Qaeda-backed LeT set for series of terror attacks in India, warns Israel’s NSC

Tel Aviv, Sep.18 (ANI): Israel’s National Security Council’s Counter-Terrorism Bureau has issued a terror warning for India, saying a Pakistani terror group, having close links with Al-Qaeda, is planning to carry out series of strikes across the country.

“A Pakistani terror organization affiliated with al-Qaida and responsible for the attacks in Mumbai last year is planning to carry out a string of attacks throughout the Indian subcontinent,” the notice issued by the bureau stated.

The warning said that though foreigners, especially from western countries could be targeted, and that Israelis and places where Israelis usually assemble in large numbers are on top of the terror outfit’s hit list.

The bureau rated the threat as ‘imminent and concrete’ and emphasized on the Jammu and Kashmir region, The Jerusalem Post reported.

This is probably the first time that such a warning has been issued regarding threat to Israelis in India, as India is considered a friendly country with thousands of Israelis living in different part of the nation. (ANI)

Trinamool chief Mamata Banerjee, CPI (M) rival file their nominations

Kolkata, Apr. 22 (ANI): Trinamul Congress leader Mamata Banerjee filed her nomination for the South Kolkata parliamentary constituency on Wednesday.

Her main CPI (M) opponent, Rabin Deb also filed his nomination today.

Banerjee declared total assets of Rs.4, 73, 193.56, including Rs.28322 in cash and three bank deposits of Rs.74, 589.85, Rs.29, 174.71 and Rs.14, 976.00 each. She also holds NSC worth Rs.3, 02, 600 and NSS worth Rs.10, 000. She has no car or property. Her jewelry totals to 9gm 75mg, worth Rs.13, 531 – a declaration truly modest in comparison to the millionaire stalwarts contesting in these elections across the country.

Deb, ironically for a Leftist, declared more assets than Mamata Banerjee. Though he has only Rs.14911 in cash, his wife has assets worth over Rs.7 lakhs in her name.

Speaking on the occasion, Deb said: “We want from the Left Front that a non-Congress, non-BJP third front government is formed in Delhi. With this aim in our state, the Left Front leadership has appealed for victory in all the 42 seats. From filing nomination, to announcement of candidate list earlier on April 3, in all these efforts, we want that in South Kolkata constituency also the voters vote for the establishment of a Third Front government in Delhi.”

Banerjee made a quite exit after filing her nomination papers.

Kolkata goes to polls on May 13. By Ajitha Menon (ANI)

Pakistan’s parliament to consider anti-terror recommendations

Islamabad, April 7 (IANS) The National Assembly, the lower house of Pakistan’s parliament will Thursday consider a road map for implementing a 14-point anti-terrorism resolution adopted at a joint session of the legislature, it was announced here Tuesday.

The upper house, the Senate, will consider the recommendations April 17.

Speaking to reporters here Tuesday, Senator Raza Rabbani, who heads parliament’s National Security Committee (NSC), said the panel had unanimously framed the recommendations.

Parliament had, at a joint session in October 2008, adopted the 14-point anti-terrorism resolution to evolve an agreed approach to deal with the threats to the country’s security and to clamp down on rising militancy.

The resolution declared, among other things, that the drone and ground attacks by US-NATO forces in Pakistan’s tribal areas along the Afghanistan border were unacceptable.

Pakistani leaders had raised the issue Tuesday with visiting chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, and the US special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke.

However, both sides agreed to disagree on the issue and would further discuss it at the trilateral Pakistan-Afghanistan-US meeting in Washington next month.

On Monday, the NSC reiterated its condemnation of the drone attacks, terming them a threat to Pakistan’s sovereignty.

‘The government would vigorously take up this issue with the visiting US special representative, in light of the parliamentary committee recommendations,’ Rabbani told reporters after a meeting of the committee.

‘Let everybody be sure that parliament is supreme and the committee of parliament is making it categorically clear that the drone attacks are unacceptable,’ he added.

Responding to a question on the delay in finalising the NSC recommendations, Rabbani said: ‘We are facing multi-dimensional issues and have to keep in view the local, regional and international obligations.’

‘A number of state and non-state actors are involved in this problem and it’s necessary to take up all the dimensions before reaching a final conclusion and prepare workable recommendations,’ the senator added.

Sharif says that Gilani has been told to repeal of 17th Amendment

Lahore, Mar.18 (ANI): Former Pakistan Prime Minister and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif said Wednesday that Prime Minister Gilani has been told to repeal the controversial 17th Amendment.

Sharif told reporters here that the supremacy of law, elimination of poverty and outdated system were his top priorities.

“We have talked to the Prime Minister and now 17th Amendment will be abolished,” he said.

The Constitution (Seventeenth Amendment) Act, 2003 was an amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan passed in December 2003, after over a year of political wrangling between supporters and opponents of Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf.

Through this amendment, many changes were made to the Constitution of Pakistan, especially those relating to the office of the President and the reversal of the effects of the Thirteenth Amendment.

The major points of the Amendment were as follows:

President Musharraf’s Legal Framework Order (LFO) was largely incorporated into the constitution, with a few changes.

Article 63(1)(d) of the Constitution was made operative after December 31, 2004. The intent of this was to prohibit a person from holding both a political office (such as that of the President) and an “office of profit” – an office that is typically held by a career government servant, civil or military – such as the office of the Chief of Army Staff.

Although this was supposed to separate the two types of office, a loophole – “.. other than an office declared by law ..” – allowed Parliament to pass an ordinary law later in 2004 – permitting the President to hold on to the office of Chief of Army Staff, an option that President Musharraf then exercised.

Should the President win a majority in a vote of confidence in the electoral college within 30 days of the passage of this amendment, he shall be deemed to be elected to the office of President. (On January 1, 2004, Musharraf won 658 out of 1,170 electoral-college votes – a 56% majority – and was thereby deemed to be elected president.) The President regains the authority to dissolve the National Assembly – and thus effectively to dismiss the Pakistani Prime Minister – but the power to do so is made subject to an approval or veto by the Supreme Court of Pakistan.

A Governor’s power to dissolve a Provincial Assembly is similarly subject to Supreme Court approval or veto.

Article 152A, which dealt with the National Security Council, was annulled. (The legal basis for the NSC is now an ordinary law, the National Security Council Act of 2004.)

Ten laws had been added by the LFO to the Sixth Schedule, which is a list of “laws that are not to be altered, repealed or amended without the previous sanction of the President.”

After this amendment, five of those laws will lose their Sixth Schedule protection after six years. Laws to be unprotected include the four laws that established the system of democratic local governments. (Those in favor argued that it would enable each province to evolve its own systems. Opponents feared that authoritarian provincial governments could disempower or even dismantle the system of local democracies.)

Sharif said that restoration of judges was his only objective for joining the Long March. (ANI)

US welcomes Pak move to restore deposed CJ

Washington, Mar.16 (ANI): The Obama administration here has welcomed the Pakistan Government’s decision to reinstate deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.Washington gave its reaction after uthorities in Islamabad informed it about its decision.

According to sources, Chaudhry will assume his responsibilities on March 22.

Meanwhile, a report requested by United States President Barack Obama on overhauling US policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan has warned that Pakistan needs urgent help to fight its challenges, saying it could be the launch pad for the next 9/11 otherwise.

The report published in the Telegraph said President Obama had entrusted the task to overhaul the US policy to former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Middle East expert Bruce Riedel.

Riedel’s working group has concluded that stabilizing Pakistan was now the higher priority, the paper quoted its source.

Riedel said in the report, prepared in conjunction with the National Security Council (NSC), that he believed that unless serious action was taken, Pakistan would become a ‘terrorist university’, representing a far greater threat to the security of the US and Europe than Afghanistan did before 9/11.

“Recent apocalyptic intelligence on the situation in Pakistan has shocked the Obama administration and convinced Riedel’s review team that radicals trained in Pakistan are the greatest threat to western security,” the paper said.

It quoted a source familiar with the White House Pak-Afghan policy review discussions as saying that Riedel said on the record that a failed state in Pakistan was America’s ‘worst nightmare’ in the 21st century.

“The Pakistani government seems unable to control its military or intelligence people. The Tribal Areas are already a failed state and a safe haven for terrorists. If that spreads, the whole country will become a terrorist university. The chances of a spectacular in the US or Britain is exponentially increased. And Pakistan has nuclear weapons,” Telegraph cited the review report, as saying.

It said the Riedel review had reportedly concluded that seven out of 10 Taliban and other militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan were “reconcilable”, who could be bribed, cajoled and persuaded to turn away from extremism.

“The review, likely to be published within days, will recommend that non-military aid to Pakistan is quadrupled. Payments to Afghan tribal chiefs will also increase. In return, the Pakistani government will be expected to agree to a wholesale overhaul of its military which will see US special forces retrain Pakistani soldiers in counter-insurgency warfare,” The Telegraph said.

Richard Holbrooke, the US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, and a co-chairman of the Riedel Review, has warned that the international effort in Afghanistan could only succeed if Pakistan’s Tribal Areas were under control. (ANI)

Pak to abolish National Security Council: Gilani

Rezaul H Laskar Islamabad, Feb 24 (PTI) Pakistan government has decided to wind up the controversial National Security Council (NSC), the top decision-making body on security-related matters set up during former President Pervez Musharraf’s regime, Premier Yousuf Raza Gilani said today. He said a bill will soon be tabled in Pakistan’s Parliament to abolish the NSC, which included the three services chiefs and was headed by the President during the Musharraf era.

There was wide disagreement among political parties when the NSC was set up during the Musharraf regime, Gilani told reporters on the sidelines of an official function. The matter of dissolving the NSC had been discussed with President Asif Ali Zardari and the Law Minister has been asked to table a bill in the National Assembly, lower house of parliament, to wind up the body, Gilani said.

The Parliament is supreme as it is the voice of the 160 million people of Pakistan. “Parliament is supreme and sovereign and can debate all issues.

It is the voice of the people and whatever they decide, we will bow to it,” he said while responding to a question about Musharraf. The PPP-led government believes in consensus and parliament has not indemnified Musharraf, he said.

PTI.

Tadpoles could help fight cancer

Washington, Jan 30 (ANI): The humble tadpole could provide the key to developing anti-skin cancer drugs, say researchers at the University of East Anglia (UEA).

The scientists have identified a compound which, when introduced into Xenopus Laevis tadpoles, blocks the movement of the pigment cells that give the tadpoles their distinctive markings and which develop into the familiar greenish-brown of the adult frog.

It is the uncontrolled movement and growth of pigment cells (melanophore) in both tadpoles and humans that causes a particularly dangerous form of skin cancer.

By blocking the migration of these cells, the development and spread of cancerous tumours can potentially be prevented.

The study has been published in the Cell Press journal ‘Chemistry and Biology’.

The study has identified for the first time an effective new man-made MMP (metalloproteinase) inhibitor, known as ‘NSC 84093′.

“This is an exciting advance with implications in the fight against cancer,” said lead author Dr Grant Wheeler of UEA’s School of Biological Sciences.

“The next step is to test the compound in other species and, in the longer term, embark on the development of new drugs to fight skin cancer in humans,” the expert added.

The species Xenopus Laevis (South African clawed frog) is more closely related to humans than one might expect. It only diverged from man 360 million years ago and has the same organs, molecules and physiology. (ANI)