rule in the former Burma, but analysts say the generals have a far more important message to deliver.

“They will talk about ideology, policy and the steps they’ve taken towards democracy,” said Aung Naing Oo, a Harvard-educated Burmese academic based in Thailand.

“More symbolic is their attempt to show everyone at home and abroad that the military will not, and must not, be discounted.”

The generals hope that a veneer of democracy may lead Western powers into easing sanctions, but critics have already dismissed forthcoming elections as a sham.

If the incoming government cannot win legitimacy, it will struggle to fix an economy in ruins after decades of military rule.

Despite growing trade with China and Asia, its sanctions-hit banks, for instance, remain largely shut off from the world, posing a major challenge for the next generation of leaders.

The isolated country of 48 million people, with its rich natural resources from natural gas to timber and gems, is strategically nestled between Asia’s rising powers of China and India, with a port in Southeast Asia.

Undeterred by Western sanctions, those three players are racing to tap Myanmar’s economy, but with few experienced technocrats in the country, corruption, cronyism and clumsy fiscal management look set to continue.

DEMOCRATIC FACADE

A glance at the army-drafted constitution of 2008 shows critics have good reason to doubt the generals’ sincerity. The new, “democratic” Myanmar will effectively remain a military dictatorship, even if the polls are free and fair, as promised.

The armed forces chief will be more senior than an elected president, the military will retain control over key ministries and a quarter of parliamentary seats will be set aside for the men in green.

Other seats are likely to be taken by junta cronies and their proxies in civilian-led parties.

Detained opposition leader and Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi on Tuesday said she wouldn’t dream of entering her party in the polls, although she said fellow members would have the final say.

The generals have spent billions of dollars in Naypyitaw building lavish mansions, a parliament, senate and dozens of new ministries, determined to push ahead with their polls, but trouble looms in the mountains beyond.

Powerful ethnic armies along Myanmar’s borders with China and Thailand, which have enjoyed de facto autonomy for decades, are refusing to accept the junta’s “offer” to disarm and join the political process, riling Burmese generals determined to take full control of the ethnically diverse country.

War between these groups and government troops could be imminent in the rebellious Shan and Kachin states.

WHITHER THE GENERALS?

Most people in Myanmar privately express deep cynicism toward the election but are reluctant to criticise it publicly for fear of repercussions in a country that routinely jails critics.

Many are anyway more focused on pocketbook issues — from the high cost of fuel to climbing food prices — in the teeth of rampant inflation blamed on years of neglect and economic mismanagement by the military junta.

So what will happen to the top generals?

Despite speculation 77-year-old junta supremo Than Shwe could become president, Myanmar experts believe he and number two, Maung Aye, will retire and hand over power to loyal army proteges, perhaps pulling some strings from behind the scenes.

Junta number three Thura Shwe Mann, 62, is widely tipped to take the top job of armed forces supreme commander, who can assume power at a time of crisis, according to the constitution.

Although the polls have already been written off, many believe a transition to full civilian rule, albeit drawn out and gradual, will eventually transpire.

“They’re committed to this process so there’s the potential of some devolution of power, a half-way house,” said Christopher Roberts, an author and Myanmar specialist at the University of Canberra.

“For now, the generals want to show they’re still in control, but that might not necessarily be the case in another 10 years.”

(Editing by Jason Szep and David Fox)

Zardari being unnecessarily targeted for his overture to India: Editorial

Islamabad, Sep.17 (ANI): An editorial in one of the leading English dailies of Pakistan has highlighted that President Asif Ali Zardari is being unnecessarily targeted and criticized by certain quarters in the country even if he attempts to address the long pending issues with India in his bid to de-escalate tension between the two neighbour countries.

The Daily Times editorial said while Zardari is condemned for his overture to India, similar actions taken by former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif goes unnoticed in the country.

“President Zardari is pilloried if he makes a friendly overture to India; a similar overture made by Mr Nawaz Sharif is either ignored or actually praised,” the editorial said.

It also brought to light how several retired army officials and bureaucrats have suddenly jumped out of their retirement to denounce Zardari’s every action.

“Retired generals and retired bureaucrats whose ‘stand-still’ strategy with India in the past has brought Pakistan to its present crisis point, have crept out of their retirement to express their shock at how President Zardari is harming Pakistan through his diplomacy with China, the United States and the European Union,” the editorial stated.

The editorial went on to add that Zardari is right in his part to woo the international community, especially China and the US.

“Pakistan needs a lot of placatory diplomacy, not hostile ‘action’, given its past failed strategies,” it concluded. (ANI)

Adopt new, transparent selection process for police forces: Chidambaram

New Delhi, Sep 14 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Monday asked the State Governments to adopt new, time bound and transparent selection process for the state police forces on the lines of the Central Police Force selection procedure.

Addressing the three-day long conference of the Directors Generals and Inspectors Generals of state police forces organized by Intelligence Bureau, Chidambaram said: “Revamp the recruitment procedures and make them quick, time bound and transparent. We have introduced a new recruitment procedure in the CPMFs that is based on technology, objective assessment and transparency. I would take this opportunity to urge State Governments to immediately adopt the new procedure.”

Chidambaram expressed concern over the way police officers are treated and asked states to constitute the police establishment boards as the earliest.

“Constitute a Police Establishment Board that would decide on transfers and postings. It is a matter of deep regret that many police officers have been reduced to a football, to be kicked here and there, from one post to another, without regard to the damage done to the job as well as the officer,” he said.

Expressing concern over the non providing of funds to the police forces by some of the states, Chidambaram said: “I am also concerned about the attitude of some State Governments to providing funds for the police. Let me remind you that Police and Public Order are State subjects. States are right in zealously guarding their turf. The Central Government has no desire to encroach upon the jurisdiction of the State Governments. Given the Constitutional responsibility, State Governments must provide adequate funds for the State Police. “

The Home Minister appealed to the state governments to change the practice of allotting the residue – after providing funds for other Plan and Non-Plan Schemes to the head of Police.

The Central Government increased over Rs.13, 000 crore in the budget of the current fiscal to strengthening the CPFs, and for Modernization of Police Force, CCTNS, Strengthening of Fire and Emergency Services, Scheme of ICP, etc.

Chidambaram called on the conference to mark the beginning of a process of reinventing the security system in the country.

“We must learn from our past mistakes. We must also learn from the experience of other countries. It is the neglect of tried and tested methods that has led us to a situation where we seemed unequal to the challenges that face the internal security of the country,” he said.It is not enough to walk with firm steps on the path that is known. We must also lay out a path forward that will draw heavily upon technology and innovation,” Chidambaram added.

He said once the ambitious projects of CCTN and NATGRID are fully rolled out and implemented, it would mark a quantum jump in our ability to counter the challenges that we face.

Chidambaram also stressed on the creation of a first rate National Counter Terrorism Centre.

“It is also my desire that once the Police Mission submits its report, we should implement the recommendations in a time-bound manner. There is the need to enact a “Model Police Act”. Mega-city policing is a new requirement, and there is much to learn from the experiences of other mega-cities,” Chidambaram said.

Chidambaram also asked the state police chiefs to sharply upgrade our Forensic Science Laboratories and make them among the best in the world. (ANI)

Israel rejects Mossad’s role in Zia-ul-Haq plane crash

Lahore, Sep.8 (ANI): Israel has rejected reports regarding its intelligence agency, Mossad’s involvement in former Pakistan Army chief General Zia-ul-Haq’s plane crash.

Terming the allegations as ‘baseless’, Israeli Foreign Office spokesman Egaal Gilmore refused to comment on the report saying the government does not have any stance on such claims.

It may be recalled that Zia-ul-Haq’s son, Ejaz-ul-Haq has asked the authorities to conduct a criminal investigation into the plane crash in which his father died.

Ejaz-ul-Haq claimed that former pilot Akram Awan, who is in prison in connection with the Kahuta conspiracy case, had told an enquiry commission that Mossad had provided materials to destroy the aircraft in which Zia ul Haq was flying.

Ejaz-ul-Haq also said that Washington forcefully hindered investigation into the plane crash.

“I cannot point finger towards a person or a country over murder of General Zia-ul-Haq but US did not send FBI team to Pakistan for probe into plane crash,” Haq had said.

Zia died along with several of his top generals and the then United States Ambassador to Pakistan,Arnold Raphel, in an aircraft crash near Bahawalpur (Punjab) on 17th August 1988. The circumstances of the crash are still unclear. (ANI)

ISAF troops in Afghanistan need to get rid of their seige mentality

Kabul, Aug.13 (ANI): For the vast majority of troops at the International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) headquarters, Afghanistan remains an enigma, a threatening land lying beyond the concertina wire of the base.

When ISAF troops venture out from their base into the “red zone” (i.e. the comparatively safe streets of Kabul) they are prepared for combat.

Barreling through the crowded streets of a city that has been called a comparative “safety zone” by those fighting in the south, they jam the phone signals of average Afghans with their ECMs (electronic counter measures) and jam the roads with their convoys.

Defeat takes the form of thousands of casualty-phobic troops ensconced behind the walls, sand bags, and blast barriers of a well-protected safety bubble.

One would think that the coalition vehicles driving around Kabul in combat posture and menacingly waving 50 caliber machine guns at Afghans were storming a Taliban sangar (trench) in Helmand, not competing with rush hour traffic.

The only Afghan most ever meet is the Hazara carpet seller on base who serves authentic Afghan food once a month. And the only coalition soldiers most Afghans meet are encased in armor-plated vehicles or flak jackets.

Only a small percentage of “fobbits” (those who live in forward operating bases or FOBs) actually interact with average Afghans due to hyper-protective S.O.P. (standard operating procedures) meant to lessen their risks from interaction with Afghans.

ISAF troops suffer from a siege mentality that led the United States dangerously close to losing the war in Iraq in 2005 and 2006. U.S. forces in Iraq were more concerned with force protection than protecting the center of gravity in Iraq, the Iraqi people.

It was only when Generals Petraeus and Odierno pushed their troops out of the bases and into the streets of Iraq that they began to make headway in the counterinsurgency.

This meant more meetings with Iraqi people, who began to feel that the Americans were protecting them.

For the most part, the coalition has ceded the countryside of the south and parts of the east to the enemy, who took advantage of the vacuum left by enemy troops in 2003 when the U.S. was focused elsewhere.

The White House’s fear of engaging in grassroots nation building allowed the Taliban to fill the void. Pro-government khans and mullahs were executed, villagers cowed into submission, and “vanguard” groups sent onto the next province to lay mines and kill “infidel collaborators.” With no visible coalition presence outside of the provincial capitals, the Taliban swarmed the countryside.

Much the same thing happened in Afghanistan in the 1980s under the Soviets, who controlled the major roads and cities and remained safe in their bases for fear of sustaining casualties.

The U.S. Marines’ recent efforts to clear and hold territory in Helmand Province represent a welcome break from this barracked mentality.

It is only by establishing a reliable coalition presence in contested places like Helmand that the coalition can show the Afghans that they are there to stay and protect them. (ANI)

Senior Iranian clerics dismayed over Khamenei’s son being groomed for leadership

Washington, July 11 (ANI): Senior conservative clerics in Iran are concerned over Ayatollah Khamenei’s alleged attempt to groom his son, Mojtaba Khamenei for leadership, who is leading the government’s anti-protest militias, according to a report

The Guardian reports that, according to “a politician with strong connections with the security apparatus” in Iran, Mojtaba’s leading role in the crackdown has dismayed many of the country’s senior clerics, conservative politicians, and Revolutionary Guard generals.”

“Mojtaba is the commander of this coup d’etat. The Basiji are operating on Mojtaba’s orders, but his name is always hidden in all of this. The government never mentions him,” an Iranian politician said.

“Everyone is angry about this. The maraji (Iran’s most senior ayatollahs) and the clerics are angry; the conservatives are very angry and strongly critical of Mojtaba. This situation cannot continue with so many people on the top against it,” The Chorstian Science Monitor quoted the report, as saying.

The Guardian’s source adds, however, that the conservatives worry that overt opposition to the Ayatollah and his son risks undermining the Islamic Republic government and its power in the Middle East.

Instead, he says, they will use their political power to hamper the ability of the Ayatollah and Ahmadinejad to govern.

Mojtaba’s role in the crackdown is particularly noteworthy, as the Ayatollah has been grooming Mojtaba as his successor.

The Los Angeles Times reported that Mojtaba has become a key player in the bureaucracy that the Ayatollah created to consolidate his power, but an attempt to raise Mojtaba to the seat of supreme leader would face resistance from a large portion of Iran’s clergy.

Analysts say Mojtaba lacks the religious and political stature to overcome the opposition he would face in the Assembly of Experts, the body charged with selecting the supreme leader.

His father is believed to have influence over about half of the assembly’s 86 seats, but the board is headed by Rafsanjani and includes other reformists who probably would block a bid by the younger Khamenei to succeed his father.

The efforts of the Ayatollah and his son to consolidate power may be running afoul of the clergy in part because they appear to be contrary to Islamic law. (ANI)

Voting begins in Indonesia’s presidential election

Jayapura (Indonesia), July 8 (DPA) Indonesians begin voting Wednesday in only the second direct presidential elections in the country’s history, with incumbent Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is widely expected to win a second five-year term.
Voting commenced at 7 a.m. in Indonesia’s easternmost Papua province, in the sprawling archipelago of more than 17,000 islands spanning three different time zones.

More than 176 million of the country’s population of more than 230 million are eligible to vote at 450,000 polling stations.

Around 240,000 police have been deployed across the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country to provide security at polling stations, especially in restive Papua, where ethnic tensions are high and violence marred legislative polls in April.

Incumbent Yudhoyono, 59, one of the former Suharto-era generals with a cleaner reputation, will be competing for a second five-year term against former president Megawati Sukarnoputri and current Vice President Jusuf Kalla.

Widely known by his initials SBY, Yudhoyono is hoping to win a clear majority to avoid a September runoff. A candidate is required to win more than 50 percent of the votes and at least 20 percent of the vote in half of the country’s 33 provinces to win without a second-round vote.

In the April legislative election, Yudhoyono’s ruling Democratic Party garnered 20 percent of vote – up from seven percent in 2004 – to become the largest party in Parliament.

Suu Kyi denies violating Burmese regime’s house arrest rules

Yangon (Myanmar), May 18 (ANI): Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is to deny breaking the terms of her house arrest as imposed by the country’s military junta.

Suu Kyi, 63, who has spent 13 of the last 19 years under house arrest, faces up to five years in jail after an American man swam across a lake to reach her house.

“She asked me to tell her friends and everyone that she is quite well,” The Telegraph quoted her lawyer, Kyi Win, after meeting her on Saturday.

“She is ready to tell the truth that she never broke the law,” Win added.

According to the lawyer, Suu Kyi demanded that John Yettaw, 53, leave her home when he appeared there uninvited earlier this month but eventually took pity on him and allowed him to rest.

He was detected and arrested as he swam away again two days later.

Last week, Suu Kyi was transferred from her home to Rangoon’s Insein prison.

Yettaw appears to be an eccentric acting at his own initiative but his actions handed Burma’s ruling junta a pretext to prosecute Suu Kyi.

Suu Kyi’s current term of detention was due to expire later this month but analysts say the military regime, which has ruled since 1962, is determined to keep her in detention ahead of elections planned for next year.

Suu Kyi won a sweeping election victory in 1990 but the generals ignored the result and jailed her.

Next year’s polls have been widely dismissed as a sham. (ANI)

US, Pak officials dissatisfied over improper AfPak briefing

Washington, May 14 (ANI): As the Pakistan Army continues to pound the Taliban and other extremists in the Swat Valley and claims to have killed scores of militants amid immense US pressure, several policymakers both from the United States and Pakistan, have expressed dissatisfaction over the strategy regarding the issue, saying they have not been properly briefed.

It seems that Washington itself is unclear about how to conduct the war against the extremists, The Christian Science Monitor reports.

Washington is certainly confused over what it wants to do in Pakistan and Afghanistan, as was evident from the sudden dismissal of the overall commander of US forces in Afghanistan, General David McKiernan from the post.

The abrupt removal of General McKiernan underscores that the Obama administration is still modifying its strategies for both the countries.

Lieutenant General Stanley McChrystal has replaced General McKiernan, and experts believe it is a good move.

“McChrystal is known as one of the smartest and least conventional thinkers in the Army, and a counterinsurgent’s counterinsurgent,” Spencer Ackerman said.

Many experts also supported the appointment of Lieutenant General David Rodriguez as deputy commander of US forces in Afghanistan.

However, it still remains unclear exactly how the generals’ expertise will be brought to yield desired result in the war against terrorism in the region.

Recently, a leading Pakistan daily described the first 100 days of President Obama’s response to the growing crisis in Pakistan as ‘confused, confounded and contrived.’

It said that nobody knew who’s running the show on Pakistan. Whether it was Joe Biden, Richard Holbrooke or anybody else is definitely unclear. (ANI)

US confused by Pak’s late reaction against Taliban threat: Report

Lahore, May 6 (ANI): As the Pakistan Army continues to struggle against the Taliban, officials in the US are confused as to why Islamabad initiated military action against the militia after it advanced so close to the federal capital, capturing several region of the Swat Valley on the way.

Several top US officials had sounded the alarm immediately after the reports about the Taliban expanding its control beyond the Swat Valley were flashed, but for reasons unknown Pakistan waited for things to get worse.

“We’re wondering why they don’t just get out there and deal with these people .If you lose soldiers trying to retake part of your own country, that’s the army’s mission,” the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had said.

This certainly proves that Washington and Islamabad have different views over the issue.

While the Obama Administration, worried by the existential threat, has repeatedly asked Pakistan to act tough against the extremists, Islamabad on the other hand had other plans.

The Pakistani generals do not share the US view of the Taliban being some sort of external force invading territory, the Daily Times reported the Time magazine, as saying. (ANI)

Mugabe’s aides using violence, force to get amnesty

New York, Apr 10 (ANI): Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s aides are using violence to get amnesty for their past crimes.

Top lieutenants of the president are trying to force the political opposition into granting them amnesty for their past crimes by abducting, detaining and torturing opposition officials and activists, The New York Times quoted a senior member of Mugabe’s party, as saying.

Mugabe’s generals and politicians have organized campaigns of terror for decades to keep him and his party in power. But now that the opposition has a place in the nation’s new government, these strongmen worry that they are suddenly vulnerable to prosecution, especially for crimes committed during last year’s election campaign as the world watched, the paper said.

“Their faces were immediately pasted on the wall for everyone to see that they were behind the killing, the violence, the torture and intimidation,” said a senior official in Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF.

To protect themselves, some of Mugabe’s lieutenants are trying to implicate opposition officials in a supposed plot to overthrow the president, hoping to use it as leverage in any amnesty talks or to press the opposition into quitting the government altogether, ruling party officials said.

Mugabe’s lieutenants, part of an inner circle called the Joint Operations Command, know that their 85-year-old leader may not be around much longer to shield them, and they fear losing not just their power and ill-gotten wealth, but also their freedom, officials in the party said.

Their fixation on getting amnesty was described by four senior ruling party officials, all Mugabe confidants, who spoke to The New York Times. But some opposition officials say Mugabe’s loyalists are less interested in reaching a deal than in simply forcing them out of the new government through violence and intimidation.

Others suspect a push for amnesty is being sought by a broad contingent of Mugabe’s party worried about accounting for the past. (ANI)

Mugabe’s aides using violence, force to get amnesty

New York, Apr 10 (ANI): Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s aides are using violence to get amnesty for their past crimes.

Top lieutenants of the president are trying to force the political opposition into granting them amnesty for their past crimes by abducting, detaining and torturing opposition officials and activists, The New York Times quoted a senior member of Mugabe’s party, as saying.

Mugabe’s generals and politicians have organized campaigns of terror for decades to keep him and his party in power. But now that the opposition has a place in the nation’s new government, these strongmen worry that they are suddenly vulnerable to prosecution, especially for crimes committed during last year’s election campaign as the world watched, the paper said.

“Their faces were immediately pasted on the wall for everyone to see that they were behind the killing, the violence, the torture and intimidation,” said a senior official in Mugabe’s party, ZANU-PF.

To protect themselves, some of Mugabe’s lieutenants are trying to implicate opposition officials in a supposed plot to overthrow the president, hoping to use it as leverage in any amnesty talks or to press the opposition into quitting the government altogether, ruling party officials said.

Mugabe’s lieutenants, part of an inner circle called the Joint Operations Command, know that their 85-year-old leader may not be around much longer to shield them, and they fear losing not just their power and ill-gotten wealth, but also their freedom, officials in the party said.

Their fixation on getting amnesty was described by four senior ruling party officials, all Mugabe confidants, who spoke to The New York Times. But some opposition officials say Mugabe’s loyalists are less interested in reaching a deal than in simply forcing them out of the new government through violence and intimidation.

Others suspect a push for amnesty is being sought by a broad contingent of Mugabe’s party worried about accounting for the past. (ANI)

US cuts off aid to Madagascar

Washington – The United States moved to cut off aid to Madagascar on Friday following the forced resignation of the Indian Ocean island’s president that amounted to a “coup d’etat,” the State Department said.

The president of Madagascar, Marc Ravalomanana, resigned on Tuesday under pressure from the military. He ceded control to mutinous generals, who in turn appointed opposition leader Andry Rajoelina as interim president.

“This series of events is tantamount to a coup d’etat, and the United States will not maintain our current assistance partnership with Madagascar,” spokesman Robert Wood said.

The decision affects all non-humanitarian assistance to Madagascar, Wood said, adding the amount of money involved would be announced later on Friday.

The US move added to mounting international pressure on Madagascar, as Germany also said it was suspending aid and planned to push for similar action by the European Union. The African Union on Friday suspended Madagascar’s membership.

“The United States has enjoyed a longstanding relationship with the people of Madagascar, and we call on them to immediately undertake a democratic, consensus process to restore constitutional governance,” Wood said.

Ravalomanana’s surrender after being holed up in the presidential palace for days brought months of political turmoil to a head. Rajoelina has pledged to hold elections in two years. Street protests in recent weeks claimed more than 100 lives. (dpa)

US reviewing relations with Madagascar

Washington – The United States was reviewing relations with Madagascar following the “undemocratic” transfer of power in the country, the US State Department said Thursday.

State Department spokesman Robert Wood said it was too early to say if the review would results in a cut-off of the millions of dollars in aid the United States provides annually to the troubled African nation.

“We’ve taken a close look at this. And we believe recent political developments in Madagascar constitute an undemocratic transfer of power,” Wood said.

“And we’re currently evaluating what impact this transfer is going to have on all elements of our relationship with the government of Madagascar,” Wood added.

The president of Madagascar, Marc Ravalomanana, on Tuesday relinquished his power under pressure from the military. He ceded control to mutinous generals, who in turn appointed opposition leader Andry Rajoelina as interim president.

Ravalomanana’s surrender after being holed up in the presidential palace for days brought months of political turmoil to a head. Rajoelina has pledged to hold elections in two years. (dpa)

Young cricketers stage protest in Patna against Lankan attack

Patna/Chennai, Mar 5 (ANI): Young cricketers here staged demonstration against the attack on Sri Lankan cricket team in Pakistan.

They in white uniforms raised slogans against the Pakistan Government and burnt an effigy.

“We are agitated over the attack on Lankan cricketers in Pakistan. We believe that cricket or in fact any game should be kept away from fear. But it is not possible in Pakistan. Thus, we wish that all sports activity should stop and all teams should refuse to travel to Pakistan,” said Aditya Ranjan.

Meanwhile, Janata Party leader in Chennai said that the day is not far when the Taliban would rule Pakistan.

“It is only a matter of time before the army will be taken over by Taliban. Because the present Captains and Lieutenant Colonels are Taliban-minded. The Generals are still the old professional secular persons. But it will be another four to five years, they all will become Generals, these Lieutenant Colonels. And then Pakistan army will take over the state and then there will be war with India. So we have to start preparing. We should be under no illusions,” said Subramaniam Swamy, President of Janata Party.

On Tuesday, International Cricket Council (ICC) chief executive Haroon Lorgat said that Pakistan is unlikely to host international cricket in the immediate future following Tuesday’s terror attack.

Lorgat added that the ICC would review whether Pakistan could co-host the 2011 World Cup as planned at their next board meeting in April. (ANI)

‘We will leave Iraq a better place,’ says UK general

Baghdad (Iraq), Mar.2 (ANI): The general who has spearheaded Britain’s two longest and most controversial wars of the past 60 years, claimed today that the army will leave Iraq with al-Qaida largely defeated and the roots of democracy firmly planted.

Lieutenant-General John Cooper, who stands down tomorrow as deputy commanding general in Iraq and also retires from the army after more than 30 years, said Basra, which the British will leave by early summer, is back on its feet and buttressed from any militia resurgence.

Lt. Gen. Cooper believes January’s nationwide provincial elections were a turning point and said Iraq would be handed over in better shape than when Britain invaded six years ago.

“We have got democracy rooted here,” Cooper said in his final interview before leaving Iraq. “Clearly there is a long way to go to develop things. The provincial elections show that Iraqis have an appetite for it. They were free fair and credible and that reflects a desire for change.”

Cooper was second in command only to US generals David Petraeus and Raymond Odierno. All three were responsible for the 150,000 coalition troops in Iraq.

His upbeat assessment comes weeks before the final tranche of British troops begins to withdraw from Iraq and is bound to renew controversy over the role Britain played in the invasion and its aftermath.

Tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians have been killed during the insurgency. The number of British soldiers killed stands at 179, hundreds more have been maimed.

The infrastructure of the country has, in places, been decimated. (ANI)

‘We will leave Iraq a better place,’ says UK general

Baghdad (Iraq), Mar.2 (ANI): The general who has spearheaded Britain’s two longest and most controversial wars of the past 60 years, claimed today that the army will leave Iraq with al-Qaida largely defeated and the roots of democracy firmly planted.

Lieutenant-General John Cooper, who stands down tomorrow as deputy commanding general in Iraq and also retires from the army after more than 30 years, said Basra, which the British will leave by early summer, is back on its feet and buttressed from any militia resurgence.

Lt. Gen. Cooper believes January’s nationwide provincial elections were a turning point and said Iraq would be handed over in better shape than when Britain invaded six years ago.

“We have got democracy rooted here,” Cooper said in his final interview before leaving Iraq. “Clearly there is a long way to go to develop things. The provincial elections show that Iraqis have an appetite for it. They were free fair and credible and that reflects a desire for change.”

Cooper was second in command only to US generals David Petraeus and Raymond Odierno. All three were responsible for the 150,000 coalition troops in Iraq.

His upbeat assessment comes weeks before the final tranche of British troops begins to withdraw from Iraq and is bound to renew controversy over the role Britain played in the invasion and its aftermath.

Tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians have been killed during the insurgency. The number of British soldiers killed stands at 179, hundreds more have been maimed.

The infrastructure of the country has, in places, been decimated. (ANI)