Plotters of deadly Afghan attacks arrested: official

(Reuters) – Afghanistan’s intelligence department has detained four Taliban insurgents behind a series of deadly attacks against foreign targets in the capital, a spokesman for the agency said on Saturday.

The National Department for Security (NDS) also arrested another Taliban group which planned to stage attacks in Kabul in coming days, Saeed Ansari told reporters.

The first group was involved in five suicide attacks against foreigners in the city, including on the Indian embassy last year and another in February on a guest house used by Indian nationals. Scores of people, many of them Afghans, were killed.

The attacks were planned from Pakistan, where the Taliban have sanctuary, Ansari said.

“This group either managed to flee or went into hiding, but the vigilant officials of the NDS, with the help of people, managed to arrest them,” he said.

The second group consisted of six insurgents who carried out attacks against Afghan and foreign forces on a highway south of Kabul and planned further raids, including suicide bombings. Two of those held were clerics at local mosques in Kabul province.

NDS officials also seized around 450 kgs (1,000 pounds) of explosive materials during a raid against the group which was living in house on the outskirts of Kabul.

Removed from power in a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, the Taliban have made a comeback in recent years, despite the presence of nearly 150,000 foreign troops.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox)

Plotters of deadly Afghan attacks arrested – official

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Afghanistan’s intelligence department has detained four Taliban insurgents behind a series of deadly attacks against foreign targets in the capital, a spokesman for the agency said on Saturday.

The National Department for Security (NDS) also arrested another Taliban group which planned to stage attacks in Kabul in coming days, Saeed Ansari told reporters.

The first group was involved in five suicide attacks against foreigners in the city, including on the Indian embassy last year and another in February on a guest house used by Indian nationals. Scores of people, many of them Afghans, were killed.

The attacks were planned from Pakistan, where the Taliban have sanctuary, Ansari said.

“This group either managed to flee or went into hiding, but the vigilant officials of the NDS, with the help of people, managed to arrest them,” he said.

The second group consisted of six insurgents who carried out attacks against Afghan and foreign forces on a highway south of Kabul and planned further raids, including suicide bombings. Two of those held were clerics at local mosques in Kabul province.

NDS officials also seized around 450 kgs (1,000 pounds) of explosive materials during a raid against the group which was living in house on the outskirts of Kabul.

Removed from power in a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, the Taliban have made a comeback in recent years, despite the presence of nearly 150,000 foreign troops.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here) (sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Surviving Mumbai gunman facing execution

A Pakistani man faces a possible death sentence after being convicted by an Indian court in connection with the 2008 terrorist attacks on Mumbai.

Mohammad Ajmal Kasab was the only gunman to survive the siege, which left more than 160 people dead after a three-day rampage through some of Mumbai’s best known landmarks, including two luxury hotels and a Jewish centre.

Prosecutors said Kasab was caught on tape strolling through Mumbai’s main train station carrying an AK-47 rifle and a knapsack. Nearly 60 people were gunned down in the crowded station.

Kasab, wounded by police and arrested on the first night of the attacks, initially admitted his role but then said he had been framed.

Under the glare of the world’s media in a packed court room inside a maximum security prison, judge ML Talayhani read through the lengthy indictment of 86 charges.

He found Kasab guilty on each one, including waging war against India and murder which carry the death penalty.

Kasab sat with his head bowed as the guilty verdicts were read out.

The trial lasted more than a year and the judge took more than a month to consider all the evidence.

The widely expected verdict came after the prosecution said there was overwhelming evidence against Kasab, including photos and 610 witness statements.

There has been pressure on India to be seen to be delivering justice in this case.

Sentencing has been adjourned until Wednesday but several of his convictions, like waging war against India and murder, carry the death penalty.

Two Indian nationals accused of being members of the Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and of conducting reconnaissance in Mumbai before the attack were acquitted of all charges.

The Mumbai attack prompted New Delhi to break off peace talks with Pakistan, saying Islamabad must first act against militants operating from its soil, including the LeT, of which Kasab is accused of being a member.

India had charged 38 people in connection with the attack, most of them living in Pakistan.

The verdict comes days after the prime ministers of India and Pakistan held talks in Bhutan and asked their officials to take steps to normalise relations, signalling a thaw in ties that analysts say should not be affected by the verdict.

One risk to normalising relations is another major militant attack in India and the ensuing political pressure that could force the government to break off the dialogue process.

Kiwis far safer in India than Indians in New Zealand

Wellington, Apr 20 (ANI): Indians are facing a tough time in New Zealand and are more victims of crime here in comparison to Kiwis in India.

New Zealand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said that in 2009 a total of 31 New Zealanders sought consular help from the New Zealand High Commission in New Delhi.

A spokesman said of these, four were categorised as “victims of crime” and none of them violent.

Stuff.co.nz reports that over the same time, four Indian nationals were homicide victims in New Zealand including a 78-year-old Jastmatbhai Patel, who was hauled out of his van and mortally beaten on the roadside.

The latest incident occurred in January this year when Indian national and father of two, taxi driver Hiren Mohini, was stabbed to death in Auckland.

In the time New Zealanders were complaining about bag snatching in Delhi, two other Indians were killed, including bottle store worker Navtej Singh and sixteen year old dairy worker Sai Krishna Naidu.

Indian Weekender magazine, making its first anniversary as a publication, noted that it had been a depressing time for Indians in New Zealand. (ANI)

Guyanese pleads guilty to smuggling Indian to the US

WASHINGTON: A Guyanese national of Indian origin today pleaded guilty before a court for smuggling an Indian into the US.

If convicted, Annita Devi Gerald, 52, faces a mandatory minimum prison sentence of three years, and a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Her sentencing is scheduled for May 17. “Today’s guilty plea puts another alien smuggling organiser out of business,” said Assistant Attorney General Lanny A Breuer of the Criminal Division.

“Travelling the globe seeking people willing to pay for illegal entry into the United States, this defendant sought personal riches in exchange for disregarding the immigration laws of our country,” he said.

According to plea documents, Gerald provided assistance to undocumented aliens from India in their efforts to illegally enter the US.

Gerald admitted that she and her co-conspirators prepared letters of invitation for several Indian nationals from a trading and agricultural company affiliated with Gerald.

These letters falsely proclaimed the Indian nationals were farming experts whose expertise was needed for a project in Belize. The letters were used to assist the aliens in obtaining the Belizean visas that enabled them to board aircraft and transit through numerous countries in route to the US.

Australia police probe alleged Indian cyber attacks

SYDNEY: Australian police said they were investigating a string of hacking attacks against Melbourne-based companies, reportedly linked to recent violence against Indian nationals.

The cyber raids, which have occurred in the past week, are being probed by a specialist taskforce, a spokeswoman said, refusing to confirm media reports that they were linked to the Indian assaults.

“The Victoria Police e-crimes squad is investigating reports of alleged hacking of a number of different business servers hosted in Melbourne,” the spokeswoman said.

“The ongoing investigation is in its infancy and it would be inappropriate to comment any further.”

The Australian newspaper reported that several Melbourne construction and engineering firms had been attacked in recent days by a hacker called “Ghost Buster”.

“Your server data have been compromised … and have been encrypted,” Ghost Buster wrote on one.

“Stop racial attacks against Indian people,” the message said, vowing that until the assaults end, Australian servers will be hacked “every day”.

Attacks against Indians, including beatings and robberies, have been on the rise in Australia, threatening to damage diplomatic ties and the country’s 15.4-billion-US-dollar education export industry.

Race motive ‘clear’ in some Indian attacks: Australian FM

SYDNEY: Australia’s foreign minister on Tuesday told parliament some of the recent violence against Indian students had clearly been racially motivated and had “considerably damaged” the nation’s reputation.

Stephen Smith offered his government’s condolences to the family of Indian nationals attacked in Australia, telling lawmakers that repairing the subsequent damage to the country’s image was an “essential priority”.

“Recent contemptible attacks on Indian students and others of Indian origin in Australia have cast a long shadow, not only over our education links, but across our broader relationship and bilateral agenda,” Smith said in an update to parliament on relations between the two nations.

“If any of these attacks have been racist in nature — and it seems clear some of them have — they will be punished with the full force of the law. Such attacks affront our values and are anathema to our view of modern Australia.”

Australian officials had previously downplayed racism as a motive for the attacks on Indians, which have prompted media outrage in India and threatened to damage Australia’s 15.4-billion-US-dollar education export industry.

Smith said the attacks, which have included robberies and beatings, were “inexcusable” and were being taken “very seriously.”

“We also need to accept and to understand that it has considerably damaged Australia’s reputation in India and among the Indian people. Indeed, it has been widely noticed beyond India and South Asia,” he added.

Diplomatic tensions between Canberra and New Delhi mounted following the unsolved murder of 21-year-old Punjab man Nitin Garg in Melbourne, with New Delhi expressing “absolute displeasure and concern” over the violence.

The foreign minister said Delhi was “in the front rank” of Australia’s international partnerships, with as many as 450,000 Indians living in Australia, 120,000 of them students.

Many found themselves in a “higher risk profile for crime” because of where they lived and the kinds of work they did, which Smith said didn’t excuse the violence but “may help to explain why some attacks are happening.”

“While Australia is one of the world’s most tolerant countries and one the safest, we cannot promise to stop all urban crime. No government can credibly do that,” he said.

“What we are promising is to make a whole-of-nation and whole-of-government commitment to do our best to address this problem and minimise it.”

Don’t jump to conclusions about Indian boy’s death: Rudd, Brumby

Melbourne, Mar 5(ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Victorian Premier John Brumby have urged people not to jump to conclusions over the death of three-year-old Indian boy Gurshan Singh Kaurchanna in Melbourne.

Gurshan’s body was found dumped by the side of a road in Melbourne”s suburbs six hours after he disappeared from a relative”s home in Lalor on Thursday.

Prime Minister Rudd said if it was murder, people need to pause and introspect about its implications on society.

Brumby, who was informed of the murder, said he found the case “deeply and personally distressing”, and urged the public not to jump to conclusions in linking the death with recent attacks on Indian nationals.

“There are no visible signs of the cause of death at this stage … but I think it”s very important that no one jumps to conclusions,” News.com.au quoted Brumby, as saying.

“The most important thing is that we find the cause of death and bring those responsible to justice and I can only repeat from the point of view of the Government and the police force in Victoria, every single resource is being devoted to this effort,” he added.

Brumby said he had spoken to Indian High Commissioner Sujatha Singh and advised her that “no stone will be left unturned” in the murder investigation.

“I do want to assure the community that every possible step is being taken to solve this crime,” Brumby said.

“What has occurred is an unthinkable tragedy, as I”ve said it is deeply, deeply distressing, it is always a terrible thing whenever the life of any child is lost but for one so young I know that all Victorians and all Australians would find this so distressing,” he added.

He further said his thoughts went out to Gurshan’s family and friends.

“Today is about mourning the death of a child, a three-year-old child, and the loss of a three-year-old child so young is a terrible, terrible tragedy, which I find personally distressing,” he said.

A local council worker found Gurshan’s body, 30 kilometers from where he was last seen at a relative”s home in Lalor.

Victoria Police said that an autopsy of Gurshan has not been determined, and his body had no injury signs.

Homicide detectives are leading the investigation, which has been classified as a suspicious death. (ANI)

India demands stern action against Melbourne race attack perpetrators

New Delhi, Sept 16 (ANI): The Indian Government on Wednesday called on the Australian Government to take stern action against the perpetrators of alleged racial assaults on Indians in Melbourne, Victoria.

External Affairs Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said in a statement that the matter of the recurring attacks on Indians in Australia had been taken up with Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith by Indian High Commissioner Sujatha Singh.

“As we take note of the assurances given, including from the highest levels of the government and provincial authorities of Australia, it is our earnest hope that the concerned authorities would take all necessary steps towards the safety and security of Indians in that country,” said Prakash in a statement.

“The Indian Consul General in Melbourne is in contact with authorities in Victoria including the police authorities,” he added.

“We hope that the latest incident is investigated with care and the culprits are dealt with, according to the laws of the land. It would also help, if various measures being contemplated by the Australian side, in addition to those already announced, are put in place at the earliest, to prevent reoccurrence of such incidents in the future,” Prakash said.

Officials of the Consulate General of India in Melbourne, are also in touch with family members of the victims.

Two Indian nationals and two other persons of Indian origin were assaulted by a group of individuals at Melbourne late in the evening on September 12.

One of the Indian nationals, Sukhdip Singh sustained serious injuries and is presently undergoing treatment.

“We are informed that the police arrested four individuals who have since been released pending further investigations,” Prakash said. (ANI)

India demands stern action against perpetrators of Melbourne attackers

New Delhi, Sept 16 (ANI): The Indian Government on Wednesday called on the Australian Government to take stern action against the perpetrators of alleged racial assaults on Indians in Melbourne, Victoria.

External Affairs Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said in a statement that the matter of the recurring attacks on Indians in Australia had been taken up with Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith by Indian High Commissioner Sujatha Singh.

“As we take note of the assurances given, including from the highest levels of the government and provincial authorities of Australia, it is our earnest hope that the concerned authorities would take all necessary steps towards the safety and security of Indians in that country,” said Prakash in a statement.

“The Indian Consul General in Melbourne is in contact with authorities in Victoria including the police authorities,” he added.

“We hope that the latest incident is investigated with care and the culprits are dealt with, according to the laws of the land. It would also help, if various measures being contemplated by the Australian side, in addition to those already announced, are put in place at the earliest, to prevent reoccurrence of such incidents in the future,” Prakash said.

Officials of the Consulate General of India in Melbourne, are also in touch with family members of the victims.

Two Indian nationals and two other persons of Indian origin were assaulted by a group of individuals at Melbourne late in the evening on September 12.

One of the Indian nationals, Sukhdip Singh sustained serious injuries and is presently undergoing treatment.

“We are informed that the police arrested four individuals who have since been released pending further investigations,” Prakash said. (ANI)

Priest committee continues strike in Pashupatinath area against Indian priests appointment

Kathmandu, Sep.6 (ANI): The agitating Priest Appointment Joint Struggle Committee (PAJSC) and Unified CPN (Maoist) supporters on Sunday continued with their protests in and around the Pashupatinath Area against the appointment of Indian priests at the holy Pashupaitnath temple.

Protestors chanted slogans against the appointment of Indian priests and obstructed traffic at Purano Baneshwor, Gaushala, Mitrapark, Jayabageshwori, and Chabahil, reports Nepal News.

They also demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal and Culture Minister Manindra Rijal over the issue. The obstruction caused long traffic snarls in the area and threw traffic out of gear in other parts of the city including ring road for couple of hours.

Police intervened in the demonstration and arrested some protestors also. PAJSC has accused the police administration of using excessive force to quell their demonstration and torturing protestors who have been arrested.

PAJSC has been protesting since last week following the Indian priests’ appointment at the most revered Hindu temple in the country.

It has been demanding that Nepali nationals should also be considered while appointing top priests at the temple, that the appointment be made through open competition among both Nepali and Indian nationals, that the finances and expenses of the Pashupatinath Area Development Trust (PADT) should be made public and more transparency on the utilization of money that devotees offer, among others.

Newly appointed Indian priests in Pashupatinath, Girish Bhatta and Raghavendra Bhatta, brought from Karnataka state of India last week, had entered the temple amid tight security and started worship on Saturday morning.

The government had deployed an estimated 1,000 security personnel in and around the temple for this after Maoist and PAJSC members entered the temple and thrashed the newly-appointed Indian priests on Friday.

India also reacted very strongly to the incident.

“The attack on the newly appointed Indian priests, Girish Bhatt and Raghavendra Bhatt, at the revered and sacred Pashupatinath temple on September 4 has caused deep anguish and serious concern in India. The matter was immediately taken up through our Embassy in Kathmandu at the highest levels in the Government of Nepal and our concerns conveyed,” India’s Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement.

Indian ambassador Rakesh Sood had also visited Pashupati temple Saturday morning and condemned the beating of Indian priests.

Briefly speaking to reporters, Sood said he had taken the incident very seriously. (ANI)

Seven Indian barbers claim Malaysian boss abused them for four years

Penang/Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), July 2 (ANI): Seven Indian nationals have lodged a complaint with the Indian High Commission in Kuala Lumpur, accusing their employer in Penang of abusing them and failing to pay their salaries regularly for the past four years.

According to The Star, the men, aged between 20 and 28, were employed at a barbershop in Paya Terubong.

They alleged that their employer made them work 12 hours daily with only a 10-minute break for meals. They were not given any day off, except on Deepavali.

Vadivel Rajan, from Madurai, said they were hired for a monthly salary of RM1,000 and that the employer had told them their pay would be forwarded to their families every month.

He claimed his employer only paid him RM10 daily as food allowance.

According to him, the employer withheld the workers’ salaries for five months to renew their working permits, but had not done so.

He claimed that their employer would hit them whenever they asked him about their salaries or work permits.

Vadivel said they decided to run away after finding out that their permits had not been renewed for the past two years.

They saved the money from their food allowance to travel to Kuala Lumpur to file their complaint and also to make a police report at the Sentul police station. (ANI)

Swine Flu – Swine Flu cases in Mumbai – Three people reported with swine flu symptoms in Mumbai

Health authorities at Mumbai isolated and quarantined three patients who showed symptoms similar to the dreaded pandemic H1N1 flu on Thursday.

“There are three patients. They age from 25-35, one is 26-years-old other one is 32-years-old and third one is 35-years-old. They are Indian nationals coming from Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala and they travelled from Jeddah to Mumbai via Riyadh and after arriving in Mumbai International Airport they had slight symptoms of fever and cough,” said Dr. Umesh Aigal, Medical Superintendent, Kasturba Gandhi Hospital for Infectious Diseases, Mumbai.

“They have been sent from the airport screening doctors to Kasturba Hospital for isolation and for investigation,” Dr. Aigal added.

The throat swabs of the three suspect cases have been sent to National Institute of Virology (NIV) at Pune for confirmation of swine flu.

Another Indian student stabbed in Australia pleaded with attackers

Melbourne, May 28 (IANS) An Indian student, who was robbed and stabbed in this Australian city, had pleaded with his attackers who just laughed at him, a media report said.

Baljinder Singh had left a railway station Monday when two men carrying weapons approached him and demanded money. As he searched through his bag to hand over his wallet he was stabbed in the abdomen, Herald Sun reported.

“They just laughed when they stabbed me in the stomach. They laughed at me…I was screaming ‘don’t kill me, don’t kill me’,” he said.

The 25-year-old student said fears among the Indian student population in Melbourne were growing after a spate of attacks.

Singh said he once believed Melbourne was a safe place to live in, but now thinks that Indian nationals were being targeted as easy prey.

“Now there are lots of attacks. You can see that in the western suburbs,” he said.

Darrell Allen, a police official, said it was an opportunistic crime and was not racially motivated.

“I don’t think it’s racially motivated. It’s an opportunistic crime and it’s of great concern,” he said.

The attack follows another attack on an Indian student on a train May 9.

Sourabh Sharma, 21, was beaten by a group of thugs, one of whom is shown laughing in the video footage of the attack.

Two killed in blast at church in Kathmandu

Two killed in blast at church in KathmanduKathmandu- At least two people were killed and 13 others injured after a bomb went off in a church in the Nepalese capital of Kathmandu Saturday morning, police said.

The bomb went off as people gathered at the Church of Assumption in Dhoibighat area, a suburb in Kathmandu Valley.

Both the victims, including a 14-year-old girl, were Indian nationals, police said.

Both were rushed to hospital in critical condition and died while undergoing treatment, the police said.

Several other injured people were reported to be in serious condition, according to officials.

Witnesses said the bomb was in a woman’s handbag that was placed inside the church as some 150 people gathered for morning prayers.

There were no immediate claims of responsibility. However, media reports said leaflets of a group calling itself the National Defence Army was found near the church.

The group has been demanding Hinduism be declared the official state religion of Nepal. It has used such tactics in the past.

Police said they had heightened security across the capital city following the blast.

Hinduism was the official religion of Nepal until 2006, when the country declared itself a secular nation following the overthrow of King Gyanendra’s government.

The blast came just hours ahead of the vote in parliament to choose a new prime minister to replace caretaker Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal. (dpa)

Vice President Ansari to inaugurate Civil Services Day today

New Delhi, Apr 21 (ANI): Vice President Mohammad Hamid Ansari will inaugurate the Civil Services Day here today.

The theme for this year is `Excellence in Governance’.

This Day is observed by all the Central Civil Services to rededicate and recommit themselves to the cause of the people.

It provides a unique opportunity for introspection as also chalking out future strategies to deal with the challenges being posed by the changing times.

The Day is being celebrated since 2006.

The Vice President will give away the `PM Award for Excellence in Public Administration’ for the year 2007-08.

Nine outstanding initiatives in three categories – individual, group and organization – have been selected for the award.

These are:

(i) Financial Sustainability of Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (Karnataka)
(ii) Evacuation of Indian Nationals from Beirut during the war

(iii) State Motherhood and Child Survival Programme (Gujarat)

(iv)Activity Based Learning (ABL) Modules (Tamil Nadu) in the individual category.

In the group category, the winners are:

(i) Computerization of Personnel Information System in Manipur (Manipur)

(ii) SCORE: e-Registration in Bihar (Bihar),

(iii) MCA-21 and

(iv)Improved Health and Sanitation Practices through Convergence among district administration, panchayats and community in district Surguja (Chattisgarh).

The third category of ‘Organization’ includes one initiative that is Implementation of Risk Management in Customs.

A book on initiatives in e-Governance titled “BYOB” compiled by the Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances will also be released on the occasion.

The book covers various innovations successfully tried out by different Ministries/ Departments, state/UT administrations, national and international organisations.

After the inauguration, the technical session would commence with successive panel discussions on two issues.

The panel discussion will be chaired by the Cabinet Secretary.

The panelists of the first panel discussion on ‘Performance Management in Government’ areC.M.Vasudev, E.Sreedharan, P.C.Halder, and Dr. Prajapati Trivedi.

For the second panel discussion on ‘Civil Service:

Accountability to People’, the penalists are Wajahat Habibullah, V.N.Dhoot,. D.Swarup and G.K.Pillai.

The valedictory session will feature an address by the Chief Justice of India. (ANI)

Vice President Ansari to inaugurate Civil Services Day tomorrow

New Delhi, Apr 20 (ANI): Vice President Mohammad Hamid Ansari will inaugurate the Civil Services Day here tomorrow.

The theme for this year is ‘Excellence in Governance’.

This Day is observed by all the Central Civil Services to rededicate and recommit themselves to the cause of the people. It provides a unique opportunity for introspection as also chalking out future strategies to deal with the challenges being posed by the changing times.

The Day is being celebrated since 2006.

The Vice President will give away the ‘PM Award for Excellence in Public Administration’ for the year 2007-08.

Nine outstanding initiatives in three categories – individual, group and organization – have been selected for the award. These are: (i) Financial Sustainability of Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (Karnataka), (ii) Evacuation of Indian Nationals from Beirut during the war, (iii) State Motherhood and Child Survival Programme (Gujarat) and (iv) Activity Based Learning (ABL) Modules (Tamil Nadu) in the individual category.

In the group category, the winners are: (i) Computerization of Personnel Information System in Manipur (Manipur), (ii) SCORE: e-Registration in Bihar (Bihar), (iii) MCA-21 and (iv) Improved Health and Sanitation Practices through Convergence among district administration, panchayats and community in district Surguja (Chattisgarh).

The third category of ‘Organization’ includes one initiative that is Implementation of Risk Management in Customs.

A book on initiatives in e-Governance titled “BYOB” compiled by the Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances will also be released on the occasion.

The book covers various innovations successfully tried out by different Ministries/ Departments, state/UT administrations, national and international organisations.

After the inauguration, the technical session would commence with successive panel discussions on two issues.

The panel discussion will be chaired by the Cabinet Secretary.

The panelists of the first panel discussion on ‘Performance Management in Government’ areC.M.Vasudev, E.Sreedharan, P.C.Halder, and Dr. Prajapati Trivedi.

For the second panel discussion on ‘Civil Service: Accountability to People’, the penalists are Wajahat Habibullah, V.N.Dhoot,. D.Swarup and G.K.Pillai.

The valedictory session will feature an address by the Chief Justice of India. (ANI)

New lawyer for Mumbai terrorism suspect

New Delhi – An Indian court Thursday appointed a new lawyer to defend Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone gunman suspect captured during the Mumbai terrorist attacks that killed over 170 people in November, news reports said.

Abbas Kazmi, a criminal lawyer from Mumbai, was appointed by Special Judge ML Tahilyani to replace Anjali Waghmare who was removed by the court on grounds of “professional misconduct,” the IANS news agency reported.

Kasab, allegedly a member of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist organization, appeared before the special court in the high-security Mumbai jail where he is also lodged had demanded a Pakistani lawyer for his defence. However, his plea was rejected by Tahilyani.

The special court said if the Pakistani government or his family members wished to engage an Indian lawyer, they were free to do so.

Kasab is being kept in custody at the Arthur Road jail in Mumbai where the trial began Wednesday. Tight security arrangements have been made in and around the jail complex.

Kasab, 21, is accused of being part of a 10-member group that mounted attacks in Mumbai for three days beginning November 26. He was captured hours after the assault. More than 170 people were killed in the siege, including the nine other gunmen.

Kasab is accused of murder and waging war against the nation, among other charges. Two Indian nationals who are accused along with Kasab are also facing trial.

Indian police filed an 11,000-page charge sheet against 38 people including Kasab. A total of 2,202 witnesses have been identified but it is not yet clear how many will be called to testify.

The charges allege key planners of the assaults included Pakistan-based LET leaders Hafeez Sayyid, Fahim Ansari, Zaki-ur Rehman Lakhvi and Zarar Shah. Those men are in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, and have been listed as “wanted absconders.” (dpa)

Indians accounted for 38 pc H-1B visas in 2008: US

As the US is having a tough time in filling up its annual quota of 65,000 H-1B work visas for highly skilled categories, an official report in Washington has said that the Indian nationals accounted for the 38 per cent of the total H-1B visas issued by the United States last year.

India also accounts for maximum number of people entering the US on L-1 visa, which is primarily used for intra-company transferees, said the Annual Flow Report released by the Office of Immigration Statistics.

The report is based on the information gathered from the I-94 on the number and characteristics of non-immigrant admissions to the US in 2008.

The report said Indian nationals accounted for 157,726 (37.8 per cent) of the 409,619 H-1B Admissions in the US in 2008. In actual figures, this is a drop of about 3,000 as compared to 2007 when 157,613 Indian citizens were admitted to the US on H-1B visas. In 2006 the figure was 125,717.

The annual report reveals that Canada is a distant second in terms of H-1B visa admissions. In 2008 as many as 23,312 Canadian nationals were admitted to the US on this visa category, followed by Britain (19,209), Mexico (16,382) and China (13,828).

Mumbai terror defendant’s lawyer dismissed by court

*

Ajmal Amir KasabNew Delhi – The trial against Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving gunmen of the November Mumbai terror attack suffered a setback Wednesday when a special court dismissed the state-appointed lawyer for professional misconduct, news reports said. Anjali Waghmare failed to disclose that she also represented a witness in the same case when she was appointed to defend Kasab, NDTV news quoted judge ML Tahiliyani of the special court as saying.

“It will not be appropriate for Waghmare to continue. I revoke the appointment,” Tahiliyani said, citing a conflict of interest.

He said Waghmare’s deputy KP Pawar would continue to represent Kasab, and adjourned the court until later in the day.

Some reports said the court was likely to recess until another lawyer was appointed to represent Kasab, because Waghmare’s deputy was considered to lack experience.

The judge said even though Kasab was a foreign national, it was the court’s duty to provide him with legal aid and a fair trial.

“Providing true legal aid is not charity. It is the right of the accused,” the judge said.

Kasab, allegedly a member of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist organization, is accused of being part of a 10-member group that mounted attacks in Mumbai for three days beginning November 26.

He was captured hours after the assault. More than 170 people were killed in the siege, including the nine other gunmen.

Kasab is accused of murder and waging war against the nation, among other charges.

He is being kept in custody at the high-security Arthur Road Jail in Mumbai where the trial is being held under tight surveillance with limited access to the media.

Two Indian nationals who are accused along with Kasab are also facing trial.

Faheem Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed are charged with conducting reconnaissance of the Taj Mahal and Trident hotels and the railway station that were the terrorists’ targets. They allegedly prepared maps and gave them to the LET.

Indian police filed a 11,000-page charge sheet against 38 people including Kasab. A total of 2,202 witnesses have been identified but it is not yet clear how many will be called to testify.

The charges allege key planners of the assaults included Pakistan-based LET leaders Hafeez Sayyid, Fahim Ansari, Zaki-ur Rehman Lakhvi and Zarar Shah.

Those men are in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, and have been listed as “wanted absconders.”(dpa)