11 killed in violence in Karachi

KARACHI: At least 11 people were killed and 15 others were wounded in a fresh wave of violence in Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city, officials said on Friday.

Last week Pakistan ordered hundreds of extra paramilitary policemen onto the streets of the Arabian Sea port to try to quell the violence.

Political and ethnic violence in Karachi is blamed on supporters of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), based among the Urdu-speaking majority, and the rival Awami National Party (ANP), which represents based migrant Pashtuns from the northwest.

“At least 11 people were killed and 15 others were wounded since last night,” home ministry official Sharafuddin Memon said, but declined to comment whether they were ethnically-motivated killings.

Local police officials confirmed the death tol

l but did not give details.

The MQM last month quit the coalitions led by the main ruling Pakistan People's Party (PPP) that govern the country and the southern province of Sindh, of which Karachi is the capital. The ANP remains part of both coalitions.

The previous wave of violence erupted after provincial minister Zulfiqar Mirza, from the PPP, criticised the MQM and its exiled leader Altaf Hussain.

Mirza later apologised for remarks that he said were his “personal opinion” and from London, Hussain asked his supporters to “end their peaceful protest and go back to their homes”.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan says 490 people were killed in targeted killings in Karachi in the first half of the year, compared to 748 for the whole of 2010, which was the worst since 1995.

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Blast at Kenya rally injures at least 24 – media

June 13 (Reuters) – A blast at a Kenyan prayer meeting including church leaders and politicians campaigning against a proposed new constitution injured at least 24 people, local media reported on Sunday.

The Kenya Television Network (KTN) reported that there were two blasts at the Uhuru Park.

“We have so many people injured and we have reports that one person may have lost his life…,” Agriculture Minister William Ruto, who was at the prayer meeting, told KTN. Police officials were not immediately available to comment.

Kenyans are due to vote on the new constitution in a referendum on Aug. 4.

June 10 (Reuters) – South Korea plans to give banks, both domestic and foreign, two years to adjust their currency forward positions when it announces restrictions on such trades early next week, an online media outlet reported on Thursday.

Afghanistan (Reuters) – At least 40 people were killed and 77 injured by a suicide bomb attack on a packed wedding party in insurgency-plagued southern Afghanistan, officials said on Thursday.

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“A suicide bomber went inside the party where hundreds of people were sitting and blew himself up,” a police official said of the blast at around 9:30 p.m. (1700 GMT) on Wednesday in Arghandab district, north of Kandahar, where foreign troops are focusing on a push in coming months to whittle out the Taliban.

A Kandahar policeman said many of the guests had links to local police officials or a local militia, which was why it was likely targeted, although the Taliban denied responsibility.

“We condemn such a brutal act,” Taliban spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi told Reuters from an undisclosed location. “The Taliban wage Jihad (holy war) in order to free the people from the hands of occupiers. How can we kill them?”

The Taliban have previously claimed responsibility for insurgent attacks, but recanted once civilian casualties have become clear.

Ahmadi laid blame at the feet of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) for Afghanistan, which has killed hundreds of civilians in misdirected air strikes. Taliban attacks have claimed more civilian lives.

An ISAF spokeswoman said it was not involved in the blast and had helped local security forces in follow up operations.

“This is an Afghan matter,” the spokeswoman said.

CHILDREN AMONG DEAD

Witnesses described scenes of chaos at the wedding, which had drawn around 400 celebrants including women and children from nearby villages.

“Some people were waiting for food, others were dancing inside a big tent, when I heard a deafening blast,” a wounded survivor named Aminullah said.

“The dust went up in the sky and I saw dead bodies everywhere. Women and children were screaming. I thought it was end of the world.”

Children were among the dead, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

The Taliban have regrouped since their U.S.-led overthrow in 2001 and now engage a foreign force that is expected to grow to 150,000 in coming months as part of an offensive against insurgent strongholds in the south.

A favored tactic is improvised explosive devices (IEDs) or suicide attacks on foreign or Afghan forces, but pro-government sympathizers are also targeted and the insurgency used as a cover to settle old scores.

Rural wedding parties in Afghanistan can often be raucous affairs with large gatherings of people and frequently accompanied by celebratory gunfire. Several have mistakenly been attacked in the past by foreign forces.

(Additional reporting by Hamid Shalizi in Kabul; Writing by David Fox; Editing by Dan Williams)

Autorickshaw driver, aide rape 15-yr-old girl at Dahisar

Mumbai, June 6 — The Dahisar police on Friday arrested an autorickshaw driver for allegedly raping a 15-year-old girl. The accused’s accomplice is wanted in the case.

The arrested accused has been identified as Farid Syed (22), a resident of Dahisar (East). Police officials said the incident happened at Raut Compound in Dahisar Thursday morning.

The police said that the victim and two of her friends went to the N. G. Park area in search of a relative, who had been missing for the last two days. The police said the victim’s friends were walking ahead, while the victim was trailing.

Farid and his accomplice were drunk and they allegedly approached the victim. “They threatened and assaulted the victim and then dragged her to an isolated corner,” said Police Sub Inspector D. Girkar of the Dahisar police station.

They reportedly raped the victim and fled. The victim narrated the entire incident to her family, who then lodged a complaint with the police.

Based on the description provided by the victim and her friend, the police arrested Syed from his residence.

30 killed as bus overturns, catches fire

Ten children and 15 women were among 30 people killed when a Karnataka roadways bus overturned and burst into flames near Challakere area in the Chitradurga district early on Sunday. The North Eastern Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation bus was carrying 63 passengers, mostly from the rural parts of Surpur and Lingasur in the northern Gulbarga and Raichur districts.

State Transport Minister R Ashok told reporters that according to preliminary reports, the driver’s “negligence”

could have caused the accident. Transport and police officials said they suspect the driver of the bus may have dozed off and hit a barricade. The driver Siddaiah Swamy has been arrested, police said.

“The bus overturned and its diesel tank caught fire, engulfing the entire vehicle. Nearly 30 passengers were rescued and admitted to hospitals in Challakere,” Chitradurga Superintendent of Police Labhu Ram said.

The NEKSRTC announced a compensation of Rs 2.5 lakh for next of kin of the deceased while Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa also announced compensation of Rs one lakh for the families of the dead and Rs 25,000 for those injured.

Police said nine bodies had been identified so far and that they planned to conduct DNA tests on several others as their bodies had been charred beyond recognition. Messages have been sent to the relatives of victims in Surapur in Gulbarga district from where the bus had begun its journey.

Police said the overcrowded bus was mostly carrying poor labourers in search of livelihood in Bangalore following disruption in the NREGA programme in the area where they were residing. The reason for the disruption was not clear. Narasimha Naik, BJP MLA from Surapur, held authorities responsible for the suspension of the NREGA works, which, he said, had forced the locals to migrate to other places in search of jobs ahead of the monsoon. “We will look into the matter and see what went wrong,” Yeddyurappa said. Revenue Minister G Karunakara Reddy, who is also in-charge of Chitradurga district, rushed to the accident site and visited the hospitals.

Playing cricket for communal harmony

Cashing in on the popularity of cricket, the police in Vadodara are organising a cricket tournament in the city with the help of NGOs. The aim is to bridge the gap between religious communities as well as that between people and police.

As many as 32 teams will take part in the tournament and the first match will see Police Commissioner Rakesh Asthana among those playing the game.

According to Makarpura Police Inspector R M Bhadoriya the cricket matches will be played from the evening till night and they have been named Qaumi Ekta Cricket Tournament, signifying communal harmony in Vadodara. “Incidents such as that in Ahmedabad’s Shahpur area creates a bad impression regarding our state. Cricket will

act like a bridge between communities and between the police and the public. We hope to turn this

into an annual event,” said Bhadoriya. He added that after the 2002 riots, cricket matches served the role of icebreakers between two communities.

Police officials said Rs 5,000 is being charged from the teams as registration fees.

LeT man sneaked in as driver during Patil visit to AP

In a startling disclosure, a Lashkar-e-Toiba operative arrested from Hyderabad on May 3 has told interrogators that for four days in December 2008 he had driven President Pratibha Patil’s son Rajendra Shekhawat around the city as she paid a two-week official visit to Andhra Pradesh.

This was more than a year after the alleged Lashkar operative, Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq, reportedly received a consignment of a pistol and two hand grenades concealed in a box of sweets in New Delhi.

Haq is also linked to the May 7, 2006, hand grenade blast in Hyderabad’s Odeon Cinema.

Haq has told investigators that he “worked as a driver” for the President’s son as the Head of State was paying a visit to Hyderabad.

Haq has said he was preparing to target foreigners working in companies like Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu when he was arrested. Police officials in Hyderabad questioning Haq confirmed the disclosure but did not reveal whether Rashtrapati Bhavan had been briefed.

Haq was arrested from Hyderabad’s Edi Bazaar after his telephones and e-mails were intercepted. Following the arrest, two other sleeper cells in Srinagar and Nepal were busted with sufficient leads that the “handler” of all the three operatives — part of the Lashkar’s ‘Indian Ocean’ network — was an LeT Commander based in Saudi Arabia. Haq has reportedly listed all the “exchanges” he had on planned terror strikes with his “handlers”.

Haq’s interrogation has also laid bare the relative ease with which LeT operatives like him made border crossings from Pakistan Occupied Kashmir and Dhaka. He has said that after being inducted into the LeT in Saudi Arabia in 2002, he was taken to Muzaffarabad for a 30-day arms training and issued arms and ammunition in Kotli, PoK. LeT “guides” later escorted him across Poonch, after which he reached Banihal on foot and then moved to Delhi and finally, Hyderabad.

The other border crossing that Haq describes is to Bangladesh in 2008, where he was called to meet his “handler” since he was delaying “execution of offence (attacks)” in Hyderabad.

His interrogation report reads, “After receiving firearms and cash at Delhi, my handler Abdul Aziz started pressurising me to execute/commit some sensational offence. As per his instructions, either I have to throw the hand-grenade in the crowd or the targeted person. I was planning to throw the hand-grenade in the crowd gathered nearby Hitech City (Hyderabad) in front of hotels or on the foreigners working in Deliotte company. Though initially I thought I alone can execute the task, I started requesting my handler to send someone in support to me…”

Haq has said that among the 25 LeT recruits with whom he got a brief arms training in Muzaffarabad was a young man from Tamil Nadu.

He has also disclosed that it was in Saudi Arabia that he was taught how to use the Internet and create e-mail IDs.

He said that while operatives like him used e-mails and accessed Internet from five specific locations in Hyderabad, LeT commanders in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia always used VoIP ( voice-over-internet-protocol) to convey instructions.

Security guards drugged in $5 mln Iraq bank robbery

Robbers in Iraq stole 6.5 billion Iraqi dinars ($5.5 million) from a state-owned bank on Friday, assisted by a security guard who spiked his colleagues’ tea, police officials said.

“According to the information available to the security forces, one of the guards drugged his colleagues by putting a drug in their tea,” Najaf province security committee head Louai al-Yasiri told Reuters.

After the drinks were spiked, armed men entered the Rafidain bank in the town of al-Mishkab, Najaf province, shortly after midnight and made off with the loot, said Yasiri.

The drugged security guards have since recovered and no other casualties were reported.

The bank robbery followed a gold heist on Tuesday in Baghdad, when gunmen shot dead 14 people and stripped a row of goldsmiths of gold and cash in a bustling trade market normally heavily guarded by police.

The Iraqi government blamed the gold robbery on Sunni al Qaeda insurgents, trying to finance their operations.

Security officials say there are strong links between organised crime and the diminished but adapting insurgency.

Despite sectarian violence at a low ebb not seen since late 2003, shootings and bombings by militants and criminal gangs remain common.

Yasiri said police had evidence suggesting who might have been behind the bank robbery and the investigation was ongoing.

(Reporting by Khalid Farhan in Najaf, writing by Muhanad Mohammed; Editing by Michael Taylor)

Gunmen attack mosques, take hostages in Lahore

Gunmen attacked worshippers from a minority sect in two areas of the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore on Friday, taking hostages and killing at least 13 people, government and police officials said.

Thirty people were wounded in the attacks.

The gunmen opened fire shortly after Friday prayers and threw what could have been grenades at two Ahmadi mosques in residential neighbourhoods in Pakistan’s cultural capital.

“There are some hostages and we are planning an attack,” said Haider Ashraf, a senior police office in the neighbourhood of Garhi Shahu. “Their lives are under threat.”

Sajjad Bhutta, deputy commissioner of Lahore, said at least 13 people had been killed in the incidents.

One television channel showed a gunman firing at police from a tower of one of the mosques.

A Reuters reporter saw police take positions and crawl towards the building where gunmen were still present in the mosque in Garhi Shahu.

In Model Town, site of the other attack, police said one gunmen had been arrested and another killed. Other attackers escaped and one fired at a television van before the area was made safe.

“He was young, clean-shaven. He sprayed bullets at our van while fleeing the scene,” Rabia Mehmood, a reporter for Express Television, told Reuters.

Witnesses said the assaults were launched shortly after prayers.

“I saw some gunmen run towards the Ahmadis’ place of worship and then I heard blasts and gunfire,” Mohammad Nawaz, a resident, told Reuters.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but suspicion quickly fell on the Pakistani Taliban.

“The operation is not even over yet, so its too early to say who is behind these attacks. But my guess is that like most other attacks, there would be some link to the Taliban or their associated militants,” said a Lahore-based security official.

Ahmadis are a minority Muslim sect founded in the late 19th century. Pakistan is the only Muslim state to have declared Ahmadis non-Muslims.

Its 4 million-odd members have seen their religious rights in overwhelmingly Muslim Pakistan curtailed by law.

Pakistan, a key U.S. ally in the fight against militancy, is often the scene of sectarian violence, with militants from Sunni Muslim groups attacking Shi’ite Muslim and Christian communities.

(Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari and Faisal Aziz in Lahore and Kamran Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Ron Popeski)

Gunmen attack worshippers in Pakistan’s Lahore

Gunmen attacked worshippers from a minority sect in two areas of the northeastern Pakistani city of Lahore on Friday, government and police officials said, but there was no immediate word about casualties.

The gunmen opened fire shortly after Friday prayers and threw what could have been grenades at two Ahmadi mosques in residential neighbourhoods in Pakistan’s cultural capital.

Some gunmen were still holed up inside one mosque in Model Town, one of the neighbourhoods, police said.

“Some gunmen have managed to enter the worship place. We have surrounded it. I have no idea of casualties,” Illyas Saleem, a senior police officer in Model Town, told Reuters.

Witnesses said the attacks started shortly after prayers.

“I saw some gunmen run towards the Ahmadis’ place of worship and then I heard blasts and gunfire,” Mohammad Nawaz, a resident, told Reuters.

Ahmadis are a minority Muslim sect founded in the late 19th century. Pakistan is the only Muslim state to have declared Ahmadis non-Muslims.

Its 4 million-odd members have seen their religious rights in overwhelmingly Muslim Pakistan curtailed by law.

Pakistan, a key U.S. ally in the fight against militancy, is often the scene of sectarian violence, with militants from Sunni Muslim groups attacking Shi’ite Muslim and Christian communities.

(Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore and Kamran Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Paul Tait)

Blasts and gunfire rock mosques in Lahore – police

Gunmen attacked two mosques belonging to a religious minority group in Lahore in Pakistan’s northeast on Friday, government and police officials said.

There was no immediate information on casualties.

Gunmen opened fire shortly after Friday prayers weapons and threw what were believed to be grenades at two Ahmadi mosques in two residential neighbourhoods in Pakistan’s cultural capital.

(Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore and Kamran Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Paul Tait)

(For more coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, click http://www.reuters.com/places/afghanistan-pakistan)

32 arrested in trans-European anti-drug operation

London, May 26 (IANS/EFE) At least 32 people have been arrested in an anti-drug and anti-trafficking operation across Europe conducted by 750 police officials from Europol, the European Union’s criminal intelligence agency.

Twenty people were arrested in Spain and 12 in Britain Tuesday, in a joint operation in London and Spain’s Costa del Sol. The operation also included house searches in the Ireland capital Dublin as well as in Belgium and Cyprus, and was carried out jointly by Ireland’s An Garda Siochana police, the Spanish National Police, SOCA and the Belgian police.

A 53-year-old Irish-born British gangster Christopher ‘Christy’ Kinahan was arrested Tuesday at his mansion in Costa del Sol, Britain’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) said Tuesday.

Kinahan was arrested by the Spanish National Police along with several of his family members, a number of British and Irish citizens and four Spanish attorneys, SOCA said.

In a statement released in Warsaw, Spanish Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba said Kinahan’s organisation is connected to several crimes including murder, drug and human trafficking.

Rubalcaba said the trans-European operation showed that ‘political cooperation works’.

‘The scale of this joint operation by law enforcement agencies from so many countries is an indication of how prolific we think this network was,’ SOCA director Trevor Pearce said.

30 killed in drug related clashes in Jamaica

Mexico City, May 26 (DPA) At least 26 civilians were killed in the Jamaican capital of Kingston as police stormed a drug gangster’s stronghold and violence spread to outlying regions, local media reported Tuesday.

The deaths confirmed by the Jamaica Constabulary Force would bring to 30 the number of people, including three members of the security forces, killed since clashes began over the weekend.

Another 25 people have been injured and more than 200 arrested.

The clashes broke out when military and police officials attempted to arrest accused drug kingpin Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, wanted in the US on criminal charges. He is believed to be hiding in the Tivoli Gardens neighbourhood of the capital, where the clashes have centred.

Explosions were heard near the quarter in the capital, and heavy clouds of smoke rose from the area late Monday, according to local media reports.

Violence initially broke out Sunday after Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding vowed to extradite Coke to the United States.

Police reportedly came under fire in parts of West Kingston Sunday, and a police station was set ablaze after being abandoned by besieged officers who had run out of ammunition.

In response, Golding declared a month-long state of emergency in parts of the capital and outlying St Andrew, media reports from the Caribbean island said.

Sindh High Court issues notices to Musharraf, Interior Ministry over May 2007 carnage

Karachi, May 15 (ANI): The Sindh High Court (SHC) has issued notices to former President General Pervez Musharraf and the Interior Ministry on a petition seeking their nomination as respondents in a case concerning the May 12, 2007 carnage.

Over 50 people were killed and dozen others were injured in violence that erupted on the said date when the then deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry arrived in Karachi to address a lawyers gathering.

The court has also asked Musharraf to appear before it on the next hearing i.e on June 1.

The petition, which was filed by noted human rights activist Iqbal Kazmi, also named Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) chief Altaf Hussain, Sindh Home Adviser Waseem Akhtar, Home Secretary Brigadier (retire) Ghulam Muhammad Mohtarrum, and various other top police officials as respondents in the case, The Daily Times reports.

Earlier, the Abbottabad District and Sessions court while declaring former President General Pervez Musharraf an‘absconder’ directed authorities to confiscate his property. (ANI)

Bomb explodes in Greek courthouse

A bomb has exploded at a courthouse in Greece’s second largest city, Thessaloniki, but there were no injuries and only minor damage, police officials said.

The blast came after a similar explosion outside the main prison in the capital Athens late on Thursday which slightly injured two people and damaged dozens of shops and homes.

An unidentified caller warned a Greek TV station and a newspaper that a bomb would explode in the Thessaloniki courthouse, police said.

“There was an explosion in the toilets of the main courthouse in Thessaloniki. There are no reports of injuries so far,” a police official who declined to be named said.

“The explosion was very similar to the one in Athens.”

Bomb attacks by militant groups are frequent in Greece and usually target police, public buildings or businesses.

In March, a 15-year-old boy was killed and his mother and sister were wounded as a bomb exploded outside a building in central Athens, the first deadly bomb attack in years.

Urban violence has increased after the police shooting of a teenager in December 2008, which prompted weeks of riots.

Social unrest is also picking up after Greece took belt-tightening measures, including wage cuts and tax hikes in recent months, aimed at pulling Greece out of a debt crisis.

BB murder: Pak officials submit details of evidence collected from crime scene

Rawalpindi, May 13 (ANI): Pakistani police officials, who were accused of destroying vital ground evidence in the former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto assassination case, have submitted details of 30 articles and other evidences, which were collected from the crime scene on December 27, 2007 before the area was hosed down.

The details were submitted to the three member enquiry committee constituted by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to probe the hosing down of the crime scene at Liaquat Bagh , and also to the joint investigation team of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA).

According to the report, officials had colleted 30 important evidences, including a 30 bore pistol, a damaged magazine, a nine-MM pistol, a black leather jacket, samples of blood, and also the dismembered head of the suspected suicide bomber before the site was washed off.

Various other materials such as several empty bullet cartridges, damaged vehicles including that of Bhutto, her blood samples from the Land Cruiser, mobiles phones and identity cards were also colleted, the report said.

However, some crucial pieces of possible evidence are missing, including a SIM card used by the suspected bomber or his accomplices, which may have been lost because of the hosing down of the area, The Dawn reports.

But the most important piece of evidence submitted by the officials is the letter written by the then City Police Officer (CPO) Saud Aziz to the Inspector General of Police of Punjab saying that police had sought Asif Ali Zardari’s permission for Bhutto’s autopsy, but it was denied.

“ But Asif Ali Zardari turned down our request and declared that her post-mortem shall not be conducted,” the letter states.

Citing the Scotland Yard report on the assassination, the report said that the person who had fired at Bhutto was the same who had detonated the explosives. (ANI)

New York Police racially driven in frisking minorities in the city

New York, May 13 (ANI): A non-profit organisation in New York has accused the city police of being racially driven while undertaking frisking drives of residents.

In 2009, it said police in New York City frisked Blacks and Latinos nine times more than whites.

According to the New York Times, police carried out more than 575,000 stops of people in the city, a record number of what are known in police parlance as “stop and frisks,” and this yielded 762 guns.

The least commonly cited reason for the stop was the claim that the person fit the description of a suspect. The most common reason listed by the police was a category known as “furtive movements.”

Under Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, the New York Police Department’s use of such street stops has more than quintupled, fueling not only an intense debate about the effectiveness and propriety of the tactic, but also litigation intended to force the department to reveal more information about the encounters.

The Center for Constitutional Rights, which got the data on stop and frisks after it first sued the city over the issue after the 1999 killing of Amadou Diallo, said its analysis of the 2009 data showed again what it argued was the racially driven use of the tactic against minorities and its relatively modest achievements in fighting crime.

Police officials, for their part, vigorously praise the stop-and-frisk policy as a cornerstone of their efforts to suppress crime.

They claim the stops led to 34,000 arrests and seizure of more than 6,000 weapons other than guns, according to the center’s analysis.

The police officials argue that the widespread use of the tactic has forced criminals to keep their guns at home and allowed the department to bank thousands of names in a database for detectives to mine in fighting future crimes.

Besides better reporting, the surge in the number of stops, they said, is also a byproduct of flooding high-crime areas with more officers, a strategy for a force with a shrinking headcount. (ANI)

The postman who stole 76,000 letters

London, May 13 (IANS) A British postman, who stashed away 76,000 letters and parcels in his home, had to leave his flat as there was no space to live in it.

Paul Noga, 38, nicked 76,000 letters, bank statements, birthday presents and parcels over a two-year period.

Stunned police officials found mail covering every surface of the flat when they raided his home, The Sun reported.

Noga torched up to 1,000 stolen packages and damaging hundreds more.

‘The mail was just lying around in the flat. It got to such an extent he had to move to his mother’s flat, where he now lives,’ Noga’s lawyer Shaun Routledge told Newcastle Crown Court.

Routledge sought a psychiatric report on the postman.

Pak police kills militant wanted in Iran consulate official’s murder

Peshawar, May 12 (ANI): The Peshawar police has killed an alleged militant wanted over terror attacks, including last year’s murder of an official with the Iranian consulate, officials said.

Sources told Daily Times that Amanullah, a resident of Badhber village, was travelling in a car in the Sheikhabad area when police flagged him down but he made a run for it.

Amanullah was asked to surrender for a complete search but he refused to do so, which led to an exchange of fire.

The militant was killed on the spot while two policemen – identified as Tariq and Javed – were wounded during the gun-battle.

However, local police chief Liaquat Ali told a foreign news agency that police, acting on a tip-off, conducted a raid on a house in the provincial metropolis where Amanullah had been hiding.

A gun battle broke out and Amanullah was killed, he said, adding that two police officials were wounded in the clash, which lasted for about half an hour. (ANI)

SIT questions Togadia for role in 2002 Gujarat riots case

Gandhinagar, May 10 (ANI): Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) leader Praveen Togadia appeared before a Special Investigation Team (SIT) on Monday for questioning in connection with his role in the 2002 Gujarat communal riots.

Togadia was accompanied by several VHP activists, who shouted ”Jai Shree Ram” slogans and sang bhajans outside the SIT office, till his questioning was completed.

Togadia was earlier asked to appear before the SIT on April 29, but failed to do so.

He was summoned by the SIT after it had questioned Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi.

On April 28, the Supreme Court gave an additional 15 days to the SIT, to conduct an inquiry against Modi and 62 others in connection with post-Godhra riots, and to submit its final report.

The Supreme Court had given the deadline to complete the inquiry into complaint of Zakia Jaffery in which she alleged that Modi, his cabinet colleagues, some police officials and senior bureaucrats aided and abetted the post-Godhra riots of 2002.

Zakia”s husband and ex-MP Ehsan Jaffrey was among the 69 killed during the 2002 riots in the Gulburg Society.

SIT has already recorded statements of a number of persons named in Zakia”s complaint, which include former Minister of State for Home Gordhan Zadafia, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader I K Jadeja, former BJP MLA from Lunawada Kalu Malivad and sitting MLA from Mehsana Anil Patel, former IPS officer R B Sreekumar, social activist Teesta Setalvad, IG Shivanand Jha, some other senior police officers and political leaders. (ANI)