Indonesian magazine firebombed after graft report

July 6 (Reuters) – Two men in black threw petrol bombs at the office of a prominent Indonesian investigative magazine early on Tuesday, its editor in chief said, a week after it published a cover story on police corruption.

The case underlines the high stakes in exposing and tackling graft in a country that is attracting a surge of interest from investors but is considered one of the most corrupt in Asia. Tempo’s editor in chief Wahyu Muryadi said the magazine’s security guards saw two men pull up on motorcycles at the Jakarta office at about 2.30 a.m. (1930 GMT).

“They then threw three Molotov bottles, bottles with petrol inside. Two of them blew up and then they disappeared on motorcycles,” he said, adding no one was hurt and there was no significant damage to the building.

Police had sent a team to investigate, he said, while declining to speculate on the motive.

“I believe the police will do their best to investigate it. We are still working as usual and we are not in fear.”

A police spokesman said the investigation had begun.

“The motive will be known after we capture the perpetrators. It’s difficult for us to speculate on the motive,” said spokesman Boy Rafli Amar.

Tempo has earned many powerful enemies through its reports on cases of suspected corruption involving politicians, businessmen and law enforcement officials.

The magazine is the subject of a defamation case lodged by police over its June edition, which features a cover story on police graft titled “The fat bank accounts of police officers”, accompanied by a drawing of a policeman leading three piggy bank money boxes on leashes. [ID:nJAK49105] The English-language Jakarta Globe newspaper reported on Tuesday that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had instructed the national police chief to investigate the Tempo report. (Editing by Neil Chatterjee)

Gunmen kill radio reporter in northern Philippines

(Reuters) – Gunmen on a motorcycle shot dead a journalist on his way home in the northern Philippines, the second reporter murdered in the country this week, police said on Wednesday.

World

Joselito Agustin, 37, a radio reporter in Laoag City in northern Ilocos Norte province, was shot four times early on Wednesday, said Leonardo Espina, national police spokesman.

“We’re still in the process of investigating the motive for the killing,” Espina told reporters, adding authorities want to know whether the crime was work-related.

The Philippines was the deadliest country for journalists in the world in 2009, accounting for 37 of 132 journalists and support staff that were killed or died while working around the world, the International News Safety Institute (INSI) has said.

The journalist deaths last year included at least 30 killed in a massacre of 57 people in southern Maguindanao province in what was the country’s worst election-related violence.

(Reporting by Manny Mogato; Editing by Rosemarie Francisco)

Gunmen kill radio reporter in northern Philippines

June 16 (Reuters) – Gunmen on a motorcycle shot dead a journalist on his way home in the northern Philippines, the second reporter murdered in the country this week, police said on Wednesday.

Joselito Agustin, 37, a radio reporter in Laoag City in northern Ilocos Norte province, was shot four times early on Wednesday, said Leonardo Espina, national police spokesman.

“We’re still in the process of investigating the motive for the killing,” Espina told reporters, adding authorities want to know whether the crime was work-related.

The Philippines was the deadliest country for journalists in the world in 2009, accounting for 37 of 132 journalists and support staff that were killed or died while working around the world, the International News Safety Institute (INSI) has said. [ID:nLDE6050SA]

The journalist deaths last year included at least 30 killed in a massacre of 57 people in southern Maguindanao province in what was the country’s worst election-related violence. (Reporting by Manny Mogato; Editing by Rosemarie Francisco)

Digicel Distributes 19,000 Tents in Port-au-Prince to Shelter More Than 100,000 Haitians

PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI, Jun 09 (MARKET WIRE) —
Digicel today announced details of its plans to distribute the 19,000
six-person tents which will provide shelter to more than 100,000 Haitians
who are living in makeshift shelters following the January 12th
earthquake which devastated Port-au-Prince and its surrounding areas.
Distribution starts today and will be complete within a week.

Specifically designed to resist heavy rains and for extended living, the
tents will be distributed through organizations which have been assisting
people in securing shelter since the earthquake. They will be disbursed
to individuals throughout the affected area, so that individuals can
locate them where best suits their needs, for example, close to their
collapsed home or to their place of work.

Digicel Haiti CEO Maarten Boute said: “We have a group of 120 volunteers
made up of Digicel employees who will manage the distribution. These
volunteers will be divided into groups of 40 and sub-groups of four and,
over the next week, they will distribute the 19,000 tents to more than
150 organizations.

“This initiative means that 100,000 Haitians currently living on the
streets with inadequate shelter or in makeshift dwellings will be housed
in one of these tents which provide improved shelter until a more
permanent solution is found,” he continued.

Some of the organizations that will receive tents include: Red Cross
Haiti, World Vision, Food for the Poor, Catholic Relief Services and the
national police. According to shelter cluster figures, approximately
63,000 tents have been distributed to date. Digicel’s programme will
increase this number by 30%.

The tents have a 10×10-foot coated polyethylene ‘bathtub’ floor, separate
from the tent walls — and give protection from groundwater. The tents –
purchased from a manufacturer in the US — were shipped on 14 40-foot
containers and arrived in Port-au-Prince earlier this month.

Digicel Group CEO Colm Delves, commented: “With the rainy season upon us,
we are doing everything we can to improve conditions and give some of the
one million homeless people in Port-au-Prince some dignity and protection.

“However, the situation in Haiti is still grave. While the tents we are
distributing will go some way towards temporarily improving sheltered
accommodations, we need more organizations from across the world to
continue to step in and provide support in any way they can.”

Director of Red Cross Haiti, Mme Michelle Amedee Gedeon, said: “The
donation of these tents is a blessing for the people under our care who
are currently living in dire conditions with the spread of disease rife.

“With the provision of tents, families can live together in their own
unit which is clean and protected from the elements as they continue to
try to rebuild their lives,” continued Mme Michelle Amedee Gedeon.

As the single largest investor in Haiti with a total investment of over
US$370 million since its launch in 2006, Digicel has over two million
customers in Haiti. The Digicel Haiti Relief Fund has donated US$5
million to NGOs in Haiti to support the relief efforts and to date over
US$800,000 has been raised by Digicel customers across the Caribbean and
Central America through a text and voice donation line. Digicel also gave
each of its two million customers US$5 in free credit — totalling US$10
million.

ABOUT DIGICEL GROUP

After nine years of operation, Digicel has 9.1 million customers across
its Caribbean and Central American markets and is renowned for
competitive rates, unbeatable coverage, superior customer care, a wide
variety of products and services and state-of-the-art handsets. By
offering innovative wireless services and community support, Digicel has
become a leading brand in the Caribbean and has placed the region at the
cutting-edge of wireless communications. The company is also a recent
entrant to the Central American market in Panama and Honduras, where is
has 1.6 million subscribers.

Digicel is incorporated in Bermuda and now has operations in 32 markets
worldwide. Its Caribbean and Central American markets comprise: Anguilla,
Antigua & Barbuda, Aruba, Barbados, Bermuda, Bonaire, the British Virgin
Islands, the Cayman Islands, Curacao, Dominica, El Salvador, French
Guiana, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica,
Martinique, Panama, St. Kitts & Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent & the
Grenadines, Suriname, Trinidad & Tobago and Turks & Caicos. The Caribbean
company also has coverage in St. Martin and St. Barts. Pacific markets
comprise: Fiji, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu.

In total, across its 32 markets, Digicel has over 10.7 million
subscribers.

Digicel is the lead sponsor of Caribbean and Central American sports
teams, including the West Indies Cricket Team and Special Olympics teams
throughout the region. Digicel is also the title sponsor of the Digicel
Caribbean Championships and the Copa de Naciones Digicel, which are the
Caribbean and Central American qualifiers to the CONCACAF Gold Cup. And
in the Pacific, Digicel is the proud sponsor of several national rugby
teams including the Digicel Fiji 7s, Digicel Tonga Ikale Tahi 7s and 15s
and the Digicel Vanuatu 7s and 15s. Digicel also sponsors the Vanuatu
Cricket team.

Visit www.digicelgroup.com for more information on Digicel.

Contact:
Antonia Graham
Digicel
+1 876 564 1708
antonia.graham@digicelgroup.com

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

32 arrested in trans-European anti-drug operation

London, May 26 (IANS/EFE) At least 32 people have been arrested in an anti-drug and anti-trafficking operation across Europe conducted by 750 police officials from Europol, the European Union’s criminal intelligence agency.

Twenty people were arrested in Spain and 12 in Britain Tuesday, in a joint operation in London and Spain’s Costa del Sol. The operation also included house searches in the Ireland capital Dublin as well as in Belgium and Cyprus, and was carried out jointly by Ireland’s An Garda Siochana police, the Spanish National Police, SOCA and the Belgian police.

A 53-year-old Irish-born British gangster Christopher ‘Christy’ Kinahan was arrested Tuesday at his mansion in Costa del Sol, Britain’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) said Tuesday.

Kinahan was arrested by the Spanish National Police along with several of his family members, a number of British and Irish citizens and four Spanish attorneys, SOCA said.

In a statement released in Warsaw, Spanish Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba said Kinahan’s organisation is connected to several crimes including murder, drug and human trafficking.

Rubalcaba said the trans-European operation showed that ‘political cooperation works’.

‘The scale of this joint operation by law enforcement agencies from so many countries is an indication of how prolific we think this network was,’ SOCA director Trevor Pearce said.

Over 1,000 landmines found in Colombia

Bogota, May 26 (IANS/EFE) At least 1,053 landmines, which rebel guerrillas were planning to use in attacks ahead of the May 30 presidential elections in Colombia, have been found buried in a rural area in the northwestern region, police said.

The mines found in Antioquia province belonged to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), ‘which planned to utilize the landmines to carry out terrorist attacks against the upcoming elections’, the National Police said Tuesday.

Last week, the commander of an army explosives disposal team was killed in a landmine blast, while the team was clearing a mine field in Antioquia province.

Capt Victor Hugo Valencia was killed May 17 near a place where the rebels blasted electricity transmission towers using dynamite, leaving residents of four towns without power.

Since 1990, over 1,700 people have been killed in landmine blasts planted by guerrillas and drug traffickers, the defence ministry said.

Indonesian police uncover plot to kill president

Indonesian security forces say they have uncovered a plot to assassinate president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

They say Indonesian militants captured in recent raids were planning to strike during an Independence Day ceremony in August.

Police say all government officials and state guests attending the event would have been targets.

The authorities say the militants were also planning to kill Western nationals in Jakarta and Java by laying siege to hotels in a Mumbai-style attack.

National police chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri said 58 terror suspects have been arrested and 13 people killed in anti-terrorism raids in the past three months.

He said one of the arrested suspects was set to collect firearms and a grenade launcher from an Islamist stronghold on Mindanao, the main island in the southern Philippines, to be used in the planned attack.

Experts said the recent raids found that terrorists in Indonesia may be shifting their strategy from bombings to military-style shootouts.

South Africa bolsters security to keep hooligans out of FIFA World Cup

Johannesburg, May 10 (ANI): South African authorities have set up various �special cells� and accelerated judicial processes in order to keep European hooligans at bay during the upcoming FIFA World Cup to be hosted by the country.

South Africa which itself has one of the worst rates of violent crime is beefing up security arrangements keeping in mind the track record of over-zealous English fans who have been known to go on a rampage when their team loses.

South African National Police Commissioner General Bheki Cele said his country was hoping to stop troublemakers before they got to the World Cup, but was concerned that many were already on the move, the Herald Sun reports.

�We have met the intelligence chiefs of Britain � I didn�t know that there were countries that had a football police, but we have met the football police � and they are giving us information on those fans they won�t let leave their countries (due to prior convictions),� the paper quoted Cele as saying.

The police have also set up special remand and court systems to cope with any arrests during the tournament.

�For those fans that are here, we will have special courts, we will have special cells � if they do anything out of hand, we will put them in the special cells and try them and give them a life sentence if it is serious and let them go home if they are innocent,� he said.

Cele has been a controversial figure in South Africa due to his claims a FIFA official told him that the World Cup is going to be taken away from South Africa due to safety concerns, and for saying that he is praying USA doesn�t make it to the second round so that he could avoid having to host President Obama, the paper reports. (ANI)

Policemen deployed at Thailand hospital after Red Shirts’ forced entry

Bangkok, Apr 30(ANI): A total of 100 policemen have been deployed around King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital in Bangkok to prevent any further forced entry by the Red Shirt protesters, police chief said.

Assistant national police chief Pol Lt-Gen Worapong Chiewpreecha said the
Centre for the Resolution of Emergency Situations (CRES) has ordered police to provide security for all hospitals in Bangkok.

The decision comes after about 200 supporters and guards of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) led by leader Payap Panket searched the hospital, claiming it was being used as a hideout by the security forces.

Chulalongkorn Hospital Director Adisorn Patradul said the hospital, located next to the Red Shirt rally site on Ratchadamri Road, has closed its out-patient service after the incident and currently it is only handling emergency cases.

The patients have been transferred to Siriraj and other hospitals, he added.

According to reports, the hospital evacuated more than 1,000 patients, but there are about 600 patients in the building.

Meanwhile, UDD leader Weng Tojirakarn has issued an apology for the raid, describing it as “inappropriate, too much, and unreasonable”.

“On behalf of all [UDD] leaders, I apologise to the public and to Chulalongkorn Hospital for the incident. The situation got out of control. It is not our policy to obstruct hospital operations,” Tojirakarn said. (ANI)

Protest over Jakarta tomb turns deadly

Two people were killed and dozens injured in clashes in Jakarta between security forces and people protesting at the bulldozing of a cemetery containing the remains of a revered Muslim scholar.

Police fired tear gas, pepper bullets and water cannon to disperse dozens of men armed with machetes and sticks who had massed in the clashes that lasted all day, witnesses said.

It left the area near Jakarta’s international port looking like a war zone, with blood-stained streets and burning police vehicles sending black smoke into the sky.

“Two people died and more than 50 were injured… the number may rise,” national police spokesman Zainuri Lubis said.

City spokesman Cucu Ahmad Kurnia earlier gave a higher injured toll.

“Seven people have been critically injured… one (security officer) had his hand cut off and another had his stomach ripped out with a machete,” Kurnia said.

“Another 83 people had serious and light injuries, mostly head injuries from being pelted with rocks.”

Most of the injured were members of the security forces, he added.

An AFP photographer saw members of the public order force – which is different from the regular police – beating, clubbing, kicking and stomping on injured protesters.

Demonstrators were also seen hitting security officers with sticks and stomping on those who fell.

Kurnia described the situation as “anarchic” and promised to negotiate with local residents about changes to the cemetery.

“They’ve misunderstood… we’re not removing the tomb but only the old buildings and gate,” he said.

“We’ve stopped the demolition and will resume negotiations with demonstrators another time.”

Six held over links to embassy attack

Indonesian police have detained six suspected terrorists on Sumatra island, including people who allegedly took part in the 2004 truck bombing of the Australian embassy in Jakarta.

The swoop was a prelude to two raids in Aceh province on Monday in which police killed one suspected terrorist and arrested four others.

The man killed by police during a raid on a house in Aceh Besar district was identified as Enaltao, 38, who was suspected of assisting Indonesians in military training in the southern Philippines.

National police spokesman Edward Aritong said the six men arrested at a road block on Sumatra were part of a new terrorist group that was disrupted in February when police found a training camp in Aceh.

He says two of those suspects, identified as Ibrahim and Lutfi, had been arrested earlier for their roles in the bombing of the Australian embassy, an attack which killed 10 people.

Mr Aritong described Ibrahim as a “motivator” for trainee terrorists while Lutfi was a “fundraiser”.

Both men are believed to be accomplices of terror leader Noordin Mohammed Top, who was killed by police last September.

They had reportedly served time in prison and been released.

Mr Aritong says another suspect, Bayu Sena, was involved in the making of bombs intended for an attack on Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono last year.

The assassination plan was uncovered during investigations into twin suicide attacks on luxury hotels in Jakarta last July which killed seven people.

A fourth detainee, Pandu Wicaksono, was wanted for harbouring Noordin, whose network, dubbed Al Qaeda in the Malay Archipelago, carried out the embassy attack and the Jakarta hotel bombings.

UK memos claim drug-taking among Afghan police – paper

Drug abuse and high attrition rates among the Afghan police mean it will take many years to create a strong force, according to internal British government memos reported by the warned, The Independent on Sunday said.

The Afghan National Police (ANP) is being trained by Western forces and strengthening it is a main aim in the war against Taliban insurgents.

But a series of British Foreign Ministry papers said attrition rates among officers in Helmand Province, including losses caused by death, desertion and dismissal, were as high as 60 percent while half the latest group of recruits had tested positive for narcotics, the Independent said.

It also said non-existent “ghost recruits” could make for up to a quarter of the force’s purported strength.

Bribery, corruption and lack of engagement with the local community were also mentioned, the newspaper said.

Some memos suggested stricter vetting of recruits and increased pay in higher-threat areas to combat the problem.

The Foreign Ministry said in a statement: “The challenges to police reform are significant and long term, but progress is being made.

“We are aware of widespread criticisms of the ANP, some of which are deeply concerning. The UK is fully committed to police reform to ensure a professional and accountable police force.”

Britain has about 10,000 troops in Afghanistan, the second-largest contingent behind the United States. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown supports the training of Afghan forces in order to start handing over responsibility for security.

The memos seem to confirm long-standing claims of ineffectiveness and corruption within the Afghan police force, which is often accused of taking bribes at checkpoints, colluding with the Taliban and keeping phantom employees on its payroll.

But poor equipment contributed to about 1,500 Afghan police being killed in fighting between 2007 and 2009, three times as many deaths as suffered by soldiers from the Afghan army.

There are 80,000 policemen in Afghanistan but the local Interior Ministry wants to double its size to 160,000 in line with Washington’s demands for larger Afghan security forces, which would help facilitate an exit strategy for Western forces.

(Writing by Avril Ormsby; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Home Ministry drops plan to setup police university

New Delhi, Mar 19 (ANI): The Union Home Ministry on Friday dropped a proposal to set up the National Police University in view of the inherent merits in opening study centers and chairs in the existing universities.

The Union Cabinet, which met here under the chairmanship of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, approved the dropping of the plan.

Earlier, the Home Ministry, proposed to set up a `National Police University’ dedicated to research and dissemination of knowledge through education in police -related subjects.

The approximate financial implication for the proposed university was estimated at Rs.350 crores, apart from recurring expenditure of Rs.25 crores per annum. Accordingly, a proposal was submitted to the Cabinet and `in principle’ approval was obtained in May, 2008.

The Home Ministry said that keeping in view the large requirement of resources, land, manpower etc. for the National Police University, an alternate proposal of conducting courses on police related subjects by networking the existing universities was considered.

“It was found that the objectives of establishing the National Police University can be met by pursuing the alternate proposal in a lesser time by utilizing the existing infrastructure in various universities, therefore it was felt that the proposal for National Police University may be dropped,” Home Ministry said. (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)

Suspected Jakarta bombing ‘mastermind’ was trained in Pak

Jakarta, Sep.9 (ANI): In yet another case which determines that terror is Pakistan’s principle export, it has been revealed that the prime suspect of the July 2009 Jakarta hotel attacks received military training in Pakistan.

Indonesia’s national police chief General Bambang Hendarso Danuri disclosed that Mohamad Jibril, who allegedly provided funds for the terror group responsible for the bombings, received training in Pakistan during 1999-2000.

“Jibril received military training from several Jemaah Islamiyah activists for about a year, from 1999- 2000,” Bambang told the House of Representatives.

“The training was conducted in Pakistan while he was studying there,” he added.

Mohamad Jibril alias Mohamad Rizky Ardhan alias Muhammad Jibriel Abdul Rahman was arrested two weeks ago.

He is believed to have played a key role in raising funds for the terrorist group led by Noordin Top, who belongs to Malaysia.

The Indonesian police suspect that the money was coming from Middle Easte countries such as Saudi Arabia and Yemen, however, it is yet to arrive on any conclusion.

Officials said they are still working to find more solid evidence against Jibril, who was nabbed after his cell phone number was found in Ali Muhammad bin Abdullah’s mobile phone.

Ali is a Saudi Arabian who was arrested a few days before Jibril, the jihadwatch.org reports.

It has also been revealed that Jibril’s uncle, Irfan S Awwas, was the chairman of a radical Islamic organization , Indonesia Mujahidin Council (MMI). (ANI)

Two feuding Paris mayors declare street one-way in opposite directions

London, Sep 3 (ANI): Two Paris mayors, belonging to neighbouring suburbs, are said to have taken their feud to the streets by declaring the same road one-way, but in opposite directions.

Patrick Balkany, the conservative mayor of Levallois-Perret, northwest of Paris, made the D909 one-way to cut the commuter traffic flowing through his district on August 31.

But Gilles Catoire, the Socialist mayor of neighbouring Clichy-la-Garenne, complained that Balkany’s move increased congestion in his area, and thus he declared his section of the road one-way, but in the opposite direction.

With the contradictory road-signs in place, the unsurprising result was commuter chaos, road rage and gridlock.

Municipal and national police were called in to direct traffic away from the area.

“What Clichy has done is not a long-term solution, but it is a response to a unilateral decision by the town of Levallois,” the Telegraph quoted Clichy’s deputy mayor, Alain Fournier, as saying.

But Balkany insisted: “The mayor of Clichy has taken a position that is unreasonable and is hurting his own constituents.”

In a Solomonesque ruling yesterday, the Governor, or prefect, of the Hauts-de-Seine department decided that Balkany was in the right.

Patrick Strzoda said that Levallois’ plan was “coherent”, and a study showed that there would be “no notable” rise in traffic in neighbouring towns.

Clichy’s decision, however, was done “without any prior study”, and had caused “serious disorder” that threatened drivers’ safety.

He ordered Clichy to make its part of the road two-way.

The row may still not be over, as Clichy’s mayor has promised to appeal the decision. (ANI)

US has to strengthen Afghan institutions to win war: NYT

New York, June 24 (ANI): The Obama Administration is giving Afghanistan the attention it requires to rectify the mistakes of the past, in order to check the unprecedented rise in the violence, and strengthen the Afghan Army and the police, according to leading US-based daily.

The situation in Afghanistan is grim, and in the first week of June there were more than 400 attacks, a level not seen since late 2001. President Barack Obama was right to send more US troops to fight, but violence will increase as strengthened ground forces step up the pressure on Taliban and Al Qaeda sanctuaries, The New York Times says

But it is also true that there can be no lasting security and no exit for American forces until Afghanistan has a functioning army and national police that can hold back the insurgents and earn the trust of Afghan citizens. Neither comes close today, it adds.

According to the paper, Washington has already spent seven-and-half-years and more than 15 billion dollars on failed training programs. President George W. Bush’s Pentagon never sent enough trainers to systematically embed American advisers in Afghan Army units, an approach now paying dividends in Iraq.

It failed to pay Afghan soldiers a living wage, making it easy for Taliban and drug lords to outbid them for the country’s unemployed young men.

The Pentagon also neglected to keep track of weapons it gave out, like mortars, grenade launchers and automatic rifles. Tens of thousands disappeared, sold to the highest bidder and, in some cases, used against American soldiers, the report said.

Perhaps most fundamentally, says the paper, American war planners never seemed to understand that a more effective Afghan Army and a more honest and competent police force could help persuade civilians that the war against the Taliban was more their own fight and not just an American war being fought on their territory.

Though the Obama’s team seems to be rectifying the mistakes of the past with four thousand more trainers are on their way, a revived training effort will require the full engagement of the new American commander, General Stanley McChrystal, it says.

It claims that Afghanistan’s national police force will have to be rebuilt almost from scratch.

Kabul’s central government is notoriously corrupt, but the tales from the field are even more distressing. Several thousand more police trainers with experience in civilian law enforcement are needed. European NATO members can and should be providing more help, the NYT article says.

There are high expectations for General McChrystal, based on his aggressive attitudes and past special operations success. To turn around the war, ordinary Afghans must begin to trust their own government more than they either fear or trust the extremists, it concludes. (ANI)

Over 10,000 foreign militants holed up in tribal areas: Malik

Islamabad, Apr 21 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister’s Interior Affairs Advisor Rehman Malik on Tuesday said that over 10,000 foreign militants were taking refuge in the tribal areas.

“Afghan currency and arms are being used in terrorist activities in Pakistan,” the News quoted Malik as saying.

Addressing the launching ceremony of Standard Operating Procedures for Police for dealing with women and investigating crimes of violence against women formulated by National Public Safety Commission and National Police Bureau, in collaboration with German Technical Cooperation, Malik asked Tehrik Nifaz-e Shariat-e Mohammedi (TNSM) chief Maulana Sufi Mohammed to read the Constitution before challenging it, as all state affairs were being run in accordance with the national document.

“What he said, is Islamic and conforms to the teachings of the Holy Quran and Sunnah,” he added.

Malik also warned the TNSM if it violates peace agreement signed with the provincial government.

“Strict action would be taken if TNSM violates peace agreement signed with the provincial government or fails to implement it. The Nizam-e Adl Regulation (NAR-2009) was invoked in 1994, under which a session judge was named as Qazi,” he added.

Malik ruled out any intention to lift ban from TNSM and said there is no chance as well. (ANI)

Bolivian police kills alleged terrorists

La Paz/Caracas – An elite Bolivian police squad killed three members of an alleged terrorist group Thursday at a hotel in the city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra.

Bolivian President Evo Morales saif from the Venezuelan city of Cumana that the dead were foreign “mercenaries” who were planning attacks on Morales himself and other high government officials.

The Santa Cruz daily El Deber reported in its online edition, citing national Police Chief Victor Hugo Escobar, that the three dead included one Bolivian with a Hungarian and a Colombian.

Two other suspects were arrested, Bolivian authorities said. Explosives and weapons were seized in the raid, Morales said.

The group was suspected of having perpetrated a bomb attack against the Santa Cruz residence of Archbishop Julio Terraza, who backs the opposition to left-wing populist Morales.

“Those terrorists were going to try to kill the vice president and Evo Morales,” said Morales, flanked by presidents Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Raul Castro of Cuba.

In La Paz, Bolivian Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera said that police responded with lethal force after coming under gunfire as they moved to arrest the group. (dpa)