Taliban seize key district in Afghan east

KABUL, July 25 (Reuters) – Taliban guerrillas have captured a strategic district from the Afghan government after days of clashes in eastern Nuristan province, officials said on Sunday.

Separately, the Afghan government said it was checking reports by locals saying some 40 Afghan civilians were killed in a raid by foreign forces in Sangin district of southern Helmand province on Friday.

In Nuristan’s Barg-e Matal, dozens of Taliban fighters and up to six Afghan police were killed during days of clashes before the district fell to the Taliban overnight.

Barg-e Matal is important for the government and militants because of its location and has regularly changed hands.

Lying near the border with Pakistan, the rugged district has been used as a supply route for arms and fighters for the Taliban in three provinces, most importantly for Badakhshan where the Taliban have mounted a series of deadly attacks recently.

Afghan police forces withdrew from Barg-e Matal to avoid high casualties and in the face of sustained Taliban pressure after days of skirmishes, interior ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary told reporters.

“Right now the police forces in Nuristan are working to recapture it,” he said.

The Taliban have yet to comment about the fall of the district and the reported losses in their ranks.

In Helmand province, where the Taliban insurgency is strongest, Bashary said provincial authorities were checking reports by residents that dozens of civilians were killed in a raid by foreign forces on Friday.

Further details were not immediately available. (Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by Sugita Katyal) (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)

Cambodian police abuse sex workers -rights group

July 20 (Reuters) – Cambodian police and social workers have beat, extorted and raped sex workers after taking them into their custody, Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday, adding foreign governments could do more to stop such abuse.

“From beginning to end, those people who should really be protecting sex workers from violence and other abuses are in fact the ones who are harming them,” Elaine Pearson, acting director of Asia Human Rights Watch, told a news conference.

Quoting victims, the rights group said in a report that police often abused sex workers arrested during regular sweeps of the streets and parks in the capital, Phnom Penh, following the enactment of an anti-human-trafficking law in 2008.

It called on the government to close down certain detention centres where drug users, beggars, street children, homeless people and sex workers had all been illegally detained.

And it urged foreign donors to review funding to the police and Social Affairs Ministry.

“Donors should not spend their money on abusive officials but instead take steps that will promote accountability from the Cambodian government,” Pearson said.

Cambodian police spokesman Kirth Chantharith told Reuters he had not read the report and could not comment.

Lim El Djurado, a Social Affairs Ministry spokesman, said the allegations against his ministry were false, adding government centres did not house sex workers and officials did not abuse them.

“There are no sex workers at our centres. The centres are for the homeless,” Lim El Djurado said, adding that prostitutes had in fact been sent to non-governmental organisations for vocational training after police round-ups. (Reporting by Prak Chan Thul; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Kyrgyz ethnic clashes spread, Russia sends troops

Kyrgyzstan (Reuters) – Russia sent at least 150 paratroopers to Kyrgyzstan on Sunday to protect its military facilities as ethnic clashes spread in the Central Asian state, bringing the death toll from days of fighting to 113.

World | Russia | Kyrgyzstan

Ethnic Uzbeks in a besieged neighborhood of Kyrgyzstan’s second city Osh said gangs were carrying out “genocide,” burning residents out of their homes and shooting them as they fled. Witnesses saw bodies lying on the streets.

“God help us! They are killing Uzbeks like animals. Almost the whole city is in flames,” Dilmurad Ishanov, an ethnic Uzbek human rights worker, told Reuters by telephone from Osh.

Rights activists said the authorities were failing to stop the violence, and occasionally joining in.

“Residents are calling us and saying soldiers are firing at them. There’s an order to shoot the marauders, but they aren’t shooting them,” said ex-parliamentary deputy Alisher Sabirov, a peacekeeping volunteer in Osh.

Takhir Maksitov of human rights group Citizens Against Corruption said: “This is genocide.”

Renewed turmoil in Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet republic, has fueled concern in Russia, the United States and neighbor China. Washington uses an air base at Manas in the north of the country, about 300 km (190 miles) from Osh, to supply its forces in Afghanistan.

RUSSIAN PARATROOPS ARRIVE

Several units of paratroopers arrived on Sunday to protect servicemen and families at Russia’s Kant airbase in the north of the country, a Kremlin spokesman said. A Defense Ministry spokesman said 150 armed paratroopers had been sent, while ITAR-TASS news agency, citing ministry sources, said at least 300 were dispatched.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said he believed 15 Pakistani citizens were taken hostage and one killed in Osh. The Kyrgyz government said it was checking the reports.

The interim government in Kyrgyzstan, which took power in April after a popular revolt toppled president Kurmanbek Bakiyev, has appealed for Russian help to quell the riots in the south.

Led by Roza Otunbayeva, the interim government has sent a volunteer force to the south and granted shoot-to-kill powers to its security forces in response to the deadly riots, which began in Osh late on Thursday before spreading to Jalalabad.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was alarmed by the scale of the clashes and ordered a special envoy to travel to the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek, his office said in a statement.

The Red Cross said the humanitarian situation in southern Kyrgyzstan “is becoming critical.”

“We are getting reports of severe brutality, with an intent to kill,” it said in a statement.

The upsurge in violence has killed more people than the riots that accompanied the overthrow of Bakiyev. Otunbayeva, whose government has only limited control over the south, has accused supporters of Bakiyev of stoking ethnic conflict.

Bakiyev issued a statement from exile in Belarus, describing claims he was behind the clashes as “shameless lies.”

The situation worsened in Jalalabad region, which has become “the center of destabilizing forces,” government spokesman Farid Niyazov said.

Gunmen there shot at firefighters racing to a blaze at the Uzbek-run University of Friendship of Peoples, wounding a driver, Emergencies Ministry spokesman Sultan Mamatov said.

Retired builder Habibullah Khurulayev, 69, said he was afraid to leave his apartment in the besieged district of Osh. Uzbeks armed with hunting rifles manned improvised barricades to keep out Kyrgyz gangs with automatic rifles, he said.

“They are killing us with impunity,” he said. “The police are doing nothing. They are helping them kill us … There are not many of us left to shoot.”

The Health Ministry said 113 people had been killed — 92 in Osh and 21 in Jalalabad — and 1,405 were wounded. At least five policemen have been killed, the Interior Ministry said.

“Kyrgyz groups are driving in and setting homes on fire. When the people run out, they shoot at them,” Andrea Berg, Central Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch, said by telephone from Osh.

APPEAL TO RUSSIA

Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan intertwine in the Fergana Valley. While Uzbeks make up 14.5 percent of the Kyrgyz population, the two groups are roughly equal in the Osh and Jalalabad regions.

The latest clashes are the worst ethnic violence in southern Kyrgyzstan since 1990, when then-Kremlin leader Mikhail Gorbachev sent Soviet troops into Osh after hundreds of people were killed in a dispute that started over land ownership.

Otunbayeva has asked Russia to send in troops. This appeal was renewed on Sunday by interim defense minister Ismail Isakov, who said Russian special forces could quickly end the conflict.

Russia has said it will not send in peacekeepers alone but will discuss the situation on Monday within a Moscow-led security bloc of former Soviet republics known as the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Sunday called Otunbayeva to discuss the violence, the Kremlin said.

The U.S. Embassy in Kyrgyzstan said in a statement it was in talks with the interim government on the supply of humanitarian aid, and called for “the immediate restoration of order.”

Meanwhile, thousands of women and children have crossed the border into Uzbekistan. Cholponbek Turuzbekov, deputy commander of the Kyrgyz border service, said Uzbek authorities had since closed the border.

Russia’s RIA news agency quoted an unnamed official in the Uzbek emergency ministry official as saying that 75,000 refugees may have crossed the border. A Red Cross official in Uzbekistan said the figure was far lower, but likely in the thousands.

Berg of Human Rights Watch said she understood thousands had fled. Some had crossed the border and others were massed on the Kyrgyz side, mainly women and children.

“The men stayed. They are either dead or in Osh, trying to protect the houses that haven’t yet been set on fire.”

(Additional reporting by Olga Dzyubenko in Bishkek, Andrei Makhovsky in Minsk, Robin Paxton in Almaty; Writing by Robin Paxton and Conor Humphries; editing by Mark Trevelyan)

India, US to discuss terror, Pak at strategic dialogue

Continuing with their deepening ties, India and US will hold their first Strategic Dialogue next week and will discuss a plethora of issues, including the security situation in the region and cooperation in countering terrorism.

The Strategic Dialogue, to be held on June 3 in Washington, will cover 18 sectors, including energy and climate change, education and development, strategic cooperation and science and technology. The Indian side will be led by External Affairs Minister S M Krishna while US will be represented by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The Strategic Dialogue will focus on a wide range of bilateral, regional and global issues of shared interest and common concern. It would give direction to the programmes currently under implementation and take initiatives to further the Indian and US developmental, security and economic interests, External Affairs Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said here on Sunday.

The two sides will discuss the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan and the issue of continuing support of terror groups by Islamabad is also expected to come up at the dialogue which will also lay the ground for President Barak Obama’s visit to India in November.

Interestingly, the dialogue will take place at a time when Indian investigators will be in the US to question David Coleman Headley.

It (the dialogue) will focus on a wide range of bilateral, regional and global issues of shared interest and common concern. It would give direction to the programmes currently under implementation and take initiatives to further the Indian and US developmental, security and economic interests, Prakash said.

The dialogue will be based on the joint statement that was issued after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met Obama in Washington in November. Currently our interaction, our exchanges, our dialogue is being undertaken in eighteen areas comprising of five pillars of cooperation, under the Strategic Dialogue. These are: strategic cooperation; energy and climate change; education and development; economic, trade and agriculture; and lastly science, technology, health and innovation, the spokesperson said.

The two sides will also seek to operationalise the Obama-Singh Knowledge Initiative that aims at increasing University linkages, faculty exchanges and cooperation in the education sector. Talks will also be held on ways and means to increase cooperation in agricultural research, human resource capacity development and natural resource management.

The Indian delegation will include HRD Minister Kapil Sibal, Minister of State for Science and Technology Prithviraj Chavan and Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao. From the US, National Security Adviser James Jones, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and Education Secretary Arne Duncan will be present.

Saudi says frees two German children held in Yemen

Saudi Arabian security forces have freed two German children held hostage in Yemen from an area near the border with Saudi Arabia, an interior ministry spokesman said on Tuesday.

A German family of five and a Briton have been missing in Yemen since last June, held by kidnappers who the government believes have links to al Qaeda. There was no immediate word on the fate of the other hostages.

The missing Europeans were among a group of nine foreigners kidnapped in the northern region of Saada, of which three women — two Germans and a South Korean — were later found dead.

(Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Louise Ireland)

India a global leader, says Ahamadinejad

Tehran (Iran), May 18 (ANI): Iranian President Mahmoud Ahamadinejad on Tuesday described India as a global leader and an economic powerhouse during a 30-minute interaction with visiting Indian Foreign Minister S.M.Krishna.

An External Affairs Ministry spokesman said that the two leaders met for about 30-minutes, during which they discussed bilateral, regional and international issues of mutual concern and interest to the two countries.

According to the spokesman, Ahamadinejad said India has always played an important role in global affairs, including in organisations like the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) and the Group of Fifteen (G-15).

He further said there is a desirability and need for India and Iran to be in touch and to work together. He also said he was very happy to see India”s economic progress, which expands beyond regions.

The spokesperson said both leaders also discussed developments in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

According to the spokesman, Krishna recalled the Iranian president”s visit to India and congratulated him for the successful organisation of the G-15 Summit.

The meeting was described as warm and cordial.

Krishana is concluding his visit to Tehran today.

On Monday, he met his Iranian counterpart Manouchehr Mottaki on the sidelines of the summit and discussed ways to enhance bilateral relations.

Mottaki recalled India”s contribution to NAM and other multilateral organisations.

On Sunday, Krishna had a meeting with the Speaker of the Iranian Parliament Ali Larijani at the Majlis, where both discussed regional issues of common concern, including the prevailing situation in Afghanistan.

The meeting lasted for about 45-minutes. Krishna apprised Larijani about Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh””s recent meeting with his Pakistani counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani in Thimphu (Bhutan).

He also conveyed India””s desire to have more cooperative and cordial relations with Pakistan, but told Larijani that terrorism remains a core concern in bilateral ties between New Delhi and Islamabad.

Larijani noted that terrorism is a common challenge for both countries and there is a similarity of outlook.

Both also expressed happiness over New Delhi hosting the upcoming 16th India-Iran Joint Commission meeting, and added that it was the desire of the two nations to boost ties in all sectors, as bilateral trade has crossed the 14 billion dollar mark.

Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Fathallahi was also present. (ANI)

China lifts 20-year-old entry ban on HIV/AIDS infected foreigners

Beijing, Apr 28 (ANI): The Chinese Government has lifted a 20-year-old rule that banned foreigners with HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases and leprosy from entering the country.

According to a statement released by China’s State Council, the decision was taken after realizing that it did little to prevent the spread of disease and caused problems when the country was hosting international events.

The statement further said the lifting of the ban would not bring an outbreak of disease in the country, as scientific research has proved daily contact does not cause infection.

Chinese Health Ministry spokesman Mao Qun’an said the groundwork for lifting the ban had began since the Beijing Olympic Games, but it took a few more years only because of the necessary procedures, the Xinhua news agency reports.

The revision comes days ahead of the opening of the Shanghai World Expo.

Earlier, the government had temporarily lifted the ban for various large-scale events, including the 1990 Beijing Asian Games, the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995 and the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

According to Chinese Health Ministry, the estimated number of people living with HIV in China had reached 740,000 by October 2009, with deaths caused by AIDS totalling 49,845 since the first case was reported in 1985.

The decision comes several months after the U.S. removed HIV infection from the list of diseases that prevent non-U.S. citizens from entering the country.

Until January, the U.S. was one of seven countries with laws barring entry of people with HIV. (ANI)

Burglars break into Dutch prison to steal televisions!

Hoorn, Apr 22(ANI): A Dutch minimum-security prison has been robbed twice in the past six weeks, where television sets were stolen from inmates’ rooms when they were on weekend leave.

The prison, in the town of Hoorn, is for inmates near the end of their sentences.

The facility is part of a Dutch Government initiative to help the prisoners gradually mix back into society. They are typically allowed weekend leave.

A Dutch Justice Ministry spokesman said that the thefts happened on two separate weekends about a month apart in March and April, The Telegraph reports.

The spokesman added that the investigating officers are still not been able to confirm how the burglars gained access.

No arrests have been made yet. (ANI)

Action against Ex ISI, IB, police officials following UN report on Bhutto’s assassination

Islamabad, Apr 19(ANI): The Pakistan Government has initiated action against several serving as well as retired bureaucrats in connection with the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto by placing their names on the Exit Control List (ECL).

The dramatic move comes after the release of a report compiled by the UN commission, which held the officials directly or indirectly responsible for Bhutto’s assassination.

According to Pakistan People”s Party (PPP) insiders, the party has decided to take strong legal action against all government officials who failed to protect Bhutto.

The Interior Ministry has compiled a list of 13 senior government officers, which include former Director General of Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) Lt. Gen. (Retd) Hamid Gul, former Chief of Intelligence Bureau (IB) Brig. (Retd) Ijaz Shah, former federal Interior Secretary Kamal Shah and a senior bureaucrat of Punjab Government Ashfaq Anwar, The Nation reports.

As many as six police officials, who were also serving during the tenure of former President Pervez Musharraf, have been put on the “duty suspension list”.

In addition to that, the Federal Government has suspended the contract agreement of former Interior Ministry spokesman, Brig. (Retd) Javed Iqbal Cheema, who was working as Director General of Civil Defence.

Meanwhile, Information Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira said steps would be taken to bring back Musharraf, if he was found responsible for the tragic incident.

The PPP has held Musharraf for not providing adequate security cover to Bhutto despite having information about the impending threat to her life.

Bhutto was assassinated on December 27, 2007 after departing a PPP rally in Rawalpindi, two weeks before the scheduled Pakistani general election of 2008, where she was a leading opposition candidate. (ANI)

Action against Ex ISI, IB, police officials following UN report on Bhutto’s assassination

Islamabad, Apr 19(ANI): The Pakistan Government has initiated action against several serving as well as retired bureaucrats in connection with the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto by placing their names on the Exit Control List (ECL).

The dramatic move comes after the release of a report compiled by the UN commission, which held the officials directly or indirectly responsible for Bhutto’s assassination.

According to Pakistan People”s Party (PPP) insiders, the party has decided to take strong legal action against all government officials who failed to protect Bhutto.

The Interior Ministry has compiled a list of 13 senior government officers, which include former Director General of Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) Lt. Gen. (Retd) Hamid Gul, former Chief of Intelligence Bureau (IB) Brig. (Retd) Ijaz Shah, former federal Interior Secretary Kamal Shah and a senior bureaucrat of Punjab Government Ashfaq Anwar, The Nation reports.

As many as six police officials, who were also serving during the tenure of former President Pervez Musharraf, have been put on the “duty suspension list”.

In addition to that, the Federal Government has suspended the contract agreement of former Interior Ministry spokesman, Brig. (Retd) Javed Iqbal Cheema, who was working as Director General of Civil Defence.

Meanwhile, Information Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira said steps would be taken to bring back Musharraf, if he was found responsible for the tragic incident.

The PPP has held Musharraf for not providing adequate security cover to Bhutto despite having information about the impending threat to her life.

Bhutto was assassinated on December 27, 2007 after departing a PPP rally in Rawalpindi, two weeks before the scheduled Pakistani general election of 2008, where she was a leading opposition candidate. (ANI)

Pak sports minister seeks MS Gill’s help to recover Malik’s impounded passport

Islamabad, Apr.17 (ANI): Pakistan Sports Minister Ijaz Hussain Jakhrani has called upon his Indian counterpart MS Gill to look into the issue of cricketer Shoaib Malik’s passport being seized by the Hyderabad police.

“Jakhrani called Indian sports minister MS Gill and asked him to return Shoaib’s passport as soon as possible,” The Daily Times quoted a Pakistan sports ministry spokesman, as saying.

The spokesperson said that Gill has assured Jakhrani of all help in the issue.

“The Indian minister assured Jakhrani about his assistance to Shoaib and told him that he would talk to his government on the subject,” he said.

The spokesman said that the ministry would also host a ‘grand reception’ in honour of the sports couple Sania Mirza and Shoaib Malik, when they come to Pakistan. (ANI)

Icelandic volcano still spewing huge ash plume

An Icelandic volcano is still spewing ash into the air in a massive plume that has disrupted air traffic across Europe and shows little sign of letting up, officials said on Friday.

One expert said the eruption at the volcano, about 120 km (75 miles) southeast of capital Reykjavik, could abate in the coming days, but a government spokesman said ash would keep drifting into the skies of Europe.

The thick, dark brown ash cloud that shot several kilometres (miles) into the air and has drifted away from the north Atlantic island has shut down air traffic across northern Europe and restrictions remained in place in many areas.

Norway and Sweden said they would resume limited flights in their northern areas, but Poland and the Czech Republic joined the list of countries with closed airports.

“It is more or less the same situation as yesterday, it is still erupting, still exploding, still producing gas,” University of Iceland professor Armann Hoskuldsson told Reuters.

“We expect it to last for two days or more or something. It cannot continue at this rate for many days. There is a limited amount of magma that can spew out,” he added, saying it was the magma, or molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface, coming out of the volcano that turned into ash.

Environment Ministry spokesman Gudmundur Gudmundsson said no variation was expected in the outflow of ash.

“The eruption is ongoing and we are not expecting any change in the production of ash…High level winds will keep dispersing the plume over Europe,” he said.

The eruption has taken place under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, normally a popular hiking ground in southern Iceland.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Urdur Gudmundsdottir said there was some damage to roads and barriers protecting farms.

“There is still an evacuation of around 20 farms, which is 40 to 50 people,” she added, noting this was less than the 800 people who had been evacuated earlier this week.

FLOODS

People living close to the eruption said the main impact on their lives was the flood waters running off the glacier, which have closed roads.

“Obviously it’s all been a bit unreal. One is just managing from day to day and doing one’s best,” said Hanna Lara Andrews, a resident of a farm at the foot of the mountain, who had travelled to Reykjavijk with her one-year-old son.

Speaking by telephone, she said she and her family had felt a big earthquake last week. When the eruption came this week they could see a big white cloud and then ash forming behind it.

Another professor said on Thursday that the heat had melted up to a third of the glacial ice covering the crater, causing a nearby river to burst its banks.

Icelandic radio said part of the ring road that goes around the small north Atlantic island had been swept away.

To the east of the volcano, thousands of hectares of land are covered by a thick layer of ash.

The cloud of ash from the eruption has hit air travel all over northern Europe, with flights grounded or diverted due to the risk of engine damage from sucking in particles of ash from the volcanic cloud.

The volcano under the Ejfjallajokull glacier, Iceland’s fifth largest glacier, has erupted five times since Iceland was settled in the ninth century.

Iceland sits on a volcanic hotspot in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and has relatively frequent eruptions, although most occur in sparsely populated areas and pose little danger to people or property. Before March, the last eruption took place in 2004.

(Reporting by Omar Valdimarsson in Reykkavik and Patrick Lannin in Stockholm; writing by Patrick Lannin; Editing by William Maclean)

17 killed in uprising against Kyrgyzstan president

Opposition followers fought security forces in the Kyrgyz capital and captured state television as a revolt against president Kurmanbek Bakiyev left at least 17 dead.

As demonstrators seized the parliament building, reports and some officials said the interior minister had been killed by rioters in a remote north-western town, although his spokesman denied the information.

In the capital Bishkek, riot police fired tear gas and stun grenades in a repeated bid to fight off thousands of protestors surrounding Bakiyev’s offices before retreating as demonstrators rammed the gates.

The riots were the culmination of spiralling protests in the Central Asian nation with the opposition accusing the government of rights violations, authoritarianism and economic mismanagement.

A health ministry official said 17 people died, many from gunshot wounds, and 142 had been injured.

“Most are young people under the age of 30,” the official, Larisa Kachibekova, told AFP.

In a desperate bid to contain the unrest, prime minister Daniyar Usenov declared a state of emergency.

But after the announcement, opposition protestors stormed the Kyrgyz parliament and television centre, halting all programs, in a dramatic sign that the government was losing its grip.

A police source said interior minister Moldomus Kongantiyev had been killed in the northwest hub of Talas where the first protests erupted.

Mr Kongantiyev was attacked by protestors who had also taken deputy prime minister Akylbek Zhaparov captive, the Kabar Kyrgyz state news agency reported.

An interior ministry spokesman, Rakhmatullo Akhmedov, later said Mr Kongantiyev was alive but acknowledged the government had little information on the situation in Talas, saying it was “checking” reports the minister was taken hostage.

In Bishkek, explosions from stun grenades reverberated across the city and the crackle of automatic weapons fire filled the air as protestors in the main square gasped for breath in a fog of tear gas.

Amid appeals for calm from Russia, authorities in the ex-Soviet republic said three opposition leaders had been arrested for perpetrating “serious crimes”.

The United States, which maintains an air base in Kyrgyzstan used in the NATO campaign in nearby Afghanistan, also voiced “deep concern”.

Between 3,000 and 5,000 protestors overturned cars and set them on fire as they marched from the opposition headquarters towards the presidential offices, witnesses said.

Protestors appeared to have seized several heavily armoured police vehicles and were standing on them waving red Kyrgyz flags and the blue flag of the opposition movement.

The violence came a day after more than 1,000 opposition protesters burst through police lines and took control of government offices in Talas.

In the central city of Naryn, hundreds of opposition protesters stormed the regional government headquarters after the local governor refused to negotiate, local witnesses told AFP.

Witnesses in the city of Tokmak, just outside the capital, said around 2,000 demonstrators had gathered there. Residents in three regions near the southern town of Osh also told of protests in the streets.

Kyrgyzstan, a mountainous country perched at the strategic junction between China, Russia and south-west Asia, is among the poorest countries to have emerged from the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union.

It has been plagued by corruption and chronic instability and the troubles resemble widespread unrest that washed over the country in March 2005 and resulted in the ouster of President Askar Akayev.

Opposition leaders accuse the Bakiyev government of basic rights violations, authoritarianism and arbitrary economic management that has resulted in sharply higher prices for basic goods and services.

As the unrest unfolded, Kyrgyzstan’s prosecutor general Nurlan Tursunkulov announced police had arrested former prime minister and presidential candidate Almazbek Atambayev, ex-parliament speaker Omurbek Tekebayev and his aide Bolot Cherniazov.

The United States has an airbase at Manas that has become a pivotal staging ground for the battle against the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan.

In a statement, the US embassy in Bishkek said it was “deeply concerned” and urged “all parties to show respect for the rule of law and … to engage in talks to resolve differences”.

Thai PM’s talks with “red shirts” to resume 1100 GMT

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was set to resume talks with “red shirt” opposition protesters on Monday to find a way out of a political impasse that may now be of some concern for investors.

Tens of thousands of demonstrators have set up camp in Bangkok for over two weeks demanding fresh elections, but investors have largely shrugged off the crisis, buying a net 47 billion baht ($1.45 billion) of shares since Feb. 22.

However, the stock market was down 0.84 percent by 0520 GMT on Monday and has lost about 2.6 percent since reaching a 21-month high on Wednesday.

“The unsettling political situation will limit fund inflows to the Thai stock market,” said Chakkrit Charoenmetachai, an analyst with Globlex Securities. “Foreign investors have made huge buys…so they could hold back somewhat now.”

The Finance Ministry said the economy could grow 4.5 percent this year in revised economic forecasts published on Monday, up from 3.5 percent forecast in December, but one official said political tension could throw that out of gear.

“Our hope that private consumption and investment would take the baton from the government in spurring growth may be dashed,” Finance Ministry spokesman Ekniti Nitithanprapas was quoted as telling a roundtable organised by the Nation newspaper.

On Sunday, Abhisit was locked in televised talks for almost three hours with leaders of the movement, who broadly support twice-elected former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, but Abhisit rejected ultimatums and said any solution would take time.

Abhisit abruptly ended the talks when pressed about a timeframe for parliamentary dissolution. He left on Monday for a short visit to nearby Brunei, but was scheduled to return to resume the talks at 1100 GMT.

One of the leaders, Jatuporn Prompan, said he would pick up where he left off. “What I asked him last night, I’ll ask him again,” he told reporters on Monday. “I want him to agree to dissolve the house within 15 days.”

MUST CALL ELECTION

Abhisit must call an election by the end of next year but insists the country is too divided to face a vote, which analysts say Thaksin’s political allies are likely to win, raising the possibility of another judicial or military intervention.

The embattled Abhisit says agreements have to be reached before house dissolution to prevent violence and ensure all parties can canvass without obstruction.

After two weeks of peaceful rallies, the “red shirts” have intensified their campaign to topple the government, triggering fears of clashes between security forces and protesters and a flurry of negotiations to defuse tensions.

Tens of thousands rallied on Sunday outside an army base where Abhisit has stayed, a day after surrounding his Government House office and forcing thousands of troops to pack up and leave eight sites around the city’s historic heart.

It appeared the “red shirts” were responding to calls late last week by ousted former premier Thaksin, their assumed leader and financier, for a campaign of “civil disobedience”.

The protests continue to draw attention to the divisiveness in Southeast Asia’s second-biggest economy that has clouded the long-term investment outlook.

The threat of a flare-up and a slew of mysterious but non-fatal grenade attacks and small bombings on government buildings, banks, and three state-controlled television stations have rattled the city of 15 million.

Analysts have said Abhisit, who enjoys staunch backing of the military and Thailand’s establishment elites, is unlikely to make any real concessions but wants to be seen to be reaching out to a movement he has long snubbed.

The “red shirts” say he is beholden to the military because it organised political defections that helped Abhisit form a government after the ruling pro-Thaksin party was disbanded in December 2008.

(Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Alan Raybould and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Thai PM’s talks with “red shirts” to resume

(Reuters) – Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was set to resume talks with “red shirt” opposition protesters Monday to find a way out of a political impasse that may now be of some concern for investors.

World

Tens of thousands of demonstrators have set up camp in Bangkok for over two weeks demanding fresh elections, but investors have largely shrugged off the crisis, buying a net 47 billion baht ($1.45 billion) of shares since February 22.

However, the stock market was down 0.84 percent by 0520 GMT Monday and has lost about 2.6 percent since reaching a 21-month high Wednesday.

“The unsettling political situation will limit fund inflows to the Thai stock market,” said Chakkrit Charoenmetachai, an analyst with Globlex Securities. “Foreign investors have made huge buys…so they could hold back somewhat now.”

The Finance Ministry said the economy could grow 4.5 percent this year in revised economic forecasts published on Monday, up from 3.5 percent forecast in December, but one official said political tension could throw that out of gear.

“Our hope that private consumption and investment would take the baton from the government in spurring growth may be dashed,” Finance Ministry spokesman Ekniti Nitithanprapas was quoted as telling a roundtable organized by the Nation newspaper.

Sunday, Abhisit was locked in televised talks for almost three hours with leaders of the movement, who broadly support twice-elected former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, but Abhisit rejected ultimatums and said any solution would take time.

Abhisit abruptly ended the talks when pressed about a timeframe for parliamentary dissolution. He left Monday for a short visit to nearby Brunei, but was scheduled to return to resume the talks at 1100 GMT.

One of the leaders, Jatuporn Prompan, said he would pick up where he left off. “What I asked him last night, I’ll ask him again,” he told reporters Monday. “I want him to agree to dissolve the house within 15 days.”

MUST CALL ELECTION

Abhisit must call an election by the end of next year but insists the country is too divided to face a vote, which analysts say Thaksin’s political allies are likely to win, raising the possibility of another judicial or military intervention.

The embattled Abhisit says agreements have to be reached before house dissolution to prevent violence and ensure all parties can canvass without obstruction.

After two weeks of peaceful rallies, the “red shirts” have intensified their campaign to topple the government, triggering fears of clashes between security forces and protesters and a flurry of negotiations to defuse tensions.

Tens of thousands rallied Sunday outside an army base where Abhisit has stayed, a day after surrounding his Government House office and forcing thousands of troops to pack up and leave eight sites around the city’s historic heart.

It appeared the “red shirts” were responding to calls late last week by ousted former premier Thaksin, their assumed leader and financier, for a campaign of “civil disobedience.”

The protests continue to draw attention to the divisiveness in Southeast Asia’s second-biggest economy that has clouded the long-term investment outlook.

The threat of a flare-up and a slew of mysterious but non-fatal grenade attacks and small bombings on government buildings, banks, and three state-controlled television stations have rattled the city of 15 million.

Analysts have said Abhisit, who enjoys staunch backing of the military and Thailand’s establishment elites, is unlikely to make any real concessions but wants to be seen to be reaching out to a movement he has long snubbed.

The “red shirts” say he is beholden to the military because it organized political defections that helped Abhisit form a government after the ruling pro-Thaksin party was disbanded in December 2008.

(Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Alan Raybould and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Germany to move quickly to enact drug price cuts

* Some price cuts to be enacted on Aug. 1

Stocks | Bonds

* Savings for state expected at 500 million euros in 2010

BERLIN, March 28 (Reuters) – Germany will move faster than initially expected to make savings from cuts on the prices of patented drugs, officials from the ruling coalition have said.

The cuts — forced discounts of up to 16 percent and a ban on branded drug price increases — are part of a plan to keep health expenses in check that originally had been set to take effect at the beginning of 2011.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives and their junior coalition partners, the Free Democrats, have now agreed, however, to bring forward the so-called “short-term measures” and enact them this year, a health ministry spokesman said on Sunday.

On Saturday, a health expert for Merkel’s conservatives said the measures, which will save public health insurers some 500 million euros ($667 million) this year, should be attached to a bill already in parliament.

“Then it can come into effect on Aug. 1,” said Jens Spahn, policy spokesman for conservative legislators.

The conservatives and their Free Democrat partners currently have a majority in both houses of parliament.

The move is part of a drive by Health Minister Philipp Roesler to save 2 billion euros in expenses on patented drugs. Last Friday, his ministry unveiled the new plans, which will also give drugmakers in Germany only a year to fix their own prices on new drugs. [ID:nLDE62P0XP]

The news sent shares of major pharmaceutical companies lower, with the STOXX 600 Europe Health Care Index .SXDP falling 1.26 percent by the close on Friday.

Eli Lilly & Co (LLY.N) Chief Executive John Lechleiter on Saturday told Reuters in Brussels that the plan will ultimately harm investments in developing new medicines. [ID:nLDE62Q065] ($1=.7502 Euro) (Reporting by Sabine Ehrhardt, writing by Brian Rohan, editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Terror suspects were taking orders from Yemeni Al Qaeda: Saudi Arabia

Washington, Mar. 26 (ANI): Saudi Arabia has confirmed that several of over 100 suspects who allegedly plotted terror attacks on key oil and security facilities in Saudi Arabia, were waiting for a go ahead from senior Al Qaeda leaders in Yemen to strike.

Fox News quoted Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman General Mansour Al-Turki as saying that the arrest of the alleged plotters not only had prevented the attacks, but broken up a network of Al Qaeda-affiliated radicals that included two suicide bombing cells.

“They were ready but waiting for an order which fortunately didn’t come,” he said of the militants.

While Al-Turki declined to identify which facilities the suspects were allegedly targeting, he said one of the suspects, a Saudi national, was employed by a private Saudi industrial security company responsible for protecting oil sites and other critical infrastructure.

“As an employee, he had access to all of those sites and to current plans for protecting them,” he said.

He did not dispute news reports indicating that the plotters had been exchanging e-mails with a man in Yemen believed to be a senior leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP.

According to reports, members of the two suicide cells had been exchanging coded e-mails about the planned strikes with a man in Yemen whom the accounts called “Abu Hajer.”

One Saudi official said “Abu Hajer” is believed to be a nom de guerre for Said Al Shihri, a Saudi leader of AQAP.

He was released from the Guantanamo Bay detention center in December 2007 after being held there for six years, and he was taken to a Saudi rehabilitation center from which he disappeared. (ANI)

Arrests won’t deter Al Qaeda in Arabian peninsula

Analysts are warning Saudi Arabia not to be overly triumphant after busting Al Qaeda cells planning a major attack, because the terrorist group will not be easily defeated.

The Saudi government says it has broken up three separate Al Qaeda cells and foiled their plans for attacks on the kingdom’s oil installations.

Analysts say it is a major victory for the Saudi counter-terrorism authorities, which have been attempting to dismantle the cells since October last year.

Authorities say they seized arms, ammunition, computers, pre-paid telephone cards, cash and documents as part of the operation.

One cell had 101 people while the two others had six each and were unaware of each other’s existence.

But Macquarie University terrorism expert Clive Williams warns that Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) remains well organised and should not be underestimated.

He says the Saudi government should be able to contain the fundamentalists but the Al Qaeda leadership is experienced and competent.

“You’ve got a very competent ideology and you’ve got a very competent military guy,” Professor Williams said.

“The overall commander of the group, Nasser al-Wahayshi, was actually detained by the Yemenis and escaped from jail in Yemen, so he was part of a large group that escaped in 2006.

“It’s interesting that of the three leaders of AQAP, you’ve got two that have been detained in Yemen and escaped, and one who has come out of Guantanamo under the rehabilitation to a Saudi Arabia program.

“So all of those people are very experienced and well versed in Western methodology and so on.”

Connections to Al Qaeda

Saudi interior ministry spokesman Mansur al-Turki says the groups are linked to Al Qaeda even though they did not know about each other.

“The network and the two cells were both targeting the oil facilities in the eastern province and they had plans that were about to be implemented,” he said.

“It has been proven through initial investigations that there was correspondence between some arrested elements and the Al Qaeda organisation in Yemen.”

The largest cell was uncovered after suspected militants – two of them dressed as women – tried to infiltrate Saudi Arabia in October last year.

Two were killed in a shootout at the border while a third was arrested.

Professor Williams says it is most likely Al Qaeda deliberately kept them isolated to avoid detection.

“I assume that what they [authorities] have done is, they probably tortured the third person or persuaded him in other ways to provide information which has led to the detection of this other group,” he said.

Professor Williams says Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has a number of motivations, primarily widespread discontent with the Saudi royal family’s opulent lifestyle, which many Saudis believe is at odds with their pronouncements on Islam.

What is more, fundamentalist groups have long expressed discontent over the family’s decision to allow US troops in the kingdom.

“That was seen by very many fundamentalists as being a completely unacceptable thing to do – inviting infidels into Saudi Arabia, which is of course the protector of the holy places,” he said.

“This simply was unacceptable. So that was another nail in the coffin of the royal family as far as the fundamentalists and the extremists were concerned.”

Yemen causing headaches

Other analysts say that while Saudi Arabia’s wealth allows it to keep a lid on militants, the same cannot be said of Yemen, which has trouble controlling its territory.

A professor of government and politics at George Mason University in the US, Mark Katz, says terrorist groups are shifting from Saudi Arabia to its neighbour.

“Part of the reason why we’re facing this problem now with Yemen is that they were so successful in getting rid of so many Al Qaeda operatives from Saudi Arabia and they all fled to Yemen,” he said.

“They’re basically using Yemen as a base to mount operations back in Saudi Arabia. And in many cases it’s easier because they’re not being cracked down on in Yemen the way they were in Saudi Arabia.”

He says the Yemeni government has promised to crack down on Al Qaeda but it has other problems to worry about.

“I think the Yemeni government is just telling the Americans and Westerners what they want to hear: yes, yes, give us resources to fight Al Qaeda,” he said.

“But in fact they’re really interested in these resources to fight their more immediate enemies, the Houthis and the southern secessionists.

“The Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula does not threaten to overthrow the Yemeni government the way the Houthis does, nor does it threaten to divide the country the way the southerners do.

“So I think that for the Yemeni government, Al Qaeda is the lesser of the threats.”

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)