Tight security at Vaishno Devi shrine ahead of “Navratri”

Katra, Sept 18 (ANI): Security has been beefed up at the famous Vaishno Devi Temple near Jammu ahead of the nine-day “Navratri” festival.

Paramilitary and police personnel are patrolling and frisking people at important points in Katra, which is thronged by thousands of devotees every year, especially during Navratri.

The nine-day Navratri festival will begin from Saturday and the authorities claim to be in full control of the situation.

“There is much fanfare in Katra during Navratra festival and the inflow of tourists also rises manifold during those days. We have made proper security arrangements. We have taken the help of the CRPF. This time, we also have one contingent of Haryana police,” said Ashok Sharma, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP).

The devotees making their way to the shrine were also put through rigorous checking, a routine, exercised with extra care, considering the sensitive nature of the shrine and keeping recent threats in mind.

The devotees complied without complaining.

“There was not much trouble during the security check. We were checked several times but we did not face any problem. It was all done very safely,” said Vijay Kumar, a devotee.

‘Navratri’, which literally means nine nights, is observed twice a year.

The festival lasts for nine days in honour of nine manifestations of Durga, goddess of power ,and fall in the months of April-May and September-October.

It is believed that during the Navratri, Goddess Durga descends on earth to rid it of the demons and blesses her devotees with happiness and prosperity. (ANI)

Bihar flood victims allege government apathy

Kevati (Bihar), Aug 27 (ANI): Angry and anguished villagers have blamed government apathy for the flood-related havoc across Bihar.

Thousands of people have been displaced after the Misraulia dam broke in theState’s Darbhanga district inundating several villages in the region.

The water has flooded the National Highway 105 Highway, taking away tracts of road with the flow.

Villages have turned into mini islands and are cut off from the rest of the region. Floods have affected around a million people in eleven districts of the state.

Reportedly, over 100 villages are reeling under floods in Darbhanga district.

The death toll due to floods has risen to 23 in the state, with seven fresh cases being reported on Wednesday.

The villagers alleged the government has turned blind eye to their woes and want the government to provide relief to them.

“The flood water has cut away large tracts of land in Khirma. The administration is turned a blind eye towards us. A boat was provided to the villagers, which was broken and hence it sunk with 25 people onboard. Till now, there has been no help from the government. Further on, there is a bridge, which has also been washed away by the flood water. There is around five to seven feet of water on the road but there is no rescue work being carried on to save the people,” said Janki Ahmed, a flood victim.

Movement is also restricted due to the washing away of roads in the region.

Paramilitary forces have been called in to rescue stranded people, but according to some paramilitary officials, it is impossible to carry out rescue work in inundated villages.

“Our main aim is to rescue people. But villages here are cut off from the rest of the region. We conducted a survey and found that the villagers here did not want to leave their homes, instead, they want the government to provide them with relief material. It is impossible to carry out rescue operation here,” said Manoj Kumar Chwarsla, a paramilitary official.

State Chief Minister Nitish Kumar is conducting an aerial survey of the flood-affected regions to assess the damage.

“I will conduct an aerial survey of the flood affected regions and hold discussions with the officials there. Instructions have already been issued to the officials there as to how to deal with the situation in the flood-affected areas. How people have to be rescued, how to provide relief material to them and all this work is being carried on by the disaster management department,” said Nitish Kumar.

The villagers are forced to remain indoors and are even facing food shortage in some areas.(ANI)

Tribals block national highway alleging security forces for atrocities

Durgapur (West Bengal), June 30 (ANI): Armed with bows and arrows, many tribals blocked the national highway leading to Durgapur in Hooghly district of West Bengal on Tuesday to express their fury over security forces’ alleged atrocities in the guise of flushing out Maoists in Lalgarh region of west Medinipur district.

Protestors under the banner of Jharkhand Disom Party (JDP), a tribal organisation, alleged that the security personnel had committed grave atrocities by targeting innocent villagers, the tribal community, in particular, during their combing operation in search of Maoist rebels.

To vent their ire against this, the supporters of JDP blocked the traffic on the road leading to the steel city of Durgapur and onward to New Delhi for over two hours. They were demanding suspension of the mopping up operation by the uniformed personnel.

“We are demanding to stop the atrocities on the innocent tribals in the name of curbing Maoists in Lalgarh,” said Laxmikanta Hansda, a tribal leader of Jharkhand Disom Party.

Police and Paramilitary forces began their final assault on a Maoist stronghold, Katapahari region of Paschimi (west) Medinipur district in West Bengal on Monday (June 29).

According to local reports, the state and central security forces in their joint operation have surrounded the Maoist bastion at Katrapahari, 6 kilometres from the epicentre Lalgarh. They were in the process of beginning of a two-pronged assault from the north and south to flush out the rebels.

On June 20, Police had regained control of Lalgarh, which was earlier captured by the Maoist rebels in one of the most brazen attacks in recent years that sparked unease among investors in the communist-ruled state.

Since then the Maoists have eluded the security forces, which are now aggressively looking for them.

Earlier this week, the Government at the Centre banned and formally labelled the Maoist insurgents “a terrorist group”, hoping it would give security forces more enforcement powers after the rebels briefly created a ‘liberated zone’ in West Bengal. (ANI)

Final assault in Lalgarh faces demonstrations against operations

New Delhi, June 30 (ANI): Police here on Tuesday detained several protestors demonstrating against the paramilitary forces’ operations against Maoists in West Bengal.

Activists of the Revolutionary Democratic Front (RDF) and the Naujawan Bharat Sabha (NBS) held banners, placards and raised slogans against the Communist Party of India (Marxist) Government of West Bengal for deployment of security personnel against the Maoists.

Protesters demanded immediate withdrawal of the Border Security Force (BSF), the Assam Rifles, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), the Commando Battalion for Retaliate Action (COBRA) and other elite paramilitary forces along with the West Bengal police from Lalgarh town in West Midnapore district, which was recently captured by the Maoist rebels.

“We oppose the state terror that is going on in Lalgarh and atrocities are being done on tribals. Lalgarh’s cause is a public issue. This protest will continue and no state terror can stop it,” said an unidentified protester.

Protesters also demanded that alleged harassment of women and children in Lalgarh should immediately be stopped.

Paramilitary forces began their final assault on a Maoist stronghold, Katapahari region in West Bengal on Monday.

Earlier this week, the Central Government banned and formally labelled the Maoist insurgents as a terrorist group, hoping it would give security forces more enforcement powers after the rebels briefly created a “liberated zone” in West Bengal.

The move allows authorities to arrest members of the Maoist party even if they have not been involved in rebel violence. (ANI)

Pak security forces kill 46 Taliban militants in Lower Dir

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Peshawar, Apr 27 (ANI): Pakistani security forces have killed at least 46 militants in a ground and air operation against the Taliban in the troubled Lower Dir on Monday, the army has said./pp
According to security sources, 46 militants including two top commanders Qari Quresh and Maulana Shahid were killed by the Frontier Corps troops in Maidan area of Lower Dir. /pp
Paramilitary troops and helicopter gunships bombed suspected bases in Lower Dir for a second day running, The News reported./pp
The Taliban had earlier suspended talks with the government, demanding the army halt its latest operation codenamed Taur Tandar against militants./pp
Indefinite curfew has been imposed in Lal Qila, Islampura, Kal Kot and other adjoining areas. /pp
Security forces regained control of Lal Qila, a key militant stronghold in tehsil Maidan. The area people welcomed the action of security forces. (ANI)/p

Paramilitary forces deployed in Darjeeling

Darjeeling, Apr 24 (ANI): Authorities in Darjeeling, start flowing in paramilitary troops in the town, to put in place, tight security arrangements ahead of the third phase of polling slated to be held on April 30.

Till now, two companies of paramilitary forces have been sent to the region while six more companies will be deployed on the election day. Authorities feel that deploying paramilitary forces will instill confidence among voters.

“There is a psychological fear in their minds that we want to remove. We are going to nooks and corners telling people that their votes will be secret and no one will come to know who they are voting for. Please caste your vote without fear,” said Kunda Lal Tamta, Inspector General of Police, North Bengal.

Darjeeling has 1348 polling booths.

There is already tension prevailing in the region with the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF), an organisation which is demanding a separate state of Gorkhaland to be carved out of West Bengal, has announced its boycott of the general polls.

There is no single national issue in this election and the campaigning has been marked by personal attacks and rhetoric. Parties are wooing voters with populist measures such as food subsidies and a promise of better governance and security. (ANI)

Anti-India protesters, police clash in Kashmir, AS

SRINAGAR, India (AP) Paramilitary forces fired rubber bullets and tear gas at hundreds of rock-throwing anti-India protesters in Kashmir who turned violent after offering prayers in mosques Friday, injuring at least 13 people, police said. Chanting “We want freedom” and “Indian forces leave Kashmir,” the protesters fought street battles with police in Srinagar, the main city in Indian-administered Kashmir.

At least 13 protesters were injured in the clashes, a police officer said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters. Anti-India sentiment runs deep in Kashmir, where most people favor independence from mainly Hindu India or joining predominantly Muslim Pakistan.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan; both countries claim the region in its entirety and have fought two wars over its control since winning independence from Britain in 1947. Around this time last year, the region witnessed some of the largest protests against Indian rule in decades.

The protests were met with a tough Indian crackdown on separatists which killed at least 50 people. Maulana Showkat Ahmed Shah, a separatist and a religious leader, has asked protesters to stop throwing stones at government forces, saying it is forbidden by Islam.

Shah said last month that according to the Prophet Muhammad’s preaching, stone-throwing “neither hunts a game nor kills (or hurts) an enemy, but it gouges out an eye or breaks a tooth.” Afadul Mujtaba, the Srinagar city police chief, also has asked people to stop attacking government forces with stones, citing the Islamic teaching.

A debate has been raging on the issue in Indian-held Kashmir since then. On Friday, a top pro-Pakistan separatist leader accused Shah of quoting the Prophet Muhammad out of context.

“This (saying) relates to hunting game and in no way can be applied to this situation,” said the leader, Syed Ali Shah Geelani. “It’s our duty to resist occupation.

Kashmiris hurl stones or rocks or whatever after forces stop them from protesting the Indian military occupation,” he said. A variety of militant separatist groups have been fighting since 1989 to end Indian rule in Kashmir.

More than 68,000 people, most of them civilians, have been killed in the uprising and subsequent Indian crackdown.

India is more secure now than three months ago: Chidambaram

Sivaganga (Tamil Nadu), Mar 15 (ANI): Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram on Sunday said that India was more secured now than it was three months ago.

He also warned that the country’s reply to any terror attack on its territory would be like the one in Mumbai.

“India is more secured than it was three months ago. Any terror attack on our territory will be severe like the one in Mumbai,” Chidambaram said while addressing a meeting in his constituency here.

He asserted that the country’s safety and security would be further strengthened.

“Paramilitary forces, army and police were being given more equipments and arms to ensure total safety and security of India,” he added.

The Minister said the problems in the neighbouring countries like, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh and Pakistan has put Indian Army in a state of preparedness.

Chidambaram also described the National Rural Employment Guarantee Programme and farm loan waiver as revolutionary schemes of the UPA government, which had started implementing in Sivaganga. (ANI)

Pak Government continues with security crackdown as ‘Long March’ gets underway

Lahore/Karachi/Quetta, Mar.12 (ANI): The Pakistan Government continued with its security crackdown on opposition leaders and activists for the second consecutive day Thursday, even as the proposed “Long March” got underway in various provincial capitals.

Police said that close 100 more leaders and activists had been taken into custody on charges of disturbing the peace and compromising law and order.

In Baloch capital Quetta, political workers and lawyers gathered defiantly for the proposed “Long March”. Shouting slogans and waving party flags, they boarded cars or organised sit-down protests. Pictures of sacked Pakistan Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry and leaders of various legal organisations dotted the skyline and accompanying vehicles.

Agencies quoted Ali Ahmed Kurd, president of the Supreme Court Bar Association, as saying: “I want to make it clear that we have been peaceful for the last two years and we are peaceful at the moment but our way should not be blocked.”

The so-called “Long March” to press for an independent judiciary could destabilise the year-old government of President Asif Ali Zardari at a time when key US ally Pakistan faces severe problems from Islamist militants and a sinking economy.

In Karachi, Pakistani lawyers and opposition parties were heading for a showdown with the government which has banned rallies and detained hundreds of activists.

Paramilitary soldiers and police surrounded the High Court where lawyers were assembling, witnesses said.

‘Our buses are not being allowed in so we intend to walk,’ Munir A. Malik, a former president of the Supreme Court Bar Association and a protest organiser.

The protesters are expected to converge on Islamabad on Monday to demand the reinstatement of Chaudhry, who was dismissed by former president and army chief Pervez Musharraf in 2007.

The protest organisers plan a sit-in outside parliament, although the government has said the rally will not be allowed in the city centre.

Zardari has refused to reinstate the judge. Analysts say he fears Chaudhry could nullify an amnesty Musharraf granted Zardari and his late wife Benazir Bhutto.

His main rival, opposition leader and former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, has thrown his weight behind the lawyers, putting him into open confrontation with Zardari.

Sharif, who is also infuriated by a Supreme Court ruling which barred him and his brother from office, and which he blamed on Zardari, called the protest a defining moment for Pakistan.

The government has threatened to prosecute Sharif for sedition if violence erupts during the “Long March”.

If the crisis becomes acute, the military, which has ruled for more than half the country’s 61 years of history, may have no choice but to step in.

Top US and British diplomats have been meeting all sides in recent days in an effort to work out a compromise.

The United States called for restraint and urged all sides to avoid violence and respect the rule of law, a US embassy spokesman said.

Worry about political turmoil has weighed on financial markets in recent days but the the main stock index opened higher and the rupee was flat.(ANI)

Pakistani forces kill 10 militants in Khyber tribal area

Islamabad  – Pakistani security officials claimed on Monday to have killed 10 militants in the country’s restless tribal district along the Afghan border.

Helicopter gunships and artillery shells targeted a militants’ location in the Khyber area, which serves as a vital route for supplies for NATO troops deployed in landlocked Afghanistan, said an official from Frontier Corps, the paramilitary troops fighting the Taliban.

“Our forces destroyed their communication system, 15 vehicles and killed 10 of their men,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Extremists from an the organization Lashkar-e-Islam dominate the Khyber district that borders Afghanistan. They assist Taliban militants to launch raids on NATO supply vehicles using the Khyber Pass.

More than 400 trucks and containers have been torched or plundered over the last three months, resulting into repeated disruptions in NATO supplies.

NATO forces rely heavily on supplies of fuel, equipment and other items through Khyber.

According to the US State Department, up to 75 per cent of the US military supplies, including 40 per cent of the fuel for its troops stationed in Afghanistan, passes through the famous Khyber Pass.

The disruptions in Pakistan have forced the US and its NATO allies to look for new supply routes through Central Asian states and even Iran. (dpa)

Paramilitaries begin withdrawing from Jammu and Kashmir

Srinagar, Feb.8 (ANI): Paramilitary troops have started withdrawing from the Kashmir Valley on the directives of the Central Government.

The Government announced on February 4 that it would withdraw 133 companies of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) (over 13,000 personnel) from Jammu and Kashmir.

These personnel were deployed in Jammu and Kashmir to maintain law and order during the Amarnath land row and later to ensure peaceful conduct of elections to the State legislature last year.

Out of the 133 companies, 80 were assigned law and order duties during the Amarnath land row and the other 53 were deployed during the polls in November-December last year.

According to Prabhakar Tripathi, Public Relations Officer of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), the troop withdrawal was in compliance with the decision taken by the Home Ministry.

“The battalions which had come from outside the state are going back to their respective States and those battalions whose headquarters is here (Srinagar) have gone back to their barracks,” said Tripathi.

CRPF personnel were happy to be relieved.

“We are very happy that we are going back to our homes and will be meeting our families. We had come here for the elections, and now that the elections have been peacefully conducted, we are returning to our homes and our family members will also be very happy to see us,” said Akbar Ali of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF).

The decision to withdraw the paramilitary personnel from the valley was taken after Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah directed police in the state to take law and order into their hands.

Abdullah has said that the assistance of federal forces should only be taken when there is an emergent need. (ANI)

At least 15 militants killed near Afghan border

Islamabad – Paramilitary troops killed at least 15 Islamist militants in the troubled north-western tribal region close to the Afghan border, the military and officials said on Sunday.

Fifteen rebels were killed in a raid by the Frontier Corps (FC) soldiers on a militant stronghold in Darwazgai area of Mohmand tribal district, according to an FC statement.

One security official had died in the operation, the statement said.

The intense gunfights took place on Saturday as the security forces moved to take out militant positions in the area, a local intelligence official told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa on phone.

The official said the fighting stopped shortly after the nightfall.

More than 600 militants, mostly Afghan Taliban, attacked a paramilitary fort in Mohmand last week. The government forces repulsed the attack and killed at least 40 fighters. Six soldiers also died in the combat.

Mohmand borders the restive Bajaur tribal district, a known al-Qaeda and Taliban sanctuary where the military had claimed killing more than 1,500 militants in a major offensive launched in August 2008. dpa

Shias observe Ashura across Pakistan

slamabad, Jan.8 (ANI): Thousands of Shia Muslims held peaceful Ashura processions amid tight security across Pakistan on Thursday, commemorating the death of the Prophet Mohammed”s grandson Imam Hussein.

Police and paramilitary soldiers escorted the Shia community”s parades in several major cities, and commandos were perched on some rooftops along the routes in a bid to prevent violence, the Dawn reported.

Curfew was imposed the northwestern town of Hangu on Wednesday, where 40 people were killed in an Ashura attack in 2007 and 12 people were wounded in a mortar attack outside a Shia mosque last year.

Shia Muslims stage religious processions on Ashura to commemorate the death of Imam Hussein at Karbala in modern-day Iraq in 680 AD.

The mourners recited elegies, carried black banners and marched behind replicas of Imam Hussein”s tomb in Iraq, with some beating their chests and whipping their backs with flails in a bloody display of devotion.

The Ashura procession in Islamabad ended at a Shia mosque in Rawalpindi.

A similar procession in Lahore was to end at a mosque in the old part of the city late Thursday.

Other major Ashura events were held in Karachi and parts of central Punjab province, southwestern Balochistan and North West Frontier Province.

Shias make up about 20 per cent of Pakistan”s Sunni-dominated population of 160 million people. (ANI)

Young Communist League pledges to implement pact

Kathmandu, Jan 3 (ANI): Young Communist League (YCL) chief Ganesh Man Pun has said that the YCL would fully comply with the agreement between the Maoists and the Nepali Congress (NC).

The commitment comes a day after Prime Minister Prachanda assured the Nepali Congress that the YCL would vacate private, public and government buildings and disband its paramilitary structure within three weeks.

During an interaction programme here on Friday, he said that YCL cadres would be established in society through involvement in various development activities.

“We have started the process of vacating the buildings and also of involving cadres in various development activities by opening various offices,” he added.

Pun also said YCL would be expanded but the youth would be involved in development activities such as road construction.

According to him, YCL cadres have been occupying government and privately owned houses in Balaju Industrial Area, Sitapaila, Kirtipur, Gongabu, Samakhushi, Kapan, Jorpati, Gwarko, Ekantakuna, Lele, Bhaktapur, Sallaghari, and Palashe in the valley, Kantipur reported. (ANI)

Suicide car bombing kills eight Pakistani soldiers

Suicide car bombing kills eight Pakistani soldiersIslamabad – A suicide bomber on Sunday steered an explosive-laden car into a checkpoint at a paramilitary camp in Pakistan’s restive tribal region near Afghanistan, killing at least eight soldiers, officials said.

The attack took place at Zalai Fort, which is manned by the Frontier Corps (FC) paramilitary forces, in the South Waziristan tribal district. The camp is located 15 kilometres west of Wana, the region’s main town.

“Eight FC personnel died and two sustained injuries in the mighty blast that also caused some damage to the fort,” a security official said on the condition of anonymity.

The bomber struck the government forces two days after a suspected US strike involving an unmanned aircraft killed at least nine Taliban militants in Doug village in the district.

The insurgents said they believe US forces target them on information provided by the Pakistani military and intelligence agencies.

South Waziristan is considered a safe haven for al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters and is also home to Baitullah Mehsud, the top commander of Islamic militants operating in Pakistan.

More than 100,000 Pakistani troops have been deployed along the porous Afghan border to check militants’ cross-border attacks on international forces.

Western allies in the fight against terrorism in Afghanistan have expressed appreciation of Pakistan’s deployment, which has brought down the number of raids, but they continuously press Islamabad to do more to clamp down on Islamic militancy. (dpa)

Five rebels killed in north-eastern India

Five rebels killed in north-eastern IndiaNew Delhi – Five separatist rebels were killed in a gun battle with security forces in India’s north-eastern Assam state, news reports said Sunday.

The clash took place late Saturday in a forest area of Nalbari district, about 90 kilometres west of Assam’s main city Guwahati, IANS news agency reported quoting police officials.

“A joint team of police, paramilitary and Indian Army soldiers raided the forest reserve following specific intelligence inputs about the presence of a group of militants,” army spokesman R Kalia said.

There was a firefight soon after the security forces entered the forest. “The encounter lasted for close to three hours and we managed to gun down five of them,” Kalia said.

The security forces recovered four pistols, two grenades, ammunition and radio sets from the slain rebels.

“As of now, we can only say the five killed were definitely terrorists, although the identification process is on,” Kalia added.

Local police officials said the dead militants most likely belonged to the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom, a rebel group fighting for an independent homeland since 1979.

India’s north-east, which shares borders with China, Myanmar and Bangladesh, is a volatile region where nearly 40 separatist, tribal or leftist groups are active in five states. More than 15,000 people have lost their lives to insurgency in the region in the past decade. (dpa)