Police hunt Times Square bomb suspect

New York police are trawling through hundreds of hours of video tape from surveillance cameras in the hunt for those responsible for the attempted bombing in Times Square.

Police say they have numerous leads already but none of them point to the work of international terrorists, despite a claim of responsibility from the Pakistani Taliban.

Propane tanks, fireworks, petrol and a clock device were all removed from the vehicle parked in Times Square, and police say the “amateurish” bomb could have created a “significant fireball” if it had detonated.

Theatre-goers were heading to dinner while thousands of other tourists filled Times Square when street vendors near 45th Street spotted the car.

Rallis Gialaboukis was selling hot dogs about seven metres away.

“[The car was] abandoned, hazard [lights] on and people started talking amongst us,” he said.

“[We could] see the smoke coming out of the car, like seeping through the windows, and you could see it.

“You couldn’t see what’s in the car, nobody could see and then as they were trying to evacuate … away from it it just went off inside the car – an explosion went off inside the car.”

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said the bomb was probably beginning to detonate but malfunctioned.

“It looks like it would have caused a significant fireball and you have large numbers of pedestrians in that area so yep, we were lucky that it didn’t detonate,” he said.

The police have 82 of their own surveillance cameras to check, plus hundreds of hours of material from privately owned security cameras in the area.

Already they are looking for a white man in his 40s who was acting suspiciously.

“He also was seen shedding a dark-coloured shirt, revealing a red one underneath. He put the darker one into a bag that he was carrying,” Commissioner Kelly said.

“This happened about a half block from where the vehicle was parked.”

Detectives are also en route to a town in Pennsylvania where a tourist believes he may have captured the suspect’s image on his video camera.

Taliban claim

The Pakistani Taliban have claimed credit in a video message but Commissioner Kelly says nothing indicates they are to blame.

Homeland security secretary Janet Napolitano said authorities were treating the incident “as if it could be a potential terrorist attack”.

“The derivation of that, we do not know. And that’s what the investigation will tell us,” she said.

New York congressman Peter King says the possible connection to international terrorist groups cannot be ruled out.

“Just because it’s not done by a bombing expert doesn’t mean that we can rule out an international connection or even just having a cell or operatives in this country working together,” he said.

Twenty-four hours after the attempted bombing, Times Square was again filled with people.

But New York’s mayor Michael Bloomberg says the attempted bombing is another reminder of what the city faces every day.

“Tonight is a further reminder of the dangers that we face,” he said.

President Barack Obama, who is surveying a massive oil slick in Louisiana, says he is monitoring the situation in New York and will ensure justice is done.

Australia police hunt accused Serb commander

Thu, Apr 1 11:26 AM

A former Serb commander accused of war crimes in the Balkans was being hunted by Australian police on Thursday after disappearing in the wake of a court ruling that he could be extradited to Croatia.

Dragan Vasiljkovic, 55, an Australian who also has Serbian citizenship, lost a four-year legal battle on Tuesday when Australia’s High Court approved his extradition and reinstated a 2006 warrant for his arrest.

Croatia holds Vasiljkovic, whose Australian name is Daniel Snedden, responsible for torturing and killing Croat soldiers and civilians, as well as a foreign journalist, when he commanded a Serb paramilitary unit during Croatia’s 1991-95 independence war.

“Mr Snedden is now required to be committed to prison to await the Minister for Home Affairs’ final determination whether or not to surrender him to Croatia to face prosecution for war crimes offences,” a spokeswoman for Australia’s Attorney-General Robert McClelland said.

Vasiljkovic, known as “Captain Dragan” during the war in Croatia, won an earlier appeal against extradition when a lower court found he had grounds for believing he could be punished or imprisoned because of his nationality or political opinions.

Last week, the presidents of Croatia and Serbia promised a new era in relations, effectively resuming ties after a year of silent hostility.

On Wednesday, Serbia’s parliament apologised for the 1995 killing of thousands of Bosnian Muslims in the eastern enclave of Srebrenica, the worst atrocity in Europe since World War Two.

Police were on Thursday searching Vasiljkovic’s last known residence in the town of Boambee, north of Sydney. Vasiljkovic did not attend the court and police had no power to arrest him until after the High Court ruling.

Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Brendan O’Connor and McClelland will have the last say on whether Vasiljkovic will be extradited to Croatia.

Croatia declared independence from communist Yugoslavia in 1991, but its Serb minority, backed by Belgrade, rebelled and seized a third of the country by force. Croatia crushed the rebellion in two offensives in 1995.

(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Police hunt for accused war criminal

Federal Police are trying to locate an Australian man wanted in Croatia for alleged war crimes.

A High Court decision yesterday paved the way for the Federal Government to extradite Dragan Vasiljkovic, also known as Daniel Snedden, to Croatia.

He is accused of torturing and murdering civilians and prisoners of war.

A spokeswoman for Federal Attorney-General Robert McClelland says Mr Snedden did not attend the High Court ruling and has not notified authorities of any change to his address.

She says a police search is underway to find him.

The Federal Court had earlier allowed Snedden’s appeal against extradition, ruling his political beliefs would mean he would be dealt with unfairly in Croatia.

But the High Court quashed that decision, allowing the Federal Government to now consider whether to extradite him.

Last year a Sydney court heard allegations of repeated rape and abuse at the hands of Snedden, known as Captain Dragan at the time, during the Balkans conflict of 1992.

Snedden sued publishers Nationwide News Limited over a story printed in 2005.

A jury found the story had a number of defamatory meanings, including that he condoned the rape of women.

The Supreme Court judge ruled in favour of the publisher who had argued a truth defence.

Police hunt after takeaway armed robbery

Tasmanian police are searching for two men who robbed a Launceston takeaway.

Police say the men were wearing white hooded tops when they entered the Thistle Street takeaway about 2:30am.

The male staff member said he was threatened with what appeared to be firearms.

The men stole cash and cigarettes.

Police hunt man over indecent assault spate

New South Wales Police believe the same man may be responsible for a number of indecent assaults on women in Sydney’s south over the past several months.

Officers say a woman was followed, pushed to the ground, assaulted and robbed by a man at Woolooware in the early hours of Sunday March 14.

Early in the morning of February 6, a man followed a group of women as they left a fast-food outlet at Kirrawee and later assaulted one of them.

And police are also investigating two other cases which happened on the same day in October last year.

In the first case, a woman was indecently assaulted in a park at Gymea and about three hours later another woman was followed home and approached by a man but he left.

In all of the assaults the attacker has been described as white, slim with short or ear-length brown hair in his mid 20s to mid 30s.

All the assaults happened in the early hours of a Sunday morning.

Acting Superintedent Damian Henry says police are taking measures to prevent any further attacks.

“We’ve increased our patrols, particularly in the early hours of the morning,” he said.

Anyone with information about the man is urged to contact Sutherland Police via Crimestoppers on 1800 333 000.

Police hunt for armed robbers

Police fear two armed men who robbed a TOTE Tasmania outlet in Hobart last night could strike again.

They are searching for two men who they say threatened a TOTE staff member and a customer with large knives, one the size of a machete, at the Derwent Park outlet.

Police say the offenders then fled with cash from TOTE as well as money from both victims’ wallets.

Inspector Ian Whish-Wilson from Glenorchy CIB says a team of detectives is reviewing closed circuit television footage of the incident and would also like to speak to witnesses.

“They were wearing black balaclavas, they were also wearing blue overalls and sneaker-type shoes,” he said.

“Obviously it’s a concern that people are out there committing this type of crime and we [ask] that the public give us any information that’s available.”

Police hunt laneway sex attackers

Police are hunting for two men who savagely attacked and sexually assaulted a woman in a Bourke laneway in western New South Wales.

Police say the 25-year-old woman was walking along Moculta Street, listening to her MP3 player, about 8:00pm (AEDT) last night.

She has told officers she was attacked from behind and struck on the back of the head before being dragged into a laneway and sexually assaulted.

Police say she struggled with her attackers before they ran off and she was able to raise the alarm at a nearby home.

The crime manager of the Darling River command, Brett Greentree, says all resources are on deck to find the attackers.

“I’ve got all my detectives working on this case, it’s a very savage and cowardly attack, so we’ve had investigators working throughout the night, we’ve got forensic experts from Dubbo who are examining the scene,” he said.

“At this stage we’re following a number of inquiries and leads and again we’re asking for any assistance at all from people in the community that may be able to assist us in bringing these two persons to justice.”

The men are described as tall and Aboriginal in appearance.

Police hunt sports club thieves

Dongara police are seeking public help to catch those responsible for the burglary of two sports clubs.

The offenders struck on Monday night, stealing a television from the golf club and two outboard motors from the Dongara Denison Surf Lifesaving Club.

Police believe the two burglaries are linked and are appealing for anyone with information to contact them.

Police hunt chemist knife bandits

Ballarat detectives are searching for two men over an aggravated burglary at a chemist yesterday afternoon.

They say the men, wearing balaclavas and brandishing a knife, entered the shop in Sturt Street shortly after 5:00pm (AEDT).

Customers and staff were told to drop to the floor while the men stole cash and drugs.

Detective Senior Constable Brett Robinson says the men were wearing dark clothing and carrying a green shopping bag.

He says police need the public’s help to find the men.

“We’ve got a couple of leads that we’re following up but nothing substantial at this stage,” he said.

“If anyone saw two men as described, either before or after the incident in the Sturt Street area or surrounding areas, could they give Crime Stoppers or Ballarat police a call please.”

Police hunt home invasion attackers

Bendigo police say two people were bashed inside their home after being woken up by intruders early on Saturday morning.

Three people are being questioned after a Kangaroo Flat house was broken into about 4:00am (AEDT).

Leading Senior Constable Steve Ipsen says both victims suffered serious facial injuries and needed stitches.

“They are very shaken up. These are people that are in their house, sleeping at the time when it all occurred,” he said.

“So it is very serious, from that angle.”

Police hunt suspects in stabbing

Police are looking for two men after an armed robbery at Narre Warren, in Melbourne’s south-east.

Police believe a man in his fifties was walking along Princes’ Highway to the local railway station to go to work when he was approached by three men.

Police say one man demanded he hand over his wallet and mobile phone, while another stabbed him in the back.

He has been taken to the Dandenong hospital.

The men then ran off with the victim’s briefcase.

Police hunt three over Corio home invasion

Police are hunting for three men who broke into a Geelong home this morning, seriously injuring the occupants.

They say the men entered a house in Consedine Court in Corio about 8:00am, stabbing a 41-year-old man in the leg and attacking him with a crowbar.

It is alleged the men also attacked a 52-year-old man with the butt of a sawn-off shotgun.

A woman in her 30s, also received minor facial injuries.

Police say the suspects fled in the victims’ car with cash and mobile phones.

They are described as being aged between 20 and 30.

Victoria bushfire death toll rises to 181, 80 missing

Melbourne, Feb.11 (ANI): The death toll from the bushfires raging across southern Australia, and particularly in the state of Victoria, has risen to 181.

According to reports filed by both The Herald Sun and The Daily Telegraph, at least 80 people are still missing. There are reports that the death toll could reach as high as 300.

Those missing were “people who the coroner believes are already deceased, but are not yet identified,” Victorian Premier John Brumby said.

Marysville is being identified as a potential “Ground Zero”, with authorities fearing up to 100 of its population of 519 has died. The force of the fires has been likened to that of 500 atomic bombs.

“We had people banging on the sides of our tanker begging us to go back to houses where they knew there were people trapped, but we couldn’t because if we had, we’d all be dead too,” a firefighter told The Australian about the moment the firestorm hit.

Some residents are being allowed back to survey the devastation of the fires, but many are still banned from returning.

Whole towns are being treated as crime scenes as police hunt arsonists believed responsible for at least some of the destruction.

Police said they could release a photograph an arsonist suspected of setting a blaze in Gippsland. More than 20 people have died in that region.

Some survivors have reported battles with red tape to access desperately needed aid. ary Hughes, a writer for The Australian, said Centrelink had denied him help unless he could produce identification.

“Losing everything means just that – everything,” he wrote in an open letter to the Prime Minister.

“There are many like us who didn’t have time to calmly pause to collect wallets and purses as we fled our homes with wet towels over our faces to avoid choking to death on toxic smoke and flaming embers,” he added.

Cool, relatively calm conditions overnight allowed firefighters to try to bolster control lines around bushfires ahead of predicted warm, windy hot weather later in the week. Dozens of towns are on alert for ember attack, with 23 blazes still out of control.

Southerly winds this morning were fanning the blaze in the Yea-Murrindindi area in the state’s northeast, with warning in place for Acheron, Cathedral Lane, Rubicon, Thornton and Taggerty Road and Bulls Lane.

Threats have eased to towns near the nearby Beechworth fire, around Healesville on Melbourne’s outer eastern fringe, and from the Bunyip Ridge and Churchill-Jeeralang fires in Gippsland.

But winds forecast for Saturday could push the Bunyip fire towards a major gas plant and reservoir which supplies Melbourne with water.

The Red Cross said this morning its bushfire appeal had raised 31 million dollars so far, not including corporate and government donations. About six million dollars was raised at last night’s Australia-New Zealand cricket match in Adelaide.

It was reported that Kylie Minogue, Dannii Minogue and Natalie Imbruglia could team up for a benefit concert in London for bushfire victims. It was also reported that the Queen was planning a private donation.

Prime Minister Rudd pledged an extra five million dollars and promised unlimited money to rebuild communities “brick by brick”.

Awful tales of loss continue to surface more than three days after the blazes, but there are also uplifting accounts of survival. (ANI)