Yemen language schools near-empty after militant student

(Reuters) – When Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab enrolled in an Arabic course in Yemen last year, few who met him could have guessed what this withdrawn young man was really up to, nor the devastating impact he would leave behind.

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Staff at the now-deserted language center where he studied are still reeling from the actions of the Nigerian, suspected of trying to blow up a U.S.-bound plane in December, just weeks after leaving the Arabian peninsula country.

Adil Badi, a teacher at the Sanaa Institute for the Arabic Language, said radical Muslims such as Abdulmutallab, a student from a wealthy family who had no criminal record, had used the Arabic courses on offer in Yemen as a pretext for entering the country to meet fellow militants there.

“They had something else to do in Yemen but their excuse was to study Arabic,” Badi said.

Prized for the purity of its dialect and cheap living costs, Yemen was long a popular destination for students of Arabic. But over the years, a number of foreign militants have arrived in Yemen in the guise of Arabic students, only to join al Qaeda training camps.

Sherif Mobley, a U.S. citizen currently being held in Yemen on suspicion of belonging to al Qaeda, also first came to the country as a student of Arabic at a language institute, before attending a university run by prominent hardline Muslim cleric Sheikh Abdul-Majid al-Zindani, officials say.

Abdulmutallab was on his second visit to Yemen when he enrolled at the center in August 2009. When his visa expired in September, he disappeared for around two months, during which officials believe he moved to al Qaeda’s main hideout there.

Four months after the attempted bombing, an al Qaeda video showed Abdulmutallab attending a militant training camp in the desert and also showed footage of him in an apparent martyr’s farewell.

During this time, the former engineering student also met Anwar al-Awlaki, a radical U.S.-born preacher who is wanted dead or alive by Washington.

“His goals and objectives came prior to Yemen,” said Sabri Saleem, president of the Yemen College of Middle Eastern Studies, one of Sanaa’s oldest Arabic language schools. “He just came to implement.”

VISA BAN

Yemen has a long history with al Qaeda, whose resurgent regional wing has its base in the impoverished country and continues to attract Islamist militants from abroad.

Saleem’s institute keeps close tabs on its students, screening academic records, keeping track of their movements while they are in the country, and making them sign a declaration that they would adhere to the centre’s rules.

Of the 9,000 students who have passed through his school over the past two decades, Saleem said only one of them was radical, and that was John Walker Lindh.

Dubbed the “American Taliban,” Lindh was captured in 2001 during the Afghanistan war and jailed under a U.S. plea deal for 20 years for fighting alongside the Taliban.

The Yemeni government has made it clear that it does not believe Abdulmutallab was radicalized in Yemen, but that this happened in London, where he was a student.

But in the immediate aftermath of the attempted bombing, it banned visas issued at arrival in the airport.

Foreign Minister Abubakr al-Qirbi told Reuters that Yemen had also begun to screen individuals applying for tourist visas from its embassies abroad.

That U.S. and many European citizens could previously obtain visas at the airport had turned out to be a major security problem for the government, he said.

“That’s how some of these extremist groups managed to get into the country,” the minister said.

BAD FOR BUSINESS

While security concerns have kept potential students away for several years now, language schools say that enrolments have fallen sharply in the months since the failed plane attack, particularly as the government tightens visa restrictions.

Pictures displayed in the reception of the Sanaa Institute for the Arabic Language tell of better times. One shows a class listening attentively to the teacher, while in another a group of students poses in the now-empty garden outside.

“We are on the verge of bankruptcy,” said Badi, adding that he had only two students left, one from South Korea and the other from the United States.

Belman Sihombing, a chef from Indonesia who came to study Arabic with his wife and daughter, said his family only managed to obtain their visas with help from the school’s director.

“The visa was a problem from my embassy in my country. They wouldn’t give it to us because of the Nigerian trying to bomb the United States, so all embassies don’t give visas,” he said.

Saleem said recent events had hit his institution badly too.

This summer, Saleem’s center, which is accredited with over 100 universities across the world, will host 32 students, compared to 85 last year and 230 students in 2008, he said.

Concern over security in Yemen, which is also facing rising violence between government forces and separatists in the south and has just ended a bloody round of fighting with northern rebels, has long been an issue for his business.

“It was really building up, but the Nigerian was the worst case,” he said. “If I didn’t own the building we are in, then we would have closed by now.”

(Editing by Lin Noueihed)

Any U.S. attempt to kill Awlaki in Yemen unacceptable

(Reuters) – An assassination on Yemeni territory of a radical Muslim cleric wanted dead or alive by U.S. authorities would be unacceptable, the Yemeni prime minister said Sunday.

U.S. President Barack Obama’s National Security Council recently gave the CIA the green light to kill Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.-Yemeni citizen whom they accuse of having links to al Qaeda and who is believed to be in hiding in southern Yemen.

“We will absolutely not accept that,” Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Megawar told Reuters in an interview.

“We are a sovereign country.”

According to the latest information, Awlaki was still in the southern Yemeni province of Shabwa, Megawar said.

U.S. authorities say Awlaki was added to the CIA’s hit list after he became “operational” in al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which claimed responsibility for a failed plot to blow up a U.S.-bound passenger plane on Christmas Day.

The Nigerian man accused in the attempted bombing met Awlaki while visiting Yemen, and the U.S.-born preacher also had contacts with a U.S. Army psychiatrist who shot dead 13 people at a U.S. Army base in November.

Yemen’s foreign minister said earlier this month that Yemen would not hand Awlaki over to Washington, but instead put him on trial if he is arrested.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks, the United States and Yemen joined forces to fight al Qaeda, and Washington has kept a close eye on the impoverished country, which borders the world’s top oil exporter Saudi Arabia.

Awlaki, whose father is a former minister in Yemen, traveled to the country in 2004, where he taught at a university before he was arrested and imprisoned in 2006 for suspected links to al Qaeda and involvement in attacks.

He was released in December 2007 because he said he had repented, but he was later charged again on similar counts and went into hiding.

Megawar said he disagreed with Yemen being described as a refuge for al Qaeda.

“Yemen is not a safe haven for terrorists. Yemen has al Qaeda, we recognize that … but they are spread out in different areas and are scared as a result of the strict crackdown by the government for all their actions,” he said.

“Yes, al Qaeda is present in Yemen, al Qaeda is a risk in Yemen, but there is exaggeration by the media,” he said.

Last week, a fugitive Saudi Arabian man who was detained for several years at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo until his release in 2006, was named as a senior member of Al Qaeda’s Yemen wing, according to a tape by the group.

Megawar said Othman Ahmed al-Ghamdi’s appointment as a senior operative was another development in the ongoing fight against militants in Yemen but added, “We have nothing to do with who comes and goes.”

(Editing by Myra MacDonald)

INTERVIEW-Any US attempt to kill Awlaki in Yemen unacceptable

* Yemen will not accept U.S. killing of Awlaki on territory

* Yemen “not a safe haven” for al Qaeda, threat exaggerated

By Raissa Kasolowsky

SANAA, May 30 (Reuters) – An assassination on Yemeni territory of a radical Muslim cleric wanted dead or alive by U.S. authorities would be unacceptable, the Yemeni prime minister said on Sunday.

U.S. President Barack Obama’s National Security Council recently gave the CIA the green light to kill Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.-Yemeni citizen whom they accuse of having links to al Qaeda and who is believed to be in hiding in southern Yemen.

“We will absolutely not accept that,” Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Megawar told Reuters in an interview.

“We are a sovereign country.”

According to the latest information, Awlaki was still in the southern Yemeni province of Shabwa, Megawar said.

U.S. authorities say Awlaki was added to the CIA’s hit list after he became “operational” in al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which claimed responsibility for a failed plot to blow up a U.S.-bound passenger plane on Christmas Day.

The Nigerian man accused in the attempted bombing met Awlaki while visiting Yemen, and the U.S.-born preacher also had contacts with a U.S. Army psychiatrist who shot dead 13 people at a U.S. Army base in November.

Yemen’s foreign minister said earlier this month that Yemen would not hand Awlaki over to Washington, but instead put him on trial if he is arrested.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks, the United States and Yemen joined forces to fight al Qaeda, and Washington has kept a close eye on the impoverished country, which borders the world’s top oil exporter Saudi Arabia.

Awlaki, whose father is a former minister in Yemen, travelled to the country in 2004, where he taught at a university before he was arrested and imprisoned in 2006 for suspected links to al Qaeda and involvement in attacks.

He was released in December 2007 because he said he had repented, but he was later charged again on similar counts and went into hiding.

Megawar said he disagreed with Yemen being described as a refuge for al Qaeda.

“Yemen is not a safe haven for terrorists. Yemen has al Qaeda, we recognise that … but they are spread out in different areas and are scared as a result of the strict crackdown by the government for all their actions”, he said.

“Yes, al Qaeda is present in Yemen, al Qaeda is a risk in Yemen, but there is exaggeration by the media,” he said.

Last week, a fugitive Saudi Arabian man who was detained for several years at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo until his release in 2006, was named as a senior member of Al Qaeda’s Yemen wing, according to a tape by the group. [ID:nLDE64R043]

Megawar said Othman Ahmed al-Ghamdi’s appointment as a senior operative was another development in the ongoing fight against militants in Yemen but added, “We have nothing to do with who comes and goes.” (Editing by Myra MacDonald)

Afghan peace cleric Rahman Gul shot dead in Kunar

Chapa Dara (Afghanistan), May 18 (ANI): A prominent Afghan Muslim cleric was shot dead along with two of his family members in the country’s restive Kunar province on Sunday.

According to the BBC, Maulvi Rahman Gul was gunned down as he was returning home. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

His assassination was followed by the death of two Italian soldiers in a roadside bomb explosion in Herat.

On Sunday two US soldiers died in southern Afghanistan.

Gul was the chief cleric of his district and a member of a clerical council for eastern Afghanistan. (ANI)

Afghan peace cleric Rahman Gul shot dead in Kunar

Chapa Dara (Afghanistan), May 18 (ANI): A prominent Afghan Muslim cleric was shot dead along with two of his family members in the country’s restive Kunar province on Sunday.

According to the BBC, Maulvi Rahman Gul was gunned down as he was returning home. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

His assassination was followed by the death of two Italian soldiers in a roadside bomb explosion in Herat.

On Sunday two US soldiers died in southern Afghanistan.

Gul was the chief cleric of his district and a member of a clerical council for eastern Afghanistan. (ANI)

Failed Times Square bomber was 26/11 mastermind’s childhood friend: Officials

Washington, May 7 (ANI): Sources close to the investigations concerning confessed Times Square bomb plotter Faisal Shahzad have revealed that he has claimed that he was childhood friends with one of the masterminds of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, in which 166 people were killed by Pakistani terrorists.

According to ABC News, intelligence sources privy to investigations into the botched bombing plot, Shahzad has claimed that he had contacts with many top notch extremist leaders, such as killed Pakistan Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud, radical American-born Muslim cleric Anwar Awlaki and others.

However, the name of the Mumbai attacks mastermind with whom Shahzad is said to have close relations were not revealed.

Shahzad is also said to be linked to a man named Muhammed Rehan, who is believed to be a Jaish-e-Muhamed (JeM) operative and is in the custody of Pakistani authorities at present.

According to sources briefed on the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) probe, Shahzad, during his interrogation has revealed that he was angry over the continuous US drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal areas, and that he had suffered a personal crisis in his life.

Shahzad has reportedly said he carried out the attempted bombing because he was under duress and that he feared for his family’s safety if he didn’t fulfill the mission, sources added. (ANI)

Muslim cleric ordered out of U.S. in subway plot case

A federal judge on Thursday ordered a Muslim cleric to leave the United States for lying to the FBI in connection with a probe into a plot to blow up New York City subways, a U.S. justice official said.

In a sentencing hearing in Brooklyn, U.S. District Judge Frederic Block told Ahmad Afzali, 39, he must leave within 90 days or be deported to his native Afghanistan, said Robert Nardoza, spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Brooklyn.

Afzali faced up to six months in prison.

An imam in the New York City borough of Queens, he was arrested in 2009 as part of an investigation into what U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called one of the most serious security threats to the United States since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001.

Afzali was accused of tipping off Najibullah Zazi that he was under investigation, forcing authorities to bring Zazi in for questioning sooner than planned. Earlier this year Zazi admitted he had received weapons and training from al Qaeda and plotted a suicide attack on the city’s subways in rush hour.

The cleric, a self-proclaimed pro-American imam who cooperated with police in previous investigations, lied about the tip-off when questioned by the FBI, prosecutors said.

Afzali pleaded guilty last month to charges of lying to law enforcement officials in a deal with prosecutors who agreed to drop a more serious charge of obstructing a terrorism investigation. He agreed to waive his right to appeal.

His defence team sought to portray him as an unwitting suspect, who had no knowledge of what Zazi was planning, but the prosecution contended that the cleric was deliberately misleading law enforcement.

“Afzali is many things, but naive is not one of them. He knew that what he did was wrong, and that is the reason why he hid it from the NYPD (New York Police Department) and later lied about it to the FBI,” prosecutors said in a recent court document said.

Zazi, who moved to Queens from Afghanistan as a teenager and attended a mosque led by Afzali, will be sentenced in June.

(Reporting by Basil Katz; Editing by Michelle Nichols and Paul Simao)

Yemen says seeks cleric, yet to get U.S. intelligence

(Reuters) – Yemen said on Sunday it is trying to detain a Muslim cleric wanted dead or alive by Washington, but has yet to receive intelligence from the United States on the U.S.-born militant’s activities.

World

U.S. officials said on Tuesday that the administration of President Barack Obama had authorized operations to capture or kill U.S.-born Anwar al-Awlaki — a leading figure linked to al Qaeda’s Yemen-based regional wing which claimed responsibility for a failed bombing of a U.S.-bound plane in December.

“He (Awlaki) is wanted by Yemeni justice for questioning, so that he can clear his name … or face trial,” Yemeni Foreign Minister Abubakr al-Qirbi told Al Jazeera television.

Qirbi did not give details of any manhunt by Yemeni security forces to arrest Awalaki, but referred to an air raid on a suspected al Qaeda gathering last December which the cleric reportedly had attended.

Qirbi said Yemen had not received U.S. intelligence on Awlaki’s contacts with a Nigerian suspect in the attempted bombing of the transatlantic passenger plane and with a U.S. Army psychiatrist accused of shooting dead 13 people at a military base in Texas in November.

“The detailed information … and evidence gathered by U.S. agencies has not been given to Yemen,” Qirbi said.

Qirbi had been quoted by media reports as saying that Yemen saw Awlaki as a preacher and not a terrorist, but he told Al Jazeera that those remarks referred to the period just after Awlaki’s return to Yemen when he was not suspected of wrongdoing by the United States.

Born in New Mexico, Awlaki led prayers at U.S. mosques. He returned to Yemen in 2004 where he taught at a university before he was arrested and imprisoned in 2006 for suspected links to al Qaeda and involvement in attacks. Awlaki was released in December 2007 after he was said to have repented.

Awlaki’s tribe has denounced U.S. plans to target him, vowing it “will not stand by idly and watch.”

Heavily armed tribes in Yemen, the poorest Arab country, often try to protect their kin by seeking to gain their release or favorable treatment. At times, they have kidnapped foreign tourists to pressure the government.

Western countries fear that al Qaeda’s resurgent regional wing is exploiting instability in Yemen to launch attacks in the region and beyond.

Yemen has carried out air strikes with U.S. assistance to target al Qaeda leaders, but there have been conflicting reports about whether Awlaki was present during any of those attacks.

U.S. officials believe he remains in hiding in Yemen.

(Reporting by Firouz Sedarat; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Curfew relaxed for 11 hours in Bareilly

Bareilly, March 17 (IANS) Curfew was relaxed in Bareilly Wednesday for 11 hours as the Uttar Pradesh town limped towards normalcy after a serious bout of communal violence, authorities said.

It was the third relaxation since curfew was imposed two weeks ago.

‘As peaceful situation prevails in Bareilly, we have decided to relax the curfew for 11 hours,’ Deputy Inspector General of Police (Bareilly Range) Rajiv Sabharwal told IANS.

‘It was relaxed for eight hours Tuesday. Now, the relaxation has been extended to 5 p.m.,’ he said.

Asked when the curfew would be lifted, Sabharwal said: ‘We are reviewing the situation at regular intervals. We hope to be in a position to take a decision soon.’

The authorities are focussing on Kila, Prem Nagar, Subhashnagar, Baradari and Kotwali areas of Bareilly where communal clashes were reported.

The violence surged after the arrest of Muslim cleric Maulana Tauquir Raza Khan, president of the Ittehad-e-Millat Council.

Khan was accused of giving a ‘rabble rousing speech’ that led to communal violence, police said.

A police officer said no violence had been reported since Friday evening when at least 15 people, including a senior police officer, were injured in clashes with protesters.

All educational institutions have been shut for two weeks. The schools and colleges were likely to reopen March 22, Sabharwal said.

A minor communal clash followed by sporadic arson March 2 led the district administration to clamp curfew in several parts of Bareilly.

Bareilly curfew enters 13th day

Bareilly (UP), Mar 13 (ANI): A large part of Uttar Pradesh”s Bareilly district is under curfew for the 13th day running today.

On Friday, at least 15 people, including a senior police officer, were injured when members of a community clashed with police to protest the release of a Muslim cleric.

The community members indulged in vandalism and protested against the release of Maulana Tauquir Raza Khan, president of the Ittehad-e-Millat Council, who was arrested for his alleged role in communal violence in Bareilly.

After unruly people protested in areas of Subhashnagar Police Station, police fired rubber bullets and tear gas cannisters to control them.

Additional Director General (Law and Order) Brij Lal said: “The situation is still tense, but under control. For vandalism and violent protests, we have arrested 10 people”.

Meanwhile, political parties are now vying with one another in a game of upmanship.

Chief Minister Mayawati set the ball rolling by releasing the Maulana.

A move to ensure that the Maulana”s angry supporters did not resort to more violence, and Muslim vote was pacified. But the Maulana”s release angered the Bajrang Dal whose activists set fire to shops and vehicles.

The Congress and the Samajwadi Party leaders also tried to reach Bareilly but were prevented by the administration. (ANI)

Egypt’s top cleric dies

Egypt’s top Muslim cleric, Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, has died after suffering a heart attack while on a visit to Saudi Arabia.

As head of the al-Azhar University, the 81-year-old was one of the highest spiritual authorities in Sunni Islam, and angered many hardline Muslims with his moderate views.

Last year, Sheikh Tantawi barred female students at the university from wearing the full-face covering niqab veil.

He was also vocal in his criticism of female circumcision, calling it “un-Islamic”.

- BBC

Kerala church in hosts iftar party

Kottayam (Kerala), Sep 18 (ANI): An ancient church in Kerala became the perfect setting for communal harmony, hosting an iftar party on Thursday.

The iftar was organised in St. Mary’s Forane church Athirampuzha.

People from all faiths took part in the iftar that aimed to spread the message of love.

“The world is witnessing communal divide. Everyone should live as the children of the same parents. Communal strife will lead to destruction of the world order,” said Kunju Mohammad, Muslim cleric at nearby Athirampusha mosque.

Father Mani Puthyidam, parish priest at Athirampuzha church said, “It’s easy to divide but difficult to unite. The aim of this community iftar is to spread the message of love and brotherhood in this,” said Puthyidam.

T. S Gopinanthan Nair, secretary of Nair Service Society, a Hindu outfit, termed the iftar as a good example of communal harmony.

“We want to spread the message of love and unity in this place, Athirampuzha is a classic example of communal harmony,” Nair added. (ANI)

Muslims protest killings of their community in China ethnic clashes

Ludhiana, July 9 (ANI): Muslims here have protested against the ethnic violence between Han Chinese and Muslim Uighurs that has left at least 156 dead in China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang.

Congregating outside the Jama Masjid, they burnt the national flag of China and raised slogans to stop atrocities on Muslims.

“Two Muslim workers in a factory were killed in China. Hundreds of Muslims had gathered to stage a silent protest against the killings, which we came to know through the press. The Chinese Government could not tolerate this and ordered a crackdown killing 150 Muslims. This bloodshed of Muslims will not be wasted,” said Maualana Habib-ur-Rehman, a Muslim cleric.

Rehman also threatened that if the violence on Muslims does not stop in the coming days then they would issue a fatwa calling for boycott of Chinese products.

“Chinese items will be boycotted. If needed, we will talk to Muslim councils in the country and issue a fatwa forbidding Chinese products,” he said.

Xinjiang province has long been a hotbed of ethnic tension in China. Uighurs make up around half the 20 million population.

They’re angry about a recent influx of Han Chinese and government controls on their religion and culture.

The violence was triggered by a rumour that Uighurs had raped two women.he allegations sparked a brawl at a factory, which spread. The government is clearly trying to halt that spread.

Almost one and half thousand people have been arrested and soldiers have been told not to let their guard down. (ANI)

Clerics in Moradabad issue fatwa against homosexuality

Moradabad, July 3 (ANI): A day after the Delhi High Court overturned ban on gay sex, Muslim clerics in Moradabad have issued a fatwa against homosexuality.

The Delhi High Court on Thursday had ruled that gay sex was not a crime, a verdict that will bolster demands by gay and health groups that the government scrap a British colonial law.

The ruling is expected to be repeal the 1861 law that makes homosexual sex punishable.

However, the verdict did not go down well with Muslim clerics.

Justifying the fatwa, Sibtey Nabi Ashrafi, a Muslim cleric said that relationship between same sexes is against the law of the nature and against Islam.

“Relationship between same sexes is unnatural and we cannot bear it. Islam forbids sex between same genders. We have issued a fatwa since its illegal. Both male and female have particular role to play and it’s against the nature of the law,” said Ashrafi.

The court’s ruling that homosexual sex among consenting adults is not a crime is expected to boost an increasingly vocal pro-gay lobby that says the British-era law was a violation of human rights.

The ruling applies to the whole of the nation, but can be appealed at the Supreme Court. (ANI)

UK hate preacher converts 11-year-old Christian boy to Islam

London, June 29 (ANI): Britain’s controversial Muslim cleric Anjem Choudary has converted an 11-year-old Christian schoolboy to Islam at a road show.

A film shows Sean, 11, vowing to follow the religion by repeating words in Arabic.

Sean, whose face is obscured by a coat hood and has been blacked out, is coached through the ceremony by hate preacher Choudary.

Standing next to him, he says: “This young man here wants to become a Muslim. This is not the first time a young man has discovered the truth. Come forward to think about Islam.”

Choudary, a follower of exiled hate-preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed, recites words for him to repeat.

The ceremony was filmed at a demonstration by Choudary’s Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama’ah group in Birmingham city centre earlier this month.

Choudary defended the boy’s “reversion” to Islam.

“The boy told us he wanted to become a Muslim and, of course, some ­people are intellectually more mature than they are physically. I don’t see there is any harm in this,” he said.

Choudary, 42, was one of the masterminds behind sick protests at the homecoming parade of British soldiers from Afghanistan in Luton back in March.

He branded British troops “murderers.”

The preacher also calls for fundamentalist Sharia law in Britain and warns of the dangers of eternal “hellfire” for non-Muslims. (ANI)

Muslims in Bhopal offer special prayers for early rains

Bhopal, June 27 (ANI): Muslims in Bhopal offered Namaaz-e-Istasqa (Namaaz to ask for rain) as most of northern India reeled under drought-like situation due to delayed monsoon.

Thousands of Muslims gathered at city’s Eidgah (an open-air mosque) and offered special prayers seeking early rains.

“Our sins have risen…everyone is indulged in wrong and satanic activities, somebody is involved in gambling, another indulges in prostitution…none is giving ‘Zakat’ (a small percentage of savings as alms or charity that Muslims give)…everyone is running after the materialistic world…in this special prayer we have asked the Almighty to forgive us for our sins and bless us with rain,” said Qazi Ameerullah, a Muslim cleric.

The delay in the arrival of monsoon is becoming a cause of concern for the masses especially farmers, as nearly two-thirds of agriculture depends on the rains and two-thirds of the population is dependent on agriculture.

The monsoon is crucial for summer-sown crops such as rice, soybean, sugarcane and cotton. With only 40 percent of farmland irrigated, most of countries small farmers rely on the monsoon to water their crops.

The Meteorological Department has said that the total rainfall from the crucial June-September monsoon would be 93 percent of the long-term average, coming in below normal for the first time in four years. (ANI)

Muslim clerics in Uttar Pradesh outraged over Sarkozy’s ‘burqa’ remarks

Lucknow, June 23(ANI): Muslim clerics in Lucknow on Tuesday expressed their displeasure at the French President Nicolas Sarkozy for terming the burqa as an index of subjugating women, and said Muslims must be given complete freedom to practice their religion.

“It’s an attack on freedom of humanity and the people who profess secularism are talking just in contrast to that. If Muslims are living in their country, then the Muslims must be given complete freedom to practice their religion; else declare it a Christian theocratic country so that all the Muslims would leave,” said Maulana Kalbe Jawad Naqvi, a senior Shia Muslim cleric.

French President had said on Monday that the wearing of burqas, the traditional Muslim garment covering women from head to toe, was not “welcome in France.” He said the burqa was a “sign of subservience” and a matter of “a woman’s freedom and dignity,”

However, his remarks have not gone down well with Muslim clerics here, who said that such statements by the head of a state is an attempt to defame Islam and Muslims all over the world.

France, home to Europe’s largest Muslim minority, is divided over how to reconcile secular values with religious freedom. (ANI)

Hate Islamist preacher Bakri used British taxpayers money to live in luxury

London, Apr 26 (ANI): Hate radical Islamist preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed has boasted that he used thousands of pounds of British cash to set himself up in a luxury Lebanese apartment.

The Muslim cleric, who lived in the UK for 20 years before being banned for preaching hate, used backdated incapacity benefits to buy his plush flat in Beirut.

Speaking to the Daily Star at his latest Lebanon home in Tripoli, Bakri insists that he and fellow radicals including Anjem Choudary are justified in taking our state handouts because Britain has “plundered” and “colonised” Muslim countries around the world.

Bakri, 49, bragged: “They used to condemn me in the UK for claiming benefits but you take what is available like everyone else. The UK made me a bogeyman so I could not work.”

“One day I was at the doctor’s and he said, ‘You are disabled because of your leg. You should be claiming incapacity benefit. Why are you not claiming?’ I did not even know this was the case. Then, when I got to the benefits office, they told me I was owed arrears since the 1990s so they backdated the payments for me,” he said.

“They did not give me the cash but they told me to choose a car so I could get around. So I chose the best one, a Renault Espace.

“Then, when I came to the Lebanon in 2005, I sold the car and used the money to buy an apartment.”

Bakri laughed: “The exchange rate was so good then – about two dollars to the pound. I got around $55,000 (£28,000 in 2005) from selling the car.”

Unrepentant Bakri has now moved into a second flat in the northern city of Tripoli – because he says Beirut is not Islamic enough for him. He shares the apartment with his second wife, Ruba, 30. (ANI)

Pakistani president approves sharia law for Swat region

Islamabad – Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari has approved a regulation to enforce Islamic sharia law in the troubled Swat region, in the hopes of achieving peace with Taliban militants, state media said Tuesday. Zardari signed the controversial document late Monday after the country’s lower house of the parliament unanimously adopted a resolution urging him to approve the law for the Malakand Agency comprising eight districts, including Swat.

Hard-line Muslim cleric Maulana Sufi Mohammad on February 16 brokered a peace agreement between the regional government in the North West Frontier Province and the local Taliban to end months of militant violence in Swat in return for sharia law.

The president’s move was in “adherence to the stated intent of all the political forces in this country,” the Associated Press of Pakistan reported.

Zardari was previously expected to sign the bill directly, but he referred it to Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani at the weekend, with an advice to debate it in the parliament.

After the parliament passed Monday a resolution calling for imposing sharia law in Swat, Gilani told lawmakers that by supporting the implementation of the agreement, “the National Assembly was respecting the mandate, desire and the will of the provincial government.”

Only one political party, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement, abstained due to reservations about the truce, which included withdrawal of government troops sent to Swat valley to quell insurgency spearheaded by radical cleric Mohammad and his son-in-law, Maulana Fazlullah.

Fazullah’s spokesman had announced that any lawmaker opposing the sharia law would be committing “apostasy.”

Analysts say Zardari could have passed the regulation independently but he involved the political parties to share the blame for possible repercussions.

The government’s move to cede authority to Swat militants has sparked concern both at home and abroad.

Western powers believe the decision would embolden the militants, whereas Pakistan’s civil society says imposition of strict rules would result in human rights abuses, as seen in the case of controversial public flogging of a girl in Swat recently.

Islamic courts started functioning in Swat last month, but the hardliners were demanding an announcement by Zardari to formally introduce the system of justice. (dpa)

Italy mourns quake victims in Good Friday ceremony

L’Aquila (Italy), April 11 (DPA) A state funeral for many of the victims of Monday’s earthquake in Italy began Friday with a message from Pope Benedict XVI and also included prayers offered by a Muslim cleric.

‘I am spiritually close’ to those who have suffered in the ‘immense tragedy’ the pontiff’s personal secretary, Monsignor Georg Gaenswein said, reading Benedict’s words.

‘I implore God to grant eternal rest to the victims, a swift recovery to the injured and for all, the courage to continue hoping without succumbing to despair,’ Benedict’s message read.

Dozens of wooden caskets, including smaller ones painted white and containing some of the at least 20 children killed in the earthquake, lay before an altar erected at a parade ground of a police training school in the city of L’Aquila.

The remains of a four-month-year old baby lay in a coffin placed on top of another bearing those of his mother who also died in the earthquake.

A casket belonging to another victim, a rugby player of the local L’Aquila club, was draped with his team jersey.

Italian President Giorgio Napolitano and Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi sat among other mourners as the Vatican’s second highest official, Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone presided over the solemn ceremony.

By Friday morning the death toll from the earthquake stood at 287.

The funeral took the form of a Eucharist Mass with priests handing out communion wafers to mourners, including some of those injured who wore neck braces and bandages.

The pontiff had given special permission for the Eucharist Mass to be held, a rite which the Roman Catholic does not usually celebrate on Good Friday, the day when Christians mark Jesus’ death on the cross.

Near the end of the ceremony, a Muslim imam, Mohamed Nour Dachan, offered prayers on behalf of Italy’s Islamic community. Six of the victims of the earthquake were Muslims.

The funeral was televised live on national television. Condolences to the victims was also paid elsewhere in Italy including at Rome’s international Leonardo Da Vinci airport, where activities stopped for a minute’s silence.

Meanwhile rescuers continued sifting through rubble in L’Aquila and other nearby, badly damaged towns.

Despite fading hopes of finding more survivors, their work to find more survivors is set to continue until Easter Sunday.

The task has been made even more dangerous by dozens of powerful aftershocks that have followed the main earthquake. Monday’s tremor registered around 6.2 on the Richter scale.

Some 17,000 people spent Thursday night housed in several tent camps set up by authorities as shelters mainly for residents of the worst hit areas including L’Aquila’s city centre and the towns of Onna and Paganica.

The government says that reconstruction costs will rise to 1.2 billion euros ($1.6 billion) and entire towns will have to be rebuilt.

Monday’s earthquake was the deadliest to hit Italy in almost 30 years.

In 1980 up to 3,000 people are estimated to have died in an earthquake in the southern Campania and Basilicata regions.