No mercy for thugs at FIFA World Cup, says S.African minister

Cape Town, Apr 30 (ANI): South African Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa has said the police would show no mercy to the hooligans at the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

“Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa is confident banning orders will prevent 3,000 British troublemakers from entering the country,” reported The Daily Star.

Mthethwa said the officers would deal swiftly with anyone, who slipped through the net or others who sought to disrupt the event.

“We have a list of all those hooligans who are not supposed to come. If they find themselves here, we”ll know them,” said Mthethwa.

“They are going to face the wrath of the law,” he added.

The 2010 FIFA World Cup that kicks off on Friday will be the 19th FIFA World Cup, the premier international football tournament. (ANI)

Will Sarabjeet be spared the gallows under Pak Govt.’s plans to commute death sentences?

Islamabad, Sep.17 (ANI): The Pakistan government is considering commuting death sentences, but such a step may not help the cause of Sarabjeet Singh, the Indian inmate who has been awarded a death sentence by a Lahore anti-terrorism court in October 1991.

Interior Advisor Rehman Malik said the government has sent a draft to the law division seeking legal opinion on the proposal to commute death sentences.

Rehman, however, said that even if the proposal is accepted there would be no mercy for terrorists.

“They (terrorists) will have to face the death penalty,” The Dawn quoted Malik, as saying.

According to an estimate there are 7000 death inmates in Pakistan at present.

Pakistan security agencies have maintained that Singh had admitted that he was sent to Pakistan to carry out serial bomb blasts in Lahore, Faislabad, and Kasur, and was trained by the Indian Army, and the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).

Singh was awarded the death sentence by a Lahore anti-terrorism court in October 1991.

He challenged the verdict in the Supreme Court, however, the apex court quashed his appeal in September, 2005, saying that the review petition was not filed within the time period as mentioned in the law.

In March 2006, a two member Supreme Court bench dismissed Singh’s petition against his conviction in the Lahore’s Yakki Gate bomb blast in 1990.

Singh has been languishing in Pakistan jails for the last 28 years, as Pakistan has stonewalled release even on humanitarian grounds, despite continuous efforts by Indian diplomatic channels. (ANI)

Federer declares war on players involved in match fixing

London, June 25 (ANI): Hitting out against players involved in match-fixing, tennis star Roger Federer has called for severe penalties for any player involved in the scandal.

After his 6-2, 6-2, 6-4 victory over Spain’s Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Federer urged the sport’s governing bodies to show no mercy if any cheating of the system can be proven.

“We should have massive bans on those who get caught so they get really scared of doing it,” he said.

Federer was speaking after it emerged that on-line bookmaker Betfair alerted the Tennis Integrity Unit (TIU) after 700,000 pounds was gambled on the first-round contest in which Austrian No.26 seed Jurgen Melzer beat American Wayne Odesnik by three sets to love.

Some bookmakers suspended betting on the match as the wagers flooded in. Federer said: “We don’t talk about it in the locker room. But it has happened more frequently than we talk about it.

“If it’s happening or not, we are suspecting. We’re not sure. But, of course, it has no place in tennis.

“It’s hard to control. But I’m sure with the ATP [Association of Tennis Professionals] and the ITF [International Tennis Federation], we’re trying our best to catch those guys – if there are any out there.”

World No.2 Federer was also asked whether it would be difficult to control a flow of information reaching bookmakers, the Daily Express reported.

“I don’t know. I’ve never been approached. I never knew it existed until a few years ago when all of a sudden I heard about it. So I’ve been shocked to hear it,” he said. (ANI)

Pirates threaten revenge on US after captain’s rescue

MOGADISHU: A Somali pirate chief on Monday threatened to target Americans in revenge for the rescue of a US captain in an operation that saw
military snipers kill three of his captors after a five-day standoff and arrest the fourth, said to be just 16 years old.

After the rescue on Sunday evening, the head of the pirate group that had held the American hostage aboard a lifeboat said they had agreed to free him without ransom before the US navy took action.

“The American liars have killed our friends after they agreed to free the hostage without ransom, but I tell you that this matter will lead to retaliation and we will hunt down particularly American citizens travelling our waters,” Abdi Garad said by phone from the pirate lair of Eyl.

“We will intensify our attacks even reaching very far away from Somalia waters, and next time we get American citizens… they (should) expect no mercy from us.”

The rescued captain Richard Phillips was flown to the assault ship USS Boxer. He called his family and received a medical checkup.