Pak’s nukes well guarded by ‘strong hands’: Gilani

Lahore, May 15 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Saturday reiterated that his country’s nuclear assets are well guarded by ‘strong hands.’

Geo News quoted Gilani as saying that US President Barack Obama had himself acknowledged that Pakistan’s nuclear establishments were in safe hands.

He said that the country has suffered immensely in the ‘war on terror’, and that it was now the international community’s turn to ‘do more’ to help Pakistan come out of the myriad problems it is facing at present.

While the US is still suspicious of Pakistan’s nuclear programme, Gilani maintains that Islamabad’s ‘successful’ participation in the two-day nuclear security summit last month has ‘boosted the legitimacy of the country”s nuclear programme.’

During the nuclear security summit, Gilani had insisted that Islamabad needed fissile nuclear materials as a deterrent against India.

“For a minimum deterrence, we have to have. That is our requirement,” Gilani had said adding the issue has been discussed with the United States.

“I assure you that Pakistan, as a responsible nuclear state and an emerging democracy, stands with the international community in its effort to make this world a better place to live in,” he said.

It is worth mentioning here that John Brennan, the top anti-terrorism adviser to President Barack Obama, had warned that Al-Qaeda’s interest in nuclear weapons was “strong” and said the risk of nuclear terrorism was “real, “serious” and “growing.”

A report by Harvard University’s Belfer Centre for Science and International Affairs, titled Securing the Bomb, had said that Pakistan’s stockpile “faces a greater threat from Islamic extremists seeking nuclear weapons than any other nuclear stockpile on earth.” (ANI)

DNA tests in Indonesia confirm death of terrorist Noordin Top

Jakarta, Sep. 19 (ANI): Indonesian police said today the DNA test on the body of a man shot dead in an operation in Solo on Thursday matched that of wanted militant Noordin Mohd Top.

“It’s a 100 per cent match… from the fingerprints to the DNA tests,” detikcom website quoted Indonesian police spokesman Nanan Soekarna as saying.

Indonesian police chief Gen Bambang Hendarso Danuri had earlier confirmed that Noordin was shot dead in the raid but asked the forensic department to carry out the tests.

The report also said that Noordin’s family in Johor, Malaysia, had been informed of the test result.

The 41-year-old Malaysian-born extremist was one of four militants killed in the raid near Solo, national police chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri told reporters.

The terrorist, who was on the run for almost seven years, was identified using fingerprint analysis, Danuri said.

“He is Noordin M Top,” Danuri said, sparking a round of applause throughout the room.

Noordin led a hardline splinter group of terror organisation Jemaah Islamiah.

He was the suspected mastermind of July”s attacks on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta that killed seven, including three Australians.

Authorities believe he also masterminded a 2003 attack on the Marriott, a 2004 attack on Australia”s embassy in Jakarta and the 2005 Bali bombings that killed four Australians.

It”s believed he also helped plan the 2002 Bali bombings which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.Police came close to catching Noordin several times but he always managed to elude capture.

Noordin”s death will be a major setback for Islamic extremists throughout Indonesia and Southeast Asia.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd”s office said it was aware of reports of Top”s death.

“We are awaiting official confirmation from the Indonesian government,” Fairfax News quoted a spokesman, as saying. (ANI)

Bali bombing mastermind killed in police raid

Jakarta, Sep. 17 (ANI): Terrorist mastermind Noordin Mohammed Top was killed in a police raid on a militant hideout in Central Java on Thursday, Indonesian police have officially confirmed.

The 41-year-old Malaysian-born extremist was one of four militants killed in the raid near Solo, national police chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri told reporters.

The terrorist, who was on the run for almost seven years, was identified using fingerprint analysis, Danuri said.

“He is Noordin M Top,” Danuri said, sparking a round of applause throughout the room.

Noordin led a hardline splinter group of terror organisation Jemaah Islamiah.

He was the suspected mastermind of July’s attacks on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta that killed seven, including three Australians.

Authorities believe he also masterminded a 2003 attack on the Marriott, a 2004 attack on Australia’s embassy in Jakarta and the 2005 Bali bombings that killed four Australians.

It’s believed he also helped plan the 2002 Bali bombings which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.Police came close to catching Noordin several times but he always managed to elude capture.

Noordin’s death will be a major setback for Islamic extremists throughout Indonesia and Southeast Asia.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s office said it was aware of reports of Top’s death.

“We are awaiting official confirmation from the Indonesian government,” Fairfax News quoted a spokesman, as saying. (ANI)

Pak-based terrorists exploiting Britain’s shoddy visa system

London, Sep 10 (ANI): Pakistan-based terrorists are exploiting Britain’s shoddy visa system to come to the country.

Pakistan is considered by Britain as the No.1 base for Islamic extremists brainwashing potential terrorists.

More than 60,000 Pakistanis were given UK visas in the past nine months, but only 29 underwent face-to-face security interviews, The Sun reports.

The Home Office admitted the shocking record in Commons answers.

The new figures mean UK risk assessment officials in Pakistan could easily be dishing out visas to terror suspects.

Ministers have also admitted not a single visa applicant had a phone interview before getting entry clearance. And each application was dealt with in just 11 minutes; nothing like the time security experts say is needed.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Grayling said: “There are very real concerns that the system is being abused, and clear security issues too.” (ANI)

Detention in Britain ‘mental torture’ : Pakistani

ISLAMABAD: One of several Pakistani students rounded up by British authorities on allegations of terrorism _ later dropped _ described his detention as “mental torture” after returning to his native country Thursday.

The case has strained relations between Britain and Pakistan, especially after British authorities failed to produce enough evidence to back up the terror charges but insisted on deporting the students anyway.

“I fail to understand still why they kept us under detention,” Tariq ur Rehman, apparently the first to be sent home, told reporters in brief comments at the Islamabad airport. “We were accused of being Islamic extremists.”

Twelve people, most of them Pakistanis in Britain on student visas, were arrested in dramatic daytime operations across England on April 8. The arrests were rushed in part because one of the country’s top counterterrorism officers inadvertently exposed details of the operation to a photographer outside the prime minister’s office.

Authorities’ failure to charge the men was an embarrassment for Britain and Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who said at the time of the arrests that police had disrupted “a very big terrorist plot.”

Britain has said it wants to deport all but one of the men on national security grounds, prompting protests from Islamabad. Britain’s Home Office has refused to say what the men are accused of or how long they might be held before deportation.

“I think the mental torture is worse than physical torture,” Rehman told reporters. He declined to say if he would sue Britain. It was not immediately clear what he had been studying there.

Britain’s embassy in Islamabad said Rehman had agreed to voluntary deportation.

British High Commission spokeswoman Jennifer Wilkes said it might issue a statement on Rehman’s case later Thursday.

Some of the students have lawyers and are fighting to stay and resume their studies in Britain. Several students’ families in Pakistan have begged British officials to allow them to finish their degrees, saying their futures are at stake.

Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit, while noting Rehman had returned to Pakistan voluntarily, said his government stood behind the students who were fighting to stay in Britain.

“We still want our students to be released. We still want them to be allowed to continue their studies,” he said. “We support them.”

Britain has a large population of Muslims of Pakistani descent and is a popular destination for Pakistani students who want to study abroad. The detainees’ case has caused outrage among British Muslims, with supporters holding vigils and protests.

India, Pak begin sharing intelligence inputs after much US persuasion

Washington, May 21 (ANI): India and Pakistan have started sharing intelligence inputs regarding Islamic extremists amid continuous persuasion from the United States, a report in a leading US daily said.

According to a Wall Street Journal report, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) arranged for Pakistan and India to share information on Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the outlawed accused of carrying out the Mumbai 26/11 attacks.

The arrangement would also see Islamabad sharing information about the top Taliban commanders who are leading the insurgency inside Pakistan.

Washington is hoping that when New Delhi sees the intelligence and evidence that Islamabad is seriously fighting against the militants, it will ease the deployment of troops against Pakistan, which would prompt Pakistan to focus more on its internal threat rather than India.

“We have to satisfy the Mumbai question, and show India that the threat is abating,” the newspaper quoted an official involved in developing US’ South Asia strategy, as saying.

“We’re not going to tell them everything we know and they’re not going to tell us everything they know. Nobody expects that to happen, but we’re talking about the attack. We weren’t doing that in December,” he added.

The Obama administration has expressed its concerns over LeT’s plans to carry out a second strike against India to ignite a war between the two neighboring countries. (ANI)

Pakistan says its nuclear arsenal safe

Islamabad – Pakistan on Saturday rejected an international media report that United States was planning to capture its nuclear stockpile if militants take power in the country as “mere fiction.”

“Pakistan’s multi-tiered and robust command and control structure is operational and we are also fully capable of safeguarding our nuclear assets against any kind of threat,” Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit said.

The US network Fox News had reported on Friday that Washington had planned to enter Pakistan and securing its mobile arsenal of nuclear warheads if it feared that Islamic republic was about to fall under the control of the Taliban, Al Qaeda or other Islamic extremists.

Fox quoting American intelligence sources said the operation to occupy Pakistani weapons would be conducted by Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), the super-secret commando unit headquartered at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

The JSOC is US army’s chief terrorists hunting squad and it units are operating in Afghanistan, on Pakistan’s western border.

The mission became important due to expansion of Islamic extremists in recent months to areas just 60 miles from the capital of Islamabad.

Pakistan being the only Islamic country with nuclear capability is highly sensitive to the issue and usually sharply reacts to media stories trying to play with the idea of its weapons falling into wrong hands.

“People with vested interests now and again bring up the nuclear issue but if you do not give them front page coverage, these stories will die natural deaths,” military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas told media.

Fox, while citing a secret Defense Intelligence Agency document first disclosed in 2004, said Pakistan has a nuclear arsenal of 35 weapons. The document said Islamabad planned plans to more than double the arsenal by 2020. (dpa)

Israeli foreign minister sees Iran as obstacle to Mideast peace

Tel Aviv – Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman sees Iran as the biggest obstacle to peace in the Middle East, he told the newspaper Jerusalem Post on Friday.

He said it would not be possible to resolve a single problem in the region without first settling the issue of Iran’s controversial nuclear programme.

This applied to Lebanon and Syria as well as “the problems with Islamic extremists in Egypt, the Gaza Strip and Iraq,” he told the daily.

Lieberman said he did “not want to even think about the consequences a crazy nuclear arms race would have for the region.”

Israel and many countries in the West believe Iran is using its nuclear programme to gain expertise for making nuclear weapons, a charge which Tehran denies.

The foreign minister, who heads the ultra-right Israel Beitenu (Our Home Israel), rejected the idea of Palestinian refugees returning to Israel in the event of a negotiated peace settlement.

Lieberman also called for the radical Hamas movement in the Gaza Strip should be “strangled” and said it made little sense to continue indirect talks with Syria as long as that country continued to deepen its relations with Iran. (dpa)

Blair wants world to wage war against militant Islam

London, Apr 24 (ANI): Former Prime Minister Tony Blair, who does not regret leading Britain to Iraq war, has called on the world to take on and defeat Islamic extremists.

He believes that, without intervention, the problem will continue to grow in countries such as Afghanistan, and called for a battle to be waged against militant Islam similar to that fought against revolutionary communism.

Blair said that the world today faced a struggle posed by “an extreme and misguided form of Islam,” which threatened the majority of Muslims as well as non-Muslims.

“Our job is simple: It is to support and partner those Muslims who believe deeply in Islam but also who believe in peaceful co-existence, in taking on and defeating the extremists who don’t,” Blai told a a forum on religion and politics in Chicago.

The struggle could not be won “without our active and wholehearted participation,” The Times quoted Blair, as saying.

Blair was speaking almost 10 years to the day since he gave an address in Chicago at the height of the Kosovo crisis when he set out what he described as a “doctrine of international community” that sought to justify intervention, including military intervention.

The speech was criticised widely at the time as hopelessly idealistic and even dangerous.

Defending his intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan, he said the argument that Britain should revert to a more traditional, cautious foreign policy should be resisted.

Blair also defended the Obama Administration’s attempts to engage with Iran, and said: “The Iranian Government should not be able to claim that we have refused the opportunity for constructive dialogue, and the stature and importance of such an ancient and extraordinary civilisation means that as a nation, Iran should command respect and be accorded its proper place in the world’s affairs.”

He argued that the purpose of such engagement should be clear and was about more than preventing Iran acquiring nuclear weapons capability. (ANI)

Wary Hewitt unsure of Davis participation at Indian venue

London – Father-of-two Lleyton Hewitt has gone to ground in Europe as Tennis Australia and the ITF row over whether a May 8-10 Davis Cup Asian zonal tie should be staged in the Indian city of Chennai.

Last November, up to 150 people died when Islamic extremists attacked luxury hotels and government building in what turned into a firefight.

India says the metropolis is perfectly safe, and the ITF agrees after conducting a security probe. But Tennis Australia is appealing that decision, asking for the tie to be played at a neutral venue.

Hewitt, 57th, competed last week in Monte Carlo and is possibly waiting for a wildcard offer from Rome which starts next Monday.

The tie halfway around the world falls in the middle of the clay season, with the 28-year-old Aussie having won a title on the surface this month in Houston and increasingly confident of his French Open hopes on the dirt. (dpa)

Pirates, terrorists not linked directly: US officials

Even before Somali pirates took over a US-flagged ship this week, US military and counter terrorism officials had been scrutinising the brazen hijackings for any connection to terrorist groups operating in East Africa.

So far, they see no direct ties between pirates looking for a fast buck and the Islamic extremists looking to attack America or her allies.

It was not clear whether officials were specifically checking the Somali pirates who boarded the Maersk Alabama on Tuesday and fled in a lifeboat after taking the cargo ship’s captain hostage.

Military and counter terrorism officials say that in the intricate tribal networks, one clansman could be out hijacking cargo ships, while his brother might be a member of the al-Shabab terrorist organisation. And they both could be buying their weapons from the same traffickers operating in Somalia’s vast ungoverned spaces.

“If you look at the clan structure or the tribes – to think that there may not be linkages probably is a bit naive,” Army Gen William “Kip” Ward, head of the US Africa Command, said in an interview on Thursday.

Michael Leiter, director of the National Counter terrorism Center, warned that some of the money from piracy could make its way into the hands of extremists.

Dhaka hunts N-E rebels on its soil

Already plagued by threats from homegrown Islamic extremists, the Bangladeshi government has ordered eviction of militants operating in India’s northeastern states enjoying a safe sanctuary in that country. A highly placed Indian police source, who did not want to be named, said Bangladeshi security forces raided several locations in Moulavi Bazar district bordering western Tripura to track down Indian militants on Monday.

Troops from the elite Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) dismantled a camp of the All Tripura Tiger Force (ATTF) at Satchari in Moulavi Bazar and arrested a militant while the others fled to nearby forests without challenging the troops, the source said. “Some 15 militants were in the camp before the RAB stormed it.

They were able to flee the area with arms, ammunitions and important articles,” the source said. The RAB conducted raids on various locations in Moulavi Bazar, where militant outfits such as the ATTF, People’s Liberation Army of Manipur, the United Liberation Front of Assam and the National Socialist Council of Nagaland are believed to be based.

The militants, living in hideouts in northeastern Bangladesh, are now trying to cross over to India. But the barbed wire fencing in most parts of the Tripura border is proving to be a major obstacle for them.

Indian security agencies believe that the Bangladeshi government has been prompted to take action against militants of all kinds following the mutiny by some units of the Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) in Dhaka in end-February. Dhaka strongly suspects that the mutinous Bangladesh Rifles personnel had received the backing of militant outfits in Bangladesh to carry out large-scale killing of its officers.

Turkey police arrest 30 Islamic extremists

Ankara – Thirty suspected members of an extremist Islamist group were arrested Wednesday evening in raids on several houses in the central Anatolian city of Eskisehir, Dogan news agency reported on Thursday.

Riot police closed off streets in a number of suburbs in the city and made simultaneous raids taking 34 people into custody. Four were later released without charge.

Those arrested were suspected of belonging to the extremist Hizb ut-Tahrir, an international pan-Islamist group which aims restore the caliphate.

In addition to the arrests police seized three hand guns and a large amount of ammunition. (dpa)

Obama meets religious leaders in Istanbul

Ankara – US President Barack Obama met religious leaders in Istanbul on Tuesday on the second day of his visit to Turkey where he has attempted to repair frayed ties with both Turkey and the wider Muslim world, ties that hit a low during the previous US administration of George W Bush.

Obama held a group meeting with Armenian Orthodox Archbishop Aran Stesyan, Chief Rabbi of Istanbul Isak Haleva, Grand Mufti of Istanbul Mustafa Cagrici and Syrian Orthodox Archbishop Yusuf Cetin before holding a private meeting with Greek Orthodox Patriach Bartholomew I.

Accompanied by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the US president then toured two of Istanbul’s most popular tourist and religious sites: the Hagia Sophia, a former basilica turned mosque that is now a museum, and the nearby Blue Mosque.

No statement was released after the meeting.

In the afternoon Obama was scheduled to hold a town hall meeting with a specially selected group of university students before departing Istanbul for Washington.

Tuesday’s agenda was much more low key compared to that of Monday when he addressed the Turkish parliament in Ankara.

During his address Obama moved to heal rifts between the United States and Turkey, as well as the Islamic world, that were caused by the US-led invasion of Iraq, stressing the need for cooperation and not just the use of force to stop Islamic extremists.

The president also stressed that the United States supports Turkey’s bid to join the European Union and recent efforts between Turkey and Armenia to normalize relations.

The visit fulfills Obama’s promise to visit a Muslim country in the first 100 days of the new administration.

ROUNDUP: Obama praises Turkey and seeks to end rift with Muslim world

Ankara – US President Barack Obama on Wednesday moved to heal rifts between the United States and Turkey, as well as the wider Islamic world, caused by the US-led invasion of Iraq.

Part of his approach lay in stressing cooperation – not just the use of force – as a way to stop Islamic extremists.

“I know that the trust that binds us has been strained, and I know that strain is shared in many places where the Muslim faith is practiced. Let me say this as clearly as I can: the United States is not at war with Islam,” Obama said in a wide-ranging speech to the Turkish parliament in Ankara.

Referring to terrorism in the Middle East and Central Asia, Obama was clear that terrorism must not only be answered with force.

“Force alone cannot solve our problems, and it is no alternative to extremism. The future must belong to those who create, not those who destroy,” Obama said.

In a speech in which he made several references to US history, Obama praised the Islamic faith saying that the religion has shaped the world, including the United States for the better.

“The United States has been enriched by Muslim Americans. Many other Americans have Muslims in their family, or have lived in a Muslim-majority country – I know, because I am one of them.”

On a two-day trip to Ankara and Istanbul, fulfilling his pledge to visit a Muslim nation in the first 100 days of his administration, Obama praised Turkey as a strong ally.

He thanked his hosts for Turkey’s role in Afghanistan where it has provided troops and training for Afghan police and military forces. He was applauded by parliamentarians when he repeated his support for Turkey joining the European Union.

“Turkey is a critical ally. Turkey is an important part of Europe. And Turkey and the United States must stand together – and work together – to overcome the challenges of our time,” Obama said.

“Turkey is bound to Europe by more than bridges over the Bosporus. Centuries of shared history, culture, and commerce bring you together.”

He also praised efforts between Turkey and neighbouring Armenia to normalize relations. He also called for resolution in the argument between Armenia and Turkey over the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Armenians by Ottoman forces during the First World War.

“History, unresolved, can be a heavy weight. Each country must work through its past. And reckoning with the past can help us seize a better future,” Obama said.

Asked earlier on Monday on the question of whether he would use the term genocide to describe the massacres – a promise Obama made on the presidential campaign – the president said that even though he still held his own views on the matter, he did not want to upset current efforts by Turkey and Armenia to normalize relations.

“I’m not interested in the United States in any way tilting these negotiations,” Obama said.

Analysts say that if the US president uses the term genocide during an annual April 24 statement in which the US president commemorates the Armenian massacre, Turkish-US relations would be seriously damaged.

Obama also used his speech to the parliament to call for a permanent solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict and for Iran to forgo any nuclear ambitions. He also gave his support to efforts to solve the Cyprus problem.

The president praised Turkey for legal reforms it had made to strengthen human rights, specifically mentioning the recent launch of a state-run Kurdish-language television station.

But he also called for further implementation of reforms, including the reopening of the Greek Orthodox Halki Seminary, which has been closed since the early 1970s. He also pledged to continue US cooperation with Turkey against the separatist Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK).

Earlier on Monday, Obama paid his respects at the mausoleum of the founder of the modern Turkish Republic, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, and laid a wreath at Ataturk’s tomb.

Obama later met Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan behind closed doors and was scheduled to fly to Istanbul later on Monday. Obama will leave Istanbul Tuesday afternoon.

G-20 ‘terrorist plot’ uncovered by UK police

London, Mar.31 (ANI): Police in London have reportedly uncovered an alleged terrorist plot to disrupt the second G-20 summit with the arrest of five people.

Those who have been arrested under the Terrorism Act live in Plymouth, Devon and the surrounding area. They are being held at a police station in Cornwall.

According to The Telegraph, police found a cache of imitation firearms, knives and a number of “suspicious devices”, besides a large amount of political material that is thought to relate to anti-capitalist protests planned to disrupt the meeting of world leaders this week.

A police spokesman said there was no suggestion of Islamic extremists being involved and added: “Those arrested are not believed, at this stage, to be part of a national or larger operation.”

Officers found a range of imitation and deactivated firearms from handguns to long barrelled rifles and a Kalashnikov-style assault rifle, police said. They also found “suspicious devices,” described as “improvised explosives made of fireworks,” that were seized and submitted for forensic examination.

The discoveries followed a number of raids in Plymouth after a 25-year-old man was caught spraying graffiti slogans in the city centre on Friday night.

One of those arrested was said to be an international student and the other four are British nationals.

Police were granted more time to question them on Monday afternoon.

The Metropolitan Police said it was liaising with the Devon and Cornwall force and added: “At the current time we have no information to suggest a change to the threat picture facing either the demonstrations or G20.

The G-20 summit, to be held at the ExCeL arena in London’s Docklands on Thursday, has been described by Scotland Yard as the capital’s most challenging police operation in a decade.

More than 3,000 police officers will be on duty when the leaders of the world’s 20 richest countries, including President Obama, descend on London, with up to 100,000 protesters expected to stage rallies and marches during the week.

Police fear the rallies will be hijacked by anarchists intent on sparking violence and riots, with thousands of hardline protesters expected to fly in from abroad. (ANI)

Member of minority Yezidi sect killed in northern Iraq

Baghdad – A man belonging to the minority Yezidi religious sect was killed in northern Iraq, the Voices of Iraq agency reported Wednesday.

The body of the man was found in a field in the northern province of Nineveh, an area where in recent years numerous Christians and members of other religious minorities in Iraq had been killed by Islamic extremists.

The Al-Qaeda regards the Yezidis, who are Muslims, as heretics, with members of the religious group being subject to repression and discrimination. Many Yezidis have fled Iraq to find refuge in other countries, including Germany. (dpa)

Brit Muslim terror suspect awarded 60,000 pounds in damages for police assault

London, Mar.19 (ANI): A British Muslim terror suspect awaiting extradition to the United States has received 60,000 pounds in damages from Scotland Yard after being beaten and assaulted by the officers who arrested him.

Babar Ahmad was subjected to “serious, gratuitous, prolonged and unjustified violence” and “religious abuse” during an anti-terror raid at his home in South London, a high court was told here.

Ahmad, a 34-year-old IT support analyst, was in court in London to hear lawyers for Sir Paul Stephenson, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, admit that he had been the victim of gratuitous violence, The Times reports.

He was not charged with any offence after the early morning raid at his home in Tooting in December 2003.

Ahmad was later rearrested on the request of US authorities who want to prosecute him on charges of running a website to raise funds for Islamic extremists.

He has been lodged in the Long Lartin prison in Worcestershire since then, awaiting a decision on whether his extradition would contravene the European Convention on Human Rights. (ANI)

Islamic extremists trained in Somalia re-entering UK

London, Feb.16 (ANI): Islamic extremists who have attended terror training camps in Somalia are returning to Britain, leaving the country’s security and intelligence services quite worried over the possibility of them launching attacks.

The head of MI5, Jonathan Evans, and the outgoing head of the CIA, Michael Hayden, are on record as saying that the threat is grave, especially in the wake of Ethiopia’s invasion of Somalia in late 2006, which “catalyzed” expatriate Somalis around the world.n investigation for Channel 4 News, to be broadcast tonight, reveals that a suicide bomber who grew up in Ealing is thought to have blown himself up in an attack in Somalia that killed more than 20 soldiers.

The incident is the first reported case involving a Somali based in Britain and will add to pressure on Scotland Yard and the Home Office to tackle the problem within the Somali community, which, at about 250,000 people, is the biggest in Europe.

The Times quotes Peter Neumann, a terrorism expert who runs the Centre for the Study of Radicalisation at King’s College London, as telling Channel 4 News: “The numbers I hear [going from Britain to Somalia] are 50, 60 or 70, but in reality we don’t know. You don’t need big numbers for terrorism. Somalia will never become another Pakistan, but that does not mean it is not a threat.”

Most Somalis in Britain entered the country as asylum-seekers within the past 20 years. They include Yasin Omar and Ramzi Mohammed, two of the four men convicted of the botched bombing of the London Underground on July 21, 2005.

Some Somali leaders say their community – already associated with gang and knife crime – is being unfairly targeted. (ANI)

UK to start publicly ‘naming’ extremists banned from entering country

London, Oct 27: The British government is expected to announce plans this week about naming in public those extremists who would be banned from entering the country. Till now, the names were kept secrets, and it came to public domain only after they themselves spoke against the decision.

A Home Office official said that the move was planned in public interest. “These measures are aimed at preventing anyone who will stir up tensions in the UK from entering the country. We have not named them in the past but now, when it was in the public interest, we will. They will also be placed on international watch lists which tell other countries that they have been banned and why they were not allowed in. Coming to the UK is a privilege. We don”t want people abusing that by stirring up tensions,” The Telegraph the unidentified official as saying.

During the past three years, a total of 230 people had been barred from entering the country because of their extreme views, but they are not currently named publicly.

The bans on high profile figures, including radical Isalmist cleric Omar Bakri Mohammed and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrkhan, only became known after the individuals themselves spoke out against the decisions.

Omar Bakri Mohammed was banned from the UK in the wake of the 7/7 terror attacks in London in 2005.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith is expected to announce new measures this week aimed at preventing anybody who stirs up religious or racial hatred from entering the UK. The new rules will allow the Home Office to ban Islamic extremists, neo-Nazis and even animal rights activists. And, those who are named will also be put on international “watch lists”, reported The Telegraph.

Once the decision is taken, the Home Office is expected to issue quarterly figures on exclusions and name some of those who are banned. (ANI)