Plotters of deadly Afghan attacks arrested: official

(Reuters) – Afghanistan’s intelligence department has detained four Taliban insurgents behind a series of deadly attacks against foreign targets in the capital, a spokesman for the agency said on Saturday.

The National Department for Security (NDS) also arrested another Taliban group which planned to stage attacks in Kabul in coming days, Saeed Ansari told reporters.

The first group was involved in five suicide attacks against foreigners in the city, including on the Indian embassy last year and another in February on a guest house used by Indian nationals. Scores of people, many of them Afghans, were killed.

The attacks were planned from Pakistan, where the Taliban have sanctuary, Ansari said.

“This group either managed to flee or went into hiding, but the vigilant officials of the NDS, with the help of people, managed to arrest them,” he said.

The second group consisted of six insurgents who carried out attacks against Afghan and foreign forces on a highway south of Kabul and planned further raids, including suicide bombings. Two of those held were clerics at local mosques in Kabul province.

NDS officials also seized around 450 kgs (1,000 pounds) of explosive materials during a raid against the group which was living in house on the outskirts of Kabul.

Removed from power in a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, the Taliban have made a comeback in recent years, despite the presence of nearly 150,000 foreign troops.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox)

Plotters of deadly Afghan attacks arrested – official

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Afghanistan’s intelligence department has detained four Taliban insurgents behind a series of deadly attacks against foreign targets in the capital, a spokesman for the agency said on Saturday.

The National Department for Security (NDS) also arrested another Taliban group which planned to stage attacks in Kabul in coming days, Saeed Ansari told reporters.

The first group was involved in five suicide attacks against foreigners in the city, including on the Indian embassy last year and another in February on a guest house used by Indian nationals. Scores of people, many of them Afghans, were killed.

The attacks were planned from Pakistan, where the Taliban have sanctuary, Ansari said.

“This group either managed to flee or went into hiding, but the vigilant officials of the NDS, with the help of people, managed to arrest them,” he said.

The second group consisted of six insurgents who carried out attacks against Afghan and foreign forces on a highway south of Kabul and planned further raids, including suicide bombings. Two of those held were clerics at local mosques in Kabul province.

NDS officials also seized around 450 kgs (1,000 pounds) of explosive materials during a raid against the group which was living in house on the outskirts of Kabul.

Removed from power in a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, the Taliban have made a comeback in recent years, despite the presence of nearly 150,000 foreign troops.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here) (sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Obama pick for deputy attorney general comes under fire

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama’s nominee for deputy attorney general on Tuesday faced Republican ire for how the administration has been handling terrorism prosecutions and giving suspects U.S. legal rights.

Politics

The Senate Judiciary Committee reviewed the nomination of James Cole, 58, to be deputy attorney general at a crucial time as the administration reconsiders how to prosecute the accused plotters of the September 11, 2001, attacks and it investigates the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Cole tried to fend off Republican questions about the use of military commissions for terrorism suspects and when they should be given legal rights such as the ability to remain silent under questioning and be given a defense lawyer.

Senator Jeff Sessions, the committee’s top Republican, seized on an opinion piece Cole wrote in 2002 that raised concerns about the Bush administration’s handling of the prosecution of terrorism suspects.

“It was a position directly critical of the concept of military commissions,” Sessions told Cole. “Now are you saying that you left something out you’d like to put in that op-ed, and that if you draw up a good military commission, you don’t think it undermines the Constitution of the United States?”

Cole said there were constitutional questions about the initial military commissions that were set up and ultimately struck down by the Supreme Court. He said they have since been improved and can be used.

Cole repeated the administration’s support for using both military and criminal trials for prosecuting terrorism suspects. “We need all of the tools,” he told lawmakers.

Attorney General Eric Holder’s plan to prosecute the plotters of the September 11 attacks in a criminal court in the heart of Manhattan was sidelined after bipartisan concerns emerged about security and whether they should be tried in special military courts instead.

The White House put that effort on hold while officials re-evaluate whether it was the right venue and location for the trials but they have not set a deadline for a decision.

Republicans also focused on a controversy that erupted after the bombing attempt of a U.S. airliner on Christmas last year in which the suspect was given legal rights, known as Miranda rights, by authorities hours after being arrested.

Republican Senator John Cornyn asked why a suspected terrorist would be read Miranda rights when it was more important to get information about his travels, associations and knowledge of terror networks.

Cole replied that the right to remain silent and to have a lawyer were ingrained in the U.S. Constitution and while there are exceptions in cases where a threat may still be imminent, such rights did not always stop suspects from talking.

“My experience frankly in criminal law for 30 years is that frequently after being given Miranda warnings and after being given a lawyer, defendants and people who are being detained talk and they talk a lot,” he said.

Cole agreed to work with lawmakers on an effort by the administration to clarify how legal rights for terrorism suspects should be administered.

Cole also was asked about the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and he repeated statements by Obama and Holder that BP Plc would be held liable to pay for the damage and cleanup.

(Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky; Editing by Bill Trott)

Medvedev vows to “find and destroy” bomb plotters

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev promised on Monday to “find and destroy” those who organised two suicide bombings on the Moscow metro that killed 38 people.

“They are simply beasts,” Medvedev said after visiting the platform of the Lubyanka metro station, where dozens of people were killed in the morning rush hour.

“We will find and destroy them all,” Medvedev said at the station, which is outside the headquarters of the Federal Security Service (FSB), Russia’s main domestic security service.

“Our people have died. It was a disgusting crime,” Medvedev said after placing a bouquet of red flowers with a black ribbon on the platform.

The Kremlin later said U.S. President Barack Obama had phoned Medvedev to express his condolences about the loss of life in the bombings.

(Writing by Conor Humphries, editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

‘Princess Di was killed to end romance with Dodi’

London, March 29 (ANI): The mystery surrounding the death of Princess Diana has been resurrected amid renewed claims by Britain’s renowned defence lawyer that her death was brought about by a failed attempt to end her romance with Dodi Fayed.

Michael Mansfield QC claims the car crash deaths in 1997 were the result of the plot to “end their relationship violently”.

“I don’t believe they wanted them dead. But they did want to end the relationship by a serious accident and in that case they still can be prosecuted,” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

Mansfield, 67, added the plotters remained the “unknown quantity”. (ANI)

Terror suspects were taking orders from Yemeni Al Qaeda: Saudi Arabia

Washington, Mar. 26 (ANI): Saudi Arabia has confirmed that several of over 100 suspects who allegedly plotted terror attacks on key oil and security facilities in Saudi Arabia, were waiting for a go ahead from senior Al Qaeda leaders in Yemen to strike.

Fox News quoted Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman General Mansour Al-Turki as saying that the arrest of the alleged plotters not only had prevented the attacks, but broken up a network of Al Qaeda-affiliated radicals that included two suicide bombing cells.

“They were ready but waiting for an order which fortunately didn’t come,” he said of the militants.

While Al-Turki declined to identify which facilities the suspects were allegedly targeting, he said one of the suspects, a Saudi national, was employed by a private Saudi industrial security company responsible for protecting oil sites and other critical infrastructure.

“As an employee, he had access to all of those sites and to current plans for protecting them,” he said.

He did not dispute news reports indicating that the plotters had been exchanging e-mails with a man in Yemen believed to be a senior leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP.

According to reports, members of the two suicide cells had been exchanging coded e-mails about the planned strikes with a man in Yemen whom the accounts called “Abu Hajer.”

One Saudi official said “Abu Hajer” is believed to be a nom de guerre for Said Al Shihri, a Saudi leader of AQAP.

He was released from the Guantanamo Bay detention center in December 2007 after being held there for six years, and he was taken to a Saudi rehabilitation center from which he disappeared. (ANI)

Osama Bin Laden threatens to capture and kill Americans if 9/11 mastermind is executed

Washington, Mar. 26 (ANI): In a new audio recording, Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden has threatened to capture and kill Americans if Washington decides to execute the alleged 9/11 masterminds Khalid al Sheikh Mohammed or any other Al Qaeda suspects.

“It (the execution) would mean the U.S. has issued a death sentence against whoever of you becomes a prisoner in our hands,” Fox News quoted bin Laden, as saying in a 74-second audio tape aired on Al-Jazeera television.

“Your friend at the White House is still walking in the footsteps of those before (him) in many important matters,” including stepping up the war in Afghanistan and “oppressing our prisoners that you are holding, beginning with the mujahid hero Khalid al Sheikh Mohammed,” he added.

He went on to say that US politicians have “oppressed us and still do, especially by backing Israel, which occupies the land of Palestine.”

While it is still not clear whether Al Qaeda has any U.S. captives, the Pak-Taliban is holding an American soldier it captured in eastern Afghanistan in June 2009.

Meanwhile, the Obama administration is still considering whether to put Mohammed, who was captured in Pakistan in 2003, and four of his co-plotters on military tribunal for their role in the Sept. 11 attacks.

In 2008, the US charged him with murder and war crimes in connection with the 9/11 attacks, and Pentagon officials are going to seek the death penalty for him.

Responding to bin Laden’s latest audio, a US counterterrorism official said: “It”s the height of absurdity for anyone associated with Al Qaeda to even suggest that now, at long last, they”re going to start treating captives badly. They may have forgotten Danny Pearl and all the others they”ve slaughtered, but we haven”t.”

“If this is bin Laden and he wants to weigh in on legal proceedings involving 9/11 conspirators, I challenge him to show up in court to make his case. Frankly, that”s about all the comment this deserves,” he added. (ANI)

Stop blaming Pakistan for ‘home grown’ terror plots, Qureshi tells UK

London, Sep.19 (ANI): Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has asked Britain to stop blaming Islamabad for the ‘home grown’ terror plots against the UK.

Referring to Britain’s lashing out at Pakistan on the liquid bomb plot issue, Qureshi said it was unfair to criticize Pakistan for every terror plot hatched in Britain.

“It is easy to pass the buck, but they (liquid bomb plotters) were British citizens. They went to school here, they are part of the British system, and they live here. If they do something extraordinary is it fair that Pakistan should be blamed?” The Independent quoted Qureshi, as saying.

Pakistan has been critical of Britain’s accusations and has objected to allegations regarding it not doing enough to counter the expanding reach of the extremists based in the country’s tribal region.

A top Pakistani diplomat recently reacted strongly to Britain’s accusations regarding Pakistan harbouring extremists plotting to attack the UK.

The diplomat charged Britain of not doing enough to tackle home grown terrorists and treating Pakistan as a “whipping boy”.

“Sometimes for our British friends the truth is bitter. We have somehow turned out to be a ‘whipping boy’, there is a long history to that. The British need to search their own house,” the diplomat had said.

It may be recalled that Prime Minister Gordon Brown, during his Islamabad visit earlier this year, had said: “Three-quarters of the most serious plots investigated by the British authorities have links to Al-Qaida in Pakistan.”

Brown’s statement had angered Pakistani leadership and strained relationship between two countries, but things normalized later with President Asif Ali Zardari visit to the UK. (ANI)

UAE authorities nail Qaeda terror ring plotting to blow up Dubai targets

Washington, Sep.17 (ANI): United Arab Emirates (UAE) authorities earlier this year quietly broke up a major terrorist ring affiliated with al Qaeda that had plotted to blow up targets in Dubai.

According to the Washington Times, three U.S. intelligence officials and one former senior U.S. government official confirmed that the terrorist scheme originated in Ras Al Khaimah (RAK), a relatively poor member of the seven-emirate country.

According to these officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the incident, UAE authorities found evidence that the terrorists had conducted video surveillance of targets in Dubai including Dubai Towers, which will be the tallest building in the world when it is completed in December.

The officials also said the plotters had designated suicide bombers for the operations, but had not yet made so-called martyrdom videos.

Juan Zarate, a former deputy national security adviser in the George W. Bush administration, called the arrests a “significant … disruption. It demonstrates al Qaeda’s presence and perhaps even ill intent in the Emirates, but also signals strong cooperation from the Emirati authorities.”

A spokeswoman for the UAE Embassy in Washington said the embassy “doesn’t comment on internal security matters.”

Present and former U.S. officials described the plan to target the towers and several other high profile locations in the country as a significant shift in how al Qaeda operates in the Emirates. (ANI)

Pak diplomat tells UK to stop treating it like a ‘whipping boy’

London, Sep.9 (ANI): A top Pakistani diplomat has reacted strongly to Britain’s accusations regarding Pakistan harbouring extremists plotting to attack the UK.

The diplomat charged Britain of not doing enough to tackle home grown terrorists and treating Pakistan as a “whipping boy”.

“Sometimes for our British friends the truth is bitter. We have somehow turned out to be a ‘whipping boy’, there is a long history to that. The British need to search their own house. Britain has to take responsibility and they have to look into the issues which are driving these youth to extremism, which is the third-generation British – they weren’t born and bought up in Pakistan,” The Guardian quoted the diplomat, who refused to be named, as saying.

Referring to the massive airliners bombing plot, he said the terrorists who were nabbed and convicted were ‘born and brought up’ in Britain, and not in Pakistan.

The diplomat underlined that it was the Pakistani intelligence agencies that had tipped Britain regarding the plot following which it was unearthed.

He said the plotters would have succeeded in their plans if the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had not shared reports with London.

“It was Pakistan that informed Britain about this plot. We tipped them off, it was our security agency that tipped off the British … the British authorities were very much indebted to Pakistan. We had a major role in unearthing this plot. Had it not been for Pakistan (it) would not have been unearthed,” he said.

It may be recalled that Prime Minister Gordon Brown, during his Islamabad visit earlier this year, had said: “Three-quarters of the most serious plots investigated by the British authorities have links to Al-Qaida in Pakistan.”

Brown’s statement had angered Pakistani leadership and strained relationship between two countries, but things normalized later with President Asif Ali Zardari visit to the UK. (ANI)

Osama’s cook coming to New York to face charges in embassy bombing

Washington, May 22 (ANI): Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden’s former Tanzanian cook is coming to New York to face charges for his role in the bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa 11 years ago, President Obama announced Thursday.

Ahmed Kalfan Ghailani will be moved from Guantanamo Bay as part of Obama’s controversial order to shut down the U.S. terror prison camps in Cuba over the objections of many lawmakers from both parties.

“Preventing this detainee from coming to our shores would prevent his trial and conviction,” Obama said in a Washington speech.

The baby-faced and diminutive Ghailani – known as “Foopie” – faced a bounty of 25 million dollars when he was nabbed in July 2004 after a 12-hour shootout at an Al Qaeda safe house in Pakistan.

Ghailani rose from an Al Qaeda “rank-and-file soldier” in Afghanistan before 9/11 to become Bin Laden’s cook and his most prolific passport forger and travel agent, according to a Directorate of National Intelligence biography.

Four other plotters were convicted in federal trials in the city for the Aug. 7, 1998, bombings of U.S. embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, which killed a dozen Americans and 211 others.

Ghailani was among the original 22 “most wanted” terrorists designated by ex-President Bush’s FBI after 9/11, even though the government admits he “was not directly involved in operational planning” by Al Qaeda. (ANI)

UK PM’s ruthless ally Watson

London, Apr.14 (ANI): Tom Watson is regarded as ruthless political hard man and a key ally of British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

He sits feet away from Brown each day in his open-plan Downing Street war room.

The Cabinet Office minister has also been one of Labour’s leading bloggers – and was mentioned in one of shamed McBride’s emails suggesting dirty tricks against top Tories.

But Watson insists he knew nothing about the Internet smear conspiracy.

Despite his denials, he has form as a plotter. He was the driving force behind the “curry house coup” – a bid by Brownites to force Tony Blair to quit in 2006.

According to The Sun, he even visited Brown in Scotland the day before signing a letter with other plotters demanding Blair name his departure date. (ANI)

‘Terror plotters’ were allowed to stay in UK despite visa breaches

London, Apr.11 (ANI): At least two of the men suspected of being members of an alleged al-Qaeda cell were allowed to stay in Britain despite breaching conditions of their student visas, The Daily Telegraph has learnt.
One man was stopped by immigration officials at Manchester Airport last week as he arrived from Pakistan, but was allowed to enter the country despite his visa documents being “all over the place”, according to one source.

Another suspect was threatened with deportation after immigration officials discovered he was working as a security guard instead of studying, but he was nonetheless allowed to stay.
The revelations will intensify pressure on the Gordon Brown Government to carry out a complete overhaul of the student visa system after it emerged that all but one of the 12 suspects being held on suspicion of plotting an “Easter spectacular” bombing campaign had come to the UK from Pakistan on student visas approved by the Home Office.

Patrick Mercer, the chairman of the parliamentary counter-terrorism subcommittee, described the UK Border Agency’s failure to act as “a disgrace” and a “frightening” lapse of immigration controls.

There were also calls yesterday for greater co-operation between the UK and Pakistan in vetting applicants for student visas, with Pakistan’s high commissioner suggesting vetting procedures were currently inadequate.

Anti-terrorist police are continuing to search 10 premises in Manchester, Liverpool and Clitheroe, Lancs., following Wednesday’s arrests of a suspected terror cell which police believe may have been planning suicide bomb attacks on three shopping centres in Manchester over the Easter weekend.

Mercer said of the latest revelations: “This is symptomatic of the fact that there are wholesale breaches of immigration regulations and yet nothing ever seems to be done about it. This is especially worrying when you consider that it seems to be the case with terrorism issues time after time. Alleged terrorists have already been in the hands of our security authorities but nothing has been done.”

Almost 400,000 student visas are granted every year, with around 10,000 being issued in Pakistan alone. Foreign students bring with them a 10 billion pounds boost to the economy which the Government is keen to encourage. (ANI)

Terror raid witness says he saw men filming terror target

London, Apr.11 (ANI): A witness has described how he saw two Asian men filming shoppers at one of the alleged terror plot targets two weeks ago. oe Hester, 44, said he was shopping in Manchester’s Trafford Centre on March 26 when his attention was drawn to two “impeccably dressed” men who he thought were behaving oddly.

Police believe the Trafford Centre was one of the possible targets of the suspected terrorist plotters after covert surveillance teams watched suspects filming there and at the Arndale Centre and St Ann’s Square in the city centre.

The Telegraph quoted Hester as saying: “I was sitting down on a bench on the first floor of the Trafford Centre, near Gap, when these two guys caught my eye. They were Asian men, in their teens or early 20s, and they were using a small digital video camera to film shoppers and stores on the ground floor below them. It was like they were scanning the area with the camera. They looked very out of place. They were impeccably dressed, wearing smart, brand-new clothing – really crisp jeans and tops. I just couldn’t work out what they were up to. It just struck me as an odd thing for them to be doing.”

“I had to go and pick someone up from the airport and I just forgot about the two men, but when I read in the paper that the men who had been arrested might have filmed shopping centres, it came back to me. The more I think about it now, the more I think they were doing something wrong. It leaves a real cold shiver,” he added. (ANI)

Police urge calm over terror ‘targets’

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Greater Manchester Chief Constable Peter Fahy said the public should not fear visiting any of the reported targets of a suspected al-Qaeda plot over the weekend.

Mr Fahy said he and his family would have “no hesitation” in using shopping locations such as Manchester’s Trafford Centre and Arndale Centre.

Whitehall sources said the 12 men arrested across the North West on Wednesday were under surveillance by MI5 and police for weeks but the nature or potential target of the plot remained unclear.

One source said: “There was information of sufficient concern that action needed to be taken. Work is ongoing to get to the bottom of it.”

The official described reports the alleged plotters may have been sizing up “soft targets” such as shopping centres, nightclubs and football grounds like Old Trafford as “speculation”.

Security staff at the Trafford Centre said they had not been informed of any threat.

And a spokesman for the Arndale Centre said there was “no evidence” of any specific targeting of the complex.

Mr Fahy also said police had not uncovered a threat to a particular location, although the investigation was still ongoing.

“Clearly, there’s been some speculation about certain locations, particularly in the North West, concerning this investigation,” he said.

“There is no particular threat against any particular location and certainly not the ones mentioned in the media.

“I would like to say I would have no hesitation, or any of my family, in using any of those locations that have been mentioned.”

Eleven Pakistani nationals – of which at least ten held student visas – and one UK-born British national remain in custody.

Forensics officers are continuing to conduct searches of the raided addresses in the Cheetham Hill area of Manchester and Liverpool.

Move to calm ‘terror targets’ fear

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Greater Manchester Chief Constable Peter Fahy said the public should not fear visiting any of the reported targets of a suspected al-Qaida plot over the weekend.

Whitehall sources said the 12 men arrested across the North West on Wednesday had been under surveillance by MI5 and police for weeks but the nature or potential target of the plot remained unclear.

One source said: “There was information of sufficient concern that action needed to be taken. Work is ongoing to get to the bottom of it.”

The official described reports that the alleged plotters may have been sizing up “soft targets” such as shopping centres, nightclubs and football grounds, like Old Trafford, as “speculation”.

Mr Fahy said he and his family would have “no hesitation” in using shopping locations such as Manchester’s Trafford Centre and Arndale Centre this weekend.

Security staff at the Trafford Centre said they had not been informed of any threat. A spokesman for the Arndale Centre said there was “no evidence” of any specific targeting of the complex.

Mr Fahy also said police had not uncovered a threat to a particular location, although the investigation was still ongoing.

“Clearly, there has been some speculation about certain locations. There is no particular threat against any particular location and certainly not the ones mentioned in the media.”

Eleven Pakistani nationals – of which at least 10 held student visas – and one UK-born British national remain in custody.

If Europe has its way, UK’s Premier League could be history soon

London, Mar.18 (ANI): Football’s most powerful clubs are hatching plans for a European Super League which could destroy the Premier League.

According to The Sun, the Euro revolution would see the creation of three divisions – each with 20 teams.

The Big Four – Manchester United, Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal – would be in the top division, forced to play 38 European games alone. That would rule out any chance of them competing in the Premier League as well and would therefore spell the end of English football as we know it.

Premier chief executive Richard Scudamore has been alerted and has said that he would fiercely resist any moves to either abolish the Premier or reduce its size to accommodate extra European fixtures.

That resistance could force English competitors in a European League to withdraw from the Premier League altogether.

Unofficial talks have already taken place between members of the influential European Club Association (ECA) to discuss the idea of a three-division competition involving up to 60 teams.

The secret plotters plan to get their lucrative idea off the ground by as early as 2012.

The idea, believed to be the brainchild of AC Milan, is to scrap the Champions League and UEFA Cup in favour of the new competition. (ANI)

Ex-detective says Brit Queen escaped assassination in Australia in 1970

London, Jan.28 (ANI): Mystery plotters attempted to kill Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II during a visit to Australia in April, 1970, but luck prevented it, claims a retired police detective.

Former Detective Superintendent Cliff McHardy has sensationally revealed to the Lithgow Mercury and London’s Daily Mail that details of the conspiracy were kept quiet so as not to embarrass the Australian Government at the time.

According to The Telegraph, he claimed that the Queen and Prince Philip were travelling across the Blue Mountains towards Orange on April 29 1970 when plotters attempted to derail their train.

The now retired 81-year-old police officer claimed a wooden log was placed on the railway tracks ahead of the monarch’s train, but failed when it simply wedged under the wheels and slowed the train down until it eventually stopped at a crossing.

McHardy, who now lives in Glenbrook, said he decided to break his long silence on the case to prompt people to come forward and own up.

It is understood there is no record of the alleged event but the report by the former Lithgow police station chief caused a wild frenzy with the British Fleet Street press inundating Buckingham Palace with demands for details.

A spokeswoman for the Palace this morning declined to comment.

“We are not commenting on an alleged plot that happened 40 years ago,” the spokeswoman said.

It is believed the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh remain oblivious to the alleged assassination attempt to this day. There is no official report of the incident in the UK or Australia. (ANI)

July 20, 1944 – symbol of German anti-Nazi resistance

July 20, 1944 - symbol of German anti-Nazi resistance Berlin – July 20, 1944 has become a symbol of the military anti-Nazi resistance in Germany, marking the day when 36-year-old Colonel Claus Schenk Count of Stauffenberg tried to kill Adolf Hitler in order to start talks with the Western Allies for an end to World War II.

Stauffenberg planted a bomb hidden in a briefcase in Hitler’s eastern headquarters Wolfsschanze in Eastern Prussia during a briefing with Hitler.

He then travelled back to Berlin, waiting for the death of the

dictator with his fellow plotters in the Bendler Block, the General

Army Office of the Army High Command.

However, when the bomb went off, its impact was broken by a heavy table. Of 24 people present, four died, yet Hitler only received minor injuries.

Meanwhile back in Berlin and convinced that Hitler was dead, Stauffenberg put in motion Valkyrie, a plan originally conceived by the German military to suppress a possible rebellion during World War II which was adopted by the resistance plotters.

However, the plan failed when it emerged in the evening of July 20 that Hitler had survived the attack. In a hastily convened court- martial on the same night, Stauffenberg was sentenced to death alongside General Friedrich Olbricht, the head of the group, and two fellow plotters, Albrecht Mertz von Quirnheim, and Werner of Haeften.

The group was immediately executed in the courtyard of the Bendler Block. Another conspirator was forced to commit suicide. dpa

Indian Air Force prepared to meet any eventuality: Air Chief Marshal

New Delhi, Jan 12 (ANI): Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal Fali Homi Major today said that the IAF is prepared to meet any eventuality.

He was visiting the National Cadet Corps (NCC) camp here today.

The camp has been organised for the NCC cadets participating in the Republic Day parade to be held here later this month.

Replying to a question regarding India’s war preparedness in the wake of the recent Mumbai attacks, Air Chief Marshal Major said that his force is ready for all options.

“The Air Force has its plans ready at all times irrespective of the situation. So there is no reason to think. We have always been ready. We will always be ready for all options that the country exercises,” said Major.

India accused elements in Pakistan for the Mumbai attacks.

On Saturday, External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee said that while keeping its all options open India has not exhausted its diplomatic options in its attempt to bring the Mumbai attack plotters to justice.

Mukherjee also said that India had enough evidence to support a statement made by Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh earlier last week that “official agencies” in Pakistan were involved in the November attack.

Pakistan has rejected the Indian allegations.

Pakistan Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani on Saturday reiterated an offer that Pakistan would cooperate in investigations, but said its forces were ready to defend the country. (ANI)