Arab League chief visits Gaza Strip

GAZA, June 13 (Reuters) – Arab League chief Amr Moussa visited the Gaza Strip on Sunday, the highest Arab official to do so since its seizure by Hamas Islamists in 2007, and called for an end to Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian territory.

Moussa crossed into the enclave from Egypt, two weeks after Israel’s deadly interception of a Gaza aid flotilla.

“This blockade…must be lifted and must be broken and the Arab League decision is very clear in this regard,” Moussa said.

Egypt had kept its border with Gaza largely closed, bolstering Israel’s embargo, since Hamas’s war with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah faction three years ago.

But Cairo reopened its Rafah crossing with the territory after Israeli marines killed nine pro-Palestinian Turkish activists during violent confrontations on a Turkish-flagged vessel in the aid convoy on May 31.

Palestinian and Arab League officials said Moussa’s visit was also aimed at giving momentum to reconciliation talks between Hamas and Fatah that Egypt has sponsored but which have failed to bridge deep mistrust between the two rivals.

In what appeared to be a bid to avoid any impression of Arab League recognition of Hamas’s Gaza takeover, Moussa planned to meet Ismail Haniyeh, head of the Hamas government, in his home rather than in his office, officials said.

At a joint news conference with Moussa, Hamas Health Minister Basim Naeem said the visit indicated that “the boycott between Gaza and the Arab nation was broken”.

Naeen said Hamas also hoped the trip would “be the start of a practical plan to lift the (Israeli) blockade of Gaza once and for all, in a complete and comprehensive way”.

On Friday, Israel said it wanted to enlist global support to improve the flow of civilian goods to the Gaza Strip, while seeing to it that weapons did not reach the territory.

Amid an international outcry over the bloodshed in the flotilla raid, Israel faced mounting pressure to ease or lift a blockade that critics have described as collective punishment. (Editing by Diana Abdallah)

British Foreign Office did not authorise Sahil’s ransom for release from abductors in Pak

London, Mar.30 (ANI): The British Government has said that foreign office officials were neither consulted nor they did authorise the ransom paid by the family of five year old Sahil Saeed, who was kidnapped earlier this month from his grandmother’s house in Pakistan’s Punjab province’s Jhelum.

Sahil’s family had reportedly paid 110,000 pounds as ransom to the abductors to secure his safe release. The money was paid in Paris, hours after which the toddler was found abandoned by the kidnappers a few miles away from his ancestral house in Jhelum.

British foreign office minister Baroness Kinnock clarified that the government’s policy of ‘not making or facilitating substantive concessions to hostage-takers, including the payment of ransoms, is long standing and clear.’

“We believe that making such concessions rewards hostage-taking and encourages future kidnaps. Foreign and Commonwealth Office officials were neither consulted about nor authorised payment of a ransom to secure the release of Sahil Saeed in Pakistan,” Kinnock said while replying to a question raised by Liberal Democrat Lord Dykes.

She said officials would continue to offer ‘consular assistance’ to the families of those taken by kidnappers, The Mirror reports.

Earlier, unconfirmed reports in the Manchester Evening News had suggested that the Greater Manchester Police helped ‘facilitate’ the ransom payment, but the force refused to confirm or deny the claim.

Five persons were detained in Spain and France in connection with the abduction. Several arrests were also made in Pakistan in connection with the much reported kidnapping. (ANI)

Brown does a U-turn, vows to support IRA victims suing Libya

London, Sep. 7 (ANI): Hours after refusing to get involved in the issue, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has vowed to support IRA victims’ families in their fight to get compensation from Libya.

He declared that he would set up teams of Foreign Office officials dedicated to helping victims and their loved ones sue Libya.

“I care enormously about the impact of all IRA atrocities on the victims, their families and friends,” The Sun quoted him, as saying.

Earlier, Brown had written to the families’ lawyers saying a compensation bid would be fruitless, and insisted that it was more important to keep Libyan dictator Colonel Gaddafi as a friend on terrorism and trade.

However, he took a U-turn after his letter surfaced.

But his move added fuel to the lingering row over the Lockerbie bomber, in which critics claim terminally-ill Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi was freed to protect oil and trade deals with Libya.

“I believe the reason why the Government is not asking Libya for an apology or compensation is because of one oil deal with BP. I really believe that. It breaks my heart if we are doing deals for oil with the lives of British citizens,” said Jonathan Ganesh, who was injured in the 1996 Docklands bomb in London.

Furious campaigners pointed out that former US President George Bush forced a 1.5 billion dollar compensation settlement for terror victims out of Gaddafi, despite threats of an end to trade deals with America.

Shadow foreign secretary William Hague said: “The Prime Minister’s announcement is a stunning admission that the Government has failed to support the families of the victims of IRA terrorism in their pursuit of compensation from Libya.”

On Sunday, cancer specialist Professor Karol Sikora revealed that Libya’s government had paid to say that Megrahi had just three months to live.

He confirmed he had originally given the terror convict one year to live. But he later changed his mind when he was told he would only be freed if his life expectancy was three months or less. (ANI)

EU deploys election monitors to Malawi

Brussels – The European Union is sending 55 observers to monitor Malawi’s May 19 general election, in which President Bingu Wa Mutharik is vying for a new term in office, officials in Brussels said Friday.

The EU’s Election Observation Mission to Malawi will consist of 28 long term observers, who are already monitoring the election’s preparations, and 20 short term observers.

Their role will be to “observe voting, counting and the tabulation of results,” the EU’s executive arm in Brussels, the European Commission, said in a statement.

The monitors will be flanked by six experts and the mission’s chief observer, Luisa Morgantini, an Italian member of the European Parliament.

“The presidential and legislative elections in Malawi on the 19 May are crucial for the consolidation of the democratisation process in the country. Therefore it is essential that these elections are conducted in a credible and transparent manner, in accordance with international and regional standards,” said Benita Ferrero-Waldner, the EU’s external affairs commissioner.

The election monitoring mission will cost 2.8 million euros (3.6 million dollars), with the funds taken from the EU’s European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights (EIDHR).

The May 19 contest sees President Mutharika run against an alliance of the country’s two biggest opposition parties – the United Democratic Front (UDF) of former president Bakili Muluzi and the Malawi Congress Party (MCP).

The alliance was forged after Muluzi, who served two consecutive terms as president, from 1994 to 2004, failed to introduce the constitutional changes that would have allowed him to run for a third term.

The EU frequently deploys election monitors to the world’s hot spots and is currently considering whether to send a similar mission to Afghanistan, where presidential elections are to be held in August.

The mission in Malawi will stay in the country until June 13 in order to assess the post-election period, officials in Brussels said. (dpa)