CPI-M to stage protest marches against Gaza attacks

Thiruvananthapuram, June 6 (PTI) CPI-M has directed its local committees across Kerala to stage protest marches today and tomorrow against Israel”s attacks on the peace ships to Gaza in Palestine. The peace ships proceeded to Palestine to ease the hardships of Gaza residents caused by Israel”s blockade, a statement from the state secretariat of the party said.

It said the Centre had not even protested against the “heinous” action of Israel, which was part of their efforts to become a “junior partner” of the US. The secretariat requested all human rights activists to come together “against the American-Israel tie-up to destroy the Palestinian people

EU chief raps Russia on human rights, media freedom

ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia, June 1 (Reuters) – European Union President Herman Van Rompuy on Tuesday said Europe was seriously concerned about the difficulties faced by human rights activists and journalists in Russia.

“The situation for human rights defenders and journalists in Russia is of grave concern to the European public at large,” Rompuy said at a briefing following an EU-Russia summit in the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don. (Reporting by Conor Humphries, writing by Guy Faulconbridge, editing by Steve Gutterman)

Human rights activists call for independent panel to look into Thailand clashes

Bangkok, May 26(ANI): Local and international human rights activists are calling for the urgent establishment of an independent panel to investigate the deadly clashes between Thailand’s security forces and Red-Shirt anti-government protesters.

A network of local civic groups headed by human rights lawyer Somchai Homla said that an independent panel must be set up to find out what happened during the recent political rallies.

The group said the investigation into the clashes should cover the application of the rule of law, political issues and codes of ethics, and the military operations, which resulted in deaths and injuries, The Bangkok Post reports.

Meanwhile, New York-based Human Rights Watch’s acting Asia director Elaine Pearson said: “Now that the protests are over, the government should properly investigate and prosecute those who broke the law.”

The Human Rights Watch further urged the government to show its commitment to justice by having the National Human Rights Commission, a parliamentary inquiry and an independent panel investigate the clashes.

Thailand has been completely hammered by the nine-week political turmoil and rioting.

Nearly 1,800 people were wounded in the period as the government, backed by Thailand’s royalist establishment, and the protesters with their support from the rural masses and ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra, failed to find common ground. (ANI)

Pak rights group demands legislation for Hindu marriage registration act

Islamabad, May 19 (ANI): Pakistan’s Scheduled Caste Rights Movement (SCRM) has demanded a legislation for registering Hindu marriages in the country, in the absence of which women of the minority community are deprived of their basic rights.

Speaking during a debate titled ‘Rights of the Scheduled-Caste Hindus’, several representatives of the community were of the view that Hindu women do not get their due share in the property of their husband or parents.

“They are also unable to get health services, cast a vote, obtain a passport, and buy or sell any property,” the orators opined.

Several human rights activists who participated in the debate, urged the law makers to hasten the progress of the Pakistani Hindu Marriages Registration Bill 2009, whose draft has already been submitted to the Ministry of Minority Affairs and Ministry of Human Rights for consideration, The Daily Times reports. (ANI)

U.S., China resume human rights talks

The United States and China resumed a formal dialogue on human rights on Thursday after a two-year hiatus in which the countries have worked to keep ties stable amid disputes over Tibet, Taiwan, Internet freedom and the value of the yuan currency.

Although the first such talks under the Obama administration follow ethnic unrest in Xinjiang and Tibet and an overall deterioration in conditions in China, the Asian nation’s growing economic power and international clout make it easier for it to shrug off critics, human rights experts said.

The U.S. State Department said the two-day, closed-door meeting in Washington would address areas including religious rights, rule of law and Internet freedom, an issue that put Google Inc on a collision course with Beijing last year and led the Web search giant to quit the Chinese market.

The dialogue, which was frozen between 2002 and 2008, is expected to include cases of numerous Chinese lawyers and human rights activists who have been detained or harassed by their government, the State Department said.

“Rule of law, religious freedom, freedom of of expression, labor rights and other human rights issues of concern will be raised over a two-day period,” said State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley.

“Internet freedom is a dimension of our pursuit of freedom of expression,” he said, adding that he wasn’t sure whether the Google issue would be raised but wouldn’t be surprised if it did come up.

In a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the U.S. group Human Rights Watch urged the United States to raise specific cases of detained lawyers and activists, as well as to prevent the talks from being “largely a rhetorical shell” as they are seen by much of the rights community.

“Over the past year, the Chinese government has tightened controls on Uighurs and Tibetans, launched attacks on lawyers and human rights defenders, maintained a chokehold on media freedom, and bolstered government surveillance and censoring of Internet communications,” the letter to Clinton said.

RIGHTS COMPLAINTS

The Buddhist region of Tibet was roiled by ethnic unrest ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, while Muslim Uighurs rioted last year in violence that left nearly 200 people dead.

China “has even obstructed civil society organizations, including groups working with victims of the May 2008 Sichuan earthquake and child victims of the 2008 toxic melamine milk scandal,” Human Rights Watch said in the letter.

The plight of activists was underscored anew this week when China’s top AIDS activist, former health ministry official Wan Yanhai, fled to the United States with his family, citing pressure from authorities, said Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch.

China’s delegation, led by Chen Xu, the director-general of the Foreign Ministry’s Department of International Organizations and Conferences, is being hosted by Mike Posner, Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor in talks that also involve outside experts.

Complaints about China’s rights practices increasingly fall on deaf ears as a booming economy amid a recession in the West has given Beijing confidence and diplomatic muscle at a time of rising nationalism among Chinese, analysts say.

After decades of double digit economic growth, showcased by the Beijing Olympics and the Shanghai Expo, “the average Chinese citizen today is more well-disposed towards the Chinese government than the average American citizen is towards the American government,” said Ian Bremmer, president of the Eurasia Group political risk consultancy.

Richardson of Human Rights Watch acknowledges the unfavorable winds for meaningful rights talks.

“It’s absolutely true that they have become even more intransigent on human rights issues over the last couple of years as they are feeling very confident, and there are a lot of debates about whether these dialogues are really a useful exercise,” Richardson said.

“But the only people who really win if they don’t take place at all are people in the Chinese government.”

(Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed)(Editing by Paul Simao)

Former Delhi High Court Judge questions eviction of beggars for CWG

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Former Delhi High Court Chief Justice A. P Shah has criticized the State Government for evicting beggars and other ”have-nots” from Delhi.

He was speaking after the Housing and Land Rights Network (HLRN), a non-government body, released its progress report on the government”s intended plans in the run-up to the October 2010 Common Wealth Games.

“Authorities are cleaning street vendors, rickshaw pullers and other informal sector workers of the road in the process depriving thousands of the urban poor of their livelihood,” said Shah.

Miloon Kothari, one of the panelists, said the holding of the Games contravened India”s Constitutional.

Kothari said the excessive costs involved in staging the games event ignore the reality of high levels of poverty, hunger, inequality, homelessness and malnutrition.

The HLRN report has posed several questions such as the rationale for spending billions of rupees on the event vis-à-vis the key pre and post event general recommendations and allied suggestions.

Human rights activists have raised several questions covering various dimensions of the Commonwealth Games, especially the level of expenditure on a one-time sporting event and actual delivery of benefits to the masses

Apart from Justice Shah and Kothari, others who took part in the panel discussion were Amitabh Kundu, Director of Hazards Centre and Dunu Roy of HLRN. (ANI)

U.S., China to resume human rights dialogue in May

The United States and China will formally resume their dialogue on human rights next month for the first time in two years, a further sign relations are stabilizing after disputes over Tibet, Taiwan and the value of China’s currency.

The U.S. State Department said on Thursday the May 13-14 meeting in Washington would address issues including religious rights, rule of law and Internet freedom — which this year put online giant Google Inc on a collision course with Beijing.

The two sides last formally held a dialogue on human rights in May 2008. Before that, the discussion had been frozen since 2002.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the dialogue could be expected to include cases of lawyers and human rights activists who have clashed with the Chinese government, as well as Internet censorship.

“I am sure that the broader topic of Internet freedom and the availability of information to Chinese citizens … would come up,” Crowley said.

This year’s meeting was originally scheduled for February but had to be rescheduled because “the timing was not right,” Crowley told a news briefing.

China — the largest holder of U.S. Treasury securities and the second-biggest trading partner of the United States — was infuriated in January by Washington deciding to go ahead with a $6.4 billion arms sale to Taiwan, an island Beijing regards as its territory.

Chinese leaders were further incensed in February when U.S. President Barack Obama met exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, who Beijing reviles as a separatist plotting to divide Tibet from China.

Relations were further rocked by the Google case, which saw the U.S. search engine giant scale back activities in China amid allegations of hacking and censorship, and by U.S. pressure on Beijing to boost the value of the yuan relative to the dollar.

Despite these frictions, the two sides have worked hard in recent weeks to put ties back on track on a range of issues including military cooperation and Iran and North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.

(Reporting by Andrew Quinn; Editing by John O’Callaghan)

Israeli groups decry army West Bank deportation rules

(Reuters) – The Israeli military is introducing orders that human rights activists said on Sunday could make almost any Palestinian liable for expulsion from the occupied West Bank.

World

In a statement, the army played down any notion of mass deportation, saying the orders simply amended existing Israeli regulations to assure military “judicial oversight” in the extradition of anyone “residing illegally” in the West Bank.

The orders, which go into effect on Tuesday, were posted on an army website and allow for the deportation, in some cases in less than 72 hours, of an “infiltrator” — defined as someone who does not hold an Israeli permit to reside in the West Bank.

Existing regulations had defined “infiltrator” as someone who had stayed illegally in Israel after having passed through countries it considers its enemy.

Ten Israeli rights groups condemned the orders, saying in a statement that the vast majority of Palestinians in the West Bank, territory Israel occupied in a 1967 war, have never been required to hold an Israeli-issued residency permit.

“The military will be able to prosecute and deport any Palestinian defined as an infiltrator in stark contradiction to the Geneva Convention,” the statement said.

Offenders could face a jail sentence of up to seven years.

The groups said they feared the broad wording of the orders could enable the military to expel tens of thousands of Palestinians, mainly people born in the Gaza Strip and their West Bank-born children.

Palestinians say some 25,000 Palestinians from the Gaza Strip live in the West Bank. The Gaza Strip is politically and geographically cut off from the West Bank. It is ruled by Hamas Islamists who do not recognize Israel.

Foreigners, including international activists who join Palestinians demonstrating against Israel in the West Bank, could also fall under the “infiltrator” category.

“These military orders belong in an apartheid state,” Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said in a statement.

“Extensive in scope, they make it infinitely easier for Israel to imprison and expel Palestinians from the West Bank,” he said.

The orders provide for an appeals process in which adults served notice of deportation can take their case within eight days to a panel of military judges. But some notices can be executed in less than 72 hours.

(Writing by Jeffrey Heller and Joseph Nasr, Additional reporting by Tom Perry in Ramallah, Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)

Top Pak human rights activist coming to India on Ayesha’s mother’s request

Karachi, Apr.7 (ANI): Former federal minister and a leading Pakistani human rights activists Ansar Burney has termed the controversy surrounding cricketer Shoaib Malik and Indian tennis star Sania Mirza as an issue of ‘human dignity’ and ‘women rights’, and said he would soon be visiting India to ‘dig out’ the truth.

Burney said he decided to visit India after receiving a phone call from Ayesha Siddiqui’s mother requesting him to help the family and investigate the truth.

Burney said the marriage of Shoaib with Sania is their personal matter and he has nothing to do with it, but Ayesha’s claim has created serious doubts of alleged cheating and fraud.

“If the claim of Ayesha Siddiqui is correct then the Ansar Burney Trust will ask Shoaib Malik to accept his earlier marriage and say sorry to Ayesha, and if her claims are not proved she will have to say sorry,” The News quoted Burney, as saying.

Burney said he has already approached the Indian High Commission in Islamabad to issue him visa for India urgently, so that he could visit India to sort out issues between the Siddiquis’ and the Maliks’.

Earlier, Shoaib’s brother-in-law Imran Zafar arrived in New Delhi to seek legal action against the Siddiquis’, who have lodged a complaint against the all rounder.

Meanwhile, the Pakistani Government has stepped in and is keeping a watchful eye on the Sania-Shoaib-Ayesha muddle.

Pakistan has reportedly sent a diplomatic note to India, and requested for returning Malik’s passport as soon as possible.

Shoaib’s passport was seized by the Hyderabad police after Ayesha had lodged a police complaint with the Hyderabad Police against Shoaib under sections 498 A (harassment), 420 (cheating) and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code.

The Siddiquis’ claim that Malik married their daughter Ayesha in 2002, but has not divorced her till date. (ANI)

Web attacks hit Vietnam bauxite activists: Google

(Reuters) – Google Inc has said it identified cyber attacks aimed at silencing opposition to a Vietnamese government-led bauxite mining project involving a major Chinese firm, and said they were similar to those at the heart of the company’s friction with Beijing.

Media

The computer security firm McAfee Inc, which detected the malware, went a step further, saying its creators “may have some allegiance to the government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.”

The Vietnamese Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment.

The malware infected “potentially tens of thousands of users” who downloaded what they thought was Vietnamese keyboard software, and possibly other software, Neel Mehta of Google’s security team said in a post Tuesday on the firm’s online security blog (googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.com).

“These infected machines have been used both to spy on their owners as well as participate in distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks against blogs containing messages of political dissent,” Mehta wrote. DDoS attacks make websites inaccessible.

“Specifically, these attacks have tried to squelch opposition to bauxite mining efforts in Vietnam, an important and emotionally charged issue in the country.”

In China, some journalists said their Yahoo email accounts and those of other users whose work relates to China were compromised in an attack discovered this week.

In January, Google cited attacks on the G-mail accounts of human rights activists and journalists, a hacking attack on it and more than 20 other firms, and censorship concerns, in its decision to move its Chinese-language search services to Hong Kong.

Mehta said the Vietnamese attacks were less sophisticated, but, like the Chinese attacks, were examples of malicious software being used for political ends.

Internet use has exploded in Vietnam, and about a quarter of the population of 86 million now surf the Internet, according to the Ministry of Information and Communications.

The Vietnamese government has been pressing ahead with plans to mine and process bauxite in the Central Highlands region in partnership with Chalco, a subsidiary of China’s state-run aluminum firm Chinalco, sparking a chorus of opposition.

Vietnamese are deeply suspicious of China after centuries of tense relations, wars and territorial skirmishes, and opponents of the bauxite plan feel it is imprudent to involve China in a region many consider strategically important. Many are also concerned about possible environmental damage.

State media reported earlier this week that about 1,000 Vietnamese websites fell victim to cyber attacks last year, double the number in 2008.

(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Web attacks hit Vietnam bauxite activists: Google

(Reuters) – Google Inc has said it identified cyber attacks aimed at silencing opposition to a Vietnamese government-led bauxite mining project involving a major Chinese firm, and said they were similar to those at the heart of the company’s friction with Beijing.

Media

The computer security firm McAfee Inc, which detected the malware, went a step further, saying its creators “may have some allegiance to the government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.”

The Vietnamese Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment.

The malware infected “potentially tens of thousands of users” who downloaded what they thought was Vietnamese keyboard software, and possibly other software, Neel Mehta of Google’s security team said in a post Tuesday on the firm’s online security blog (googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.com).

“These infected machines have been used both to spy on their owners as well as participate in distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks against blogs containing messages of political dissent,” Mehta wrote. DDoS attacks make websites inaccessible.

“Specifically, these attacks have tried to squelch opposition to bauxite mining efforts in Vietnam, an important and emotionally charged issue in the country.”

In China, some journalists said their Yahoo email accounts and those of other users whose work relates to China were compromised in an attack discovered this week.

In January, Google cited attacks on the G-mail accounts of human rights activists and journalists, a hacking attack on it and more than 20 other firms, and censorship concerns, in its decision to move its Chinese-language search services to Hong Kong.

Mehta said the Vietnamese attacks were less sophisticated, but, like the Chinese attacks, were examples of malicious software being used for political ends.

Internet use has exploded in Vietnam, and about a quarter of the population of 86 million now surf the Internet, according to the Ministry of Information and Communications.

The Vietnamese government has been pressing ahead with plans to mine and process bauxite in the Central Highlands region in partnership with Chalco, a subsidiary of China’s state-run aluminum firm Chinalco, sparking a chorus of opposition.

Vietnamese are deeply suspicious of China after centuries of tense relations, wars and territorial skirmishes, and opponents of the bauxite plan feel it is imprudent to involve China in a region many consider strategically important. Many are also concerned about possible environmental damage.

State media reported earlier this week that about 1,000 Vietnamese websites fell victim to cyber attacks last year, double the number in 2008.

(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Web attacks hit Vietnam bauxite activists – Google

Wed, Mar 31 12:44 PM

Google Inc has said it identified cyber attacks aimed at silencing opposition to a Vietnamese government-led bauxite mining project involving a major Chinese firm, and said they were similar to those at the heart of the company’s friction with Beijing.

The computer security firm McAfee Inc, which detected the malware, went a step further, saying its creators “may have some allegiance to the government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam”.

The Vietnamese Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment.

The malware infected “potentially tens of thousands of users” who downloaded what they thought was Vietnamese keyboard software, and possibly other software, Neel Mehta of Google’s security team said in a post on Tuesday on the firm’s online security blog (googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.com).

“These infected machines have been used both to spy on their owners as well as participate in distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks against blogs containing messages of political dissent,” Mehta wrote. DDoS attacks make websites inaccessible.

“Specifically, these attacks have tried to squelch opposition to bauxite mining efforts in Vietnam, an important and emotionally charged issue in the country.”

In China, some journalists said their Yahoo email accounts and those of other users whose work relates to China were compromised in an attack discovered this week.

In January, Google cited attacks on the G-mail accounts of human rights activists and journalists, a hacking attack on it and more than 20 other firms, and censorship concerns, in its decision to move its Chinese-language search services to Hong Kong .

Mehta said the Vietnamese attacks were less sophisticated, but, like the Chinese attacks, were examples of malicious software being used for political ends.

Internet use has exploded in Vietnam, and about a quarter of the population of 86 million now surf the Internet, according to the Ministry of Information and Communications.

The Vietnamese government has been pressing ahead with plans to mine and process bauxite in the Central Highlands region in partnership with Chalco, a subsidiary of China’s state-run aluminium firm Chinalco, sparking a chorus of opposition.

Vietnamese are deeply suspicious of China after centuries of tense relations, wars and territorial skirmishes, and opponents of the bauxite plan feel it is imprudent to involve China in a region many consider strategically important. Many are also concerned about possible environmental damage.

State media reported earlier this week that about 1,000 Vietnamese websites fell victim to cyber attacks last year, double the number in 2008.

(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Defectors using cell phones, web sites to reveal North Korea”s secrets

Seoul (South Korea), Mar.29 (ANI): A handful of North Koreans are using networks, including cell phones, to reveal secrets about the impenetrable nation.

According to the New York Times, North Korean defectors and South Korean human rights activists are using cell phones to pierce North Korea’s near-total news blackout.

To build the networks, the NYT says recruiters slip into China to woo the few North Koreans allowed to travel there, provide cell phones to smuggle across the border, then post informers’ phoned and texted reports on web sites.

The work is risky. Recruiters spend months identifying and coaxing potential informants, all the while evading agents from the North and the Chinese police bent on stopping their work.

The North Koreans face even greater danger; exposure could lead to imprisonment — or death.

The result has been a news free-for-all, a jumble of sometimes confirmed but often contradictory reports. Some have been important such as the outrage among North Koreans over a drastic currency revaluation late last year.

The fact that such news is leaking out is something of a revolution for a brutally efficient gulag state that has forcibly cloistered its people for decades even as other closed societies have reluctantly accepted at least some of the intrusions of a more wired world.

“In an information vacuum like North Korea, any additional tidbits — even in the swamp of rumors — is helpful,” said Nicholas Eberstadt, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute who has chronicled the country’s economic and population woes for decades.

The news the informants are spiriting out is not likely to answer the questions about the North’s nuclear program or leadership succession that the United States cares about most. There is no evidence so far that these new sources have any access, or particular insight, into the North Korean leadership or military elite.

The informers themselves remain of limited use to American and South Korean spymasters, in part because the North has no broad cell phone network, making it easier for the authorities to eavesdrop on calls and harder for handlers to direct operatives in real time.

“You’re not going to find the North Korean uranium project from these guys,” the NYT quoted one American intelligence official, as saying.

The web sites appear to have inflicted damage. North Korea’s spy agencies, which almost never admit to weaknesses, recently warned that South Korea’s “plot to overthrow our system, employing all manners and means of spying, is spreading from the periphery of our territory and deeply inland.”

They vowed retaliation, especially against “human trash,” an apparent reference to the North Koreans who have betrayed their leaders’ code of silence out of principle or for pay to supplement their usually meagre wages. (ANI)

Google’s defiance of China could backfire

A Chinese business expert warns that Google’s decision to defy the Chinese government’s censorship demands could backfire.

Google has announced that users of its Chinese language search engine will be able to access unfiltered online searches from Hong Kong-based servers.

Deakin University business lecturer and expert on Chinese business, Mona Chung, says she is not convinced Google can do without China’s estimated 338 million internet users.

“I think the message is seriously there for a lot of the Western companies, especially the large companies, to really, really seriously take the message: ‘Sit down, take one step back and think about being a large organisation’,” she said.

“The fact that you become a large company doesn’t mean that you have to impose your own principles onto other people, especially onto a group of consumers that have quite different cultures and values and beliefs.”

Dr Chung says Google’s brash negotiating tactic is not likely to win out in the end.

Standard and Poor’s equity analyst Scott Kessler says even if the issue comes to a head and Google pulls the plug in China, the company will remain strong.

“[With] its current prospects, and even if those don’t include China in some way, shape or form, we still think there are a lot of reasons that investors should like the shares at this current level,” he said.

Chinese officials have reportedly accused Google of politicising commercial issues and violating a written promise it made to filter its search results.

Both sides seem unwilling to show any flexibility on the issue.

Push for free speech

But human rights activists say other companies should follow Google’s example and push the Chinese government on free speech.

Human Rights Watch director Arvind Ganesan says treading lightly will not work.

“The reality is the quiet method hasn’t worked,” he said.

“If quiet diplomacy had been taking place over the last few years in regards to the internet, the only result has been the internet is still as censored.”

Mr Ganesan says censorship will hurt the Chinese economy in the long run.

“What the Chinese government is saying is that the best products and services on the web, like Google search engine or others, are not going to be offered to Chinese net users because they are going to force them to censor and effectively offer a lesser product,” he said.

Google not backing down

Google is a company that thrives on the free flow of information.

Google Australia spokeswoman Lucinda Barlow says that makes it an uneasy fit for a country like China, where open business models are not always appreciated.

“When we went into China in 2006 it was a very, very difficult decision,” she said.

“We decided at that time that it was better to provide access to information for people in China, albeit in a compromised way, than not at all, and since then there have been a lot of discussions internally and externally.

“It has been hard, definitely. This decision, today, we are much more comfortable with.

“We are providing access to uncensored search results for people.”

Ms Barlow says if China decides to block the site, Google will continue doing what they are doing.

“We will continue evangelising and trying to open up access,” she said.

“But they have been very, very clear that we cannot legally provide uncensored search results on Google.cn from within China.”

Maoists strategy of resistance differs from social movements: Arundhati Roy

New Delhi, Mar 5 (ANI): Booker award winning writer Arundhati Roy on Friday said that all social movements are in favour of stopping displacement of people, but the Maoists resistance differ in the way of strategy.

Addressing the media, here with other human rights activists, Roy said: “There are whole range of resistances, many are non violent, Gandhians, non-Maoists all of whom are saying the same thing, that enough of displacement.”

“The Maoists just differ in that strategies of resistance, but all the social movements are saying the same thing, enough of displacement,” she added.

Earlier, Union Home Minister P Chidambaram had said the Centre is ready to freeze all the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed with multi national companies, if the Maoists are ready to come to negotiating table, without any prior condition.

“Commenting whether the intellectuals and human right activists support Maoists, Roy said: “I am not a supporter of slightly stiff, cold, annihilation of class enemy doctrine stuff comes out of the ideologue. But on the ground I have travelled in these areas, the people (tribals) trust them (Naxals) more than they trust the state.”

In the chargesheet filed against Maoist leader Kobad Ghandy the police mentioned many organisations, and persons as having links with Kobad before and after his arrest.

Commenting on Union Home Secretary G K Pillai’s statement that the Maoists are working like an army, Roy said: “Maoists would be greatly complimented by any one saying that they are like an army. It is their aim to operate like an army, but right now they are a guerrilla force.”

Earlier in the day, Pillai said that the Maoists agenda was to overthrow the Indian state by 2050.

“Documents which were found revealed that the Maoists agenda was to overthrow the Indian state by 2050, possibly with the help of ex-Armymen,” Pillai said.

“Right now, Maoists were looking to regroup and build their own army towards their plans,” he said adding that they were using administrative vacuum and under development to do this.

On talks and ceasefire offers, Roy said: “I don’t know whether he (Koteshwar Rao) is the right person to represent the party. But when they said 72 days cease fire, then both side should stop violence and talk.”

On February 24, responding to Maoists announcement to observe ceasefire Chidambaram asked them to send a signed statement to his office and also gave the fax number. But Maoists did not stop violence, since then over 20 violent incidents have been reported from various parts of India. (ANI)

Pak rights body worried over police involvement in minorities’ violence

Lahore, Sep 17 (ANI): Increasing incidents of violence against religious minorities in Pakistan in recent months, especially Christians, and the apparent involvement of the police with extremists in perpetrating these crimes is a cause of grave concern for human right activists.

Joint Action Committee (JAC) for People’s Rights has expressed its grave concerns over the increasing incidents of violence in Pakistan.

Senior human rights activists like Asma Jahangir, IA Rehman, Muhammad Tehseen, Nadeem Anthony, Shahtaj Qazilbash, Joseph Francis and Farooq Tariq stated this at a press conference here.

They said the recent ‘suicide’ of the 20-year old Robert Fanish in Silakot District Jail, who was charged with defiling of the holy Quran, raises strong suspicion of the involvement of the jail officials in his suspected murder, the Daily Times reported.

According to the JAC, similar incidents have taken place where the persons facing blasphemy charges died in jails and the authorities declared their deaths as suicides, but had the government carried out fair, transparent and thorough investigations into earlier cases of these deaths in judicial custody, it would have been a deterrent for the future.

They said the JAC had repeatedly expressed concerns at the attacks on non-Muslims over allegations of blasphemy and desecration of religious scriptures.

The JAC demanded that the government hold a transparent inquiry to determine the reasons for the alleged suicide of Fanish in Sialkot Jail and if it is found to be a murder, the criminals must be brought to justice. (ANI)

Blasphemy accused Christian man dies in Pak jail, police claims ‘suicide’

Lahore, Sep. 16 (ANI): A Christian man who was held on blasphemy charges is reported to have committed suicide in a Pakistani prison, while human rights activists are smelling foul play in his death.

Masih, 25, was arrested on Friday after hundreds of protesters accused him of desecrating the holy Quran and attacked a Catholic church in the Sambrial district near the Indian border

“Masih, being accused of blasphemy, was put in a separate cell where he committed suicide by using a string,” the Daily Times quoted Sialkot District Jail Superintendent Farooq Lodhi, as saying.

Punjab Minister for Minority Affairs Kamran Michael said the police had not handled the case properly.

“I have seen the body and there were torture marks on it,” he said.

Meanwhile, Masih’s family has claimed that he was tortured to death by the jail staff.

According to a news channel report, local Christians had snatched his body from the police and shifted it to a private hospital for an autopsy.

Human Rights Commission of Pakistan Chairwoman Asma Jahangir has demanded registration of a murder case against police officials concerned.

“This is death in custody and the police authorities are responsible,” said. (ANI)

Pak military involved in mass ‘extra judicial’ killings in Swat ?

New York, Sep.15 (ANI): While the Pakistan Army has claimed success in its offensive against the Taliban in the Swat and Malakand Divisions by killing scores of militants, human rights activists and local residents have blamed the security forces of carrying out indiscriminate killings in the region.

Recently hundreds of bodies were dumped onto the streets in Mingora. Eye witnesses said it appeared that those who were killed were subjected to torture, which has raised questions over the Pakistan military’s actions, The New York Times reported.

While the military has admitted that the bodies have turned up, it has vehemently denied its role in ‘extra judicial’ killings.

“There are no extrajudicial killings in our system.If something happens, we have a foolproof accountability system,” said Army spokesman Colonel Athar Abbas.

The Army has termed the whole issue as ‘revenge killings’ by civilians, but Swat residents denied such claims, the report said.

“There have been reports of extrajudicial killings by the military that are of concern,” This will not help bring peace,” said former Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Sherpao.

The Human Rights Commission, a non-governmental organization, argued that all the victims had not been killed by civilians, saying there are credible reports of retaliatory killings by the military, it added.

However, some people have other views regarding the killings.her Shah Khan, a well known landlord of the region, said people would hardly raise any objection to the killings as the Taliban also used to massacre innocent persons in the same manner.

“If the security services kill in the same manner as the Taliban killed, people have no problem,” Khan said. (ANI)

Pak Peace Coalition forum to pay tribute to Gandhian activist Nirmala Deshpande

Karachi, July 1 (ANI): An Indian delegation comprising of intellectuals from different spheres and human rights activists would be arriving here tomorrow (Thursday) to pay tribute to the renowned Gandhian activist, Nirmala Deshpande.

The delegation which includes senior journalist Jatin Desai, famous social activist Dr Sandeep Pandey, and renowned human rights activist Kavita Srivastava and several others would be participating in a forum named ‘Promoting Peace in South Asia and Remembering Didi Nirmala Deshpande’ here.

It is being organized by the Pakistan Peace Coalition, The Daily Times reports.

Deshpande, who passed away in May 2008, was a famous peace activist of South Asia and is primarily remembered for her undying efforts to promote the Gandhian ideology to reduce communal violence and encourage peace and cordial relations between India and Pakistan.

One of the members of the delegation, Dr Sandeep Pandey is a renowned social activist and is the founder of ‘Asha Parivar’.

The ‘Asha Parivar’ primarily focuses on strengthening democracy at the grassroots level.

Another member of the delegation, Jatin Desai, is famous for his articles on South Asian issues and Indo-Pak relations.

Kavita Srivastava, another famous human activist, is the national secretary for People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL).

She also launched a campaign for the release of PUCL National Vice President Binayak Sen, who was illegally arrested by the Chhattisgarh police and jailed for over two years. (ANI)